By Nathan Lewis
In 1949, Japan was a wreck. Four years had passed
since the end of World War II, but the economy was still moribund. The major
cities, flattened and burned during the war, remained mostly unreconstructed.
Only two trains a day ran on the most important rail line, between Tokyo and
Osaka. Hyperinflation made normal commerce impossible. What industrial assets
remained after the war, such as electricity generation plants and factories,
were being stripped by the occupying army as “reparations,” and shipped
overseas. The previous government was disbanded, and a new constitution, and a
new government, were established. People were on the brink of starvation.
This was the beginning of one of the greatest economic
advances of the twentieth century.
In comparison, Greece’s problems are trivial. Banks
are insolvent? That is nothing but paper accounting. Try having your major
cities bombed to rubble, and a generation of young men slaughtered on islands
in the Pacific. Government default? So what. Hyperinflation? Nowhere to be
seen. Starvation? Hardly. Occupation by a hostile foreign military? Not on
anyone’s list of worst fears.