Fr. 69.00

Japanese Economy

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This book provides a comprehensive survey of Japan's economic history and current situation. It offers a concise description of Japanese economic institutions and events, integrated with cogent explanations rooted in economic logic. Extensive annotation to the scholarly literature.

List of contents










  • Introduction

  • 1: Incomes and Welfare of the Japanese Today

  • 2: Economic History, Part 1: The Tokugawa Period (1603-1868) and the Meiji Era (1868-1912)

  • 3: Economic History, Part 2: The Twentieth Century (1912-1945)

  • 4: Economic History, Part 3: Postwar Recovery

  • 5: Saving

  • 6: Macroeconomy

  • 7: International Finance

  • 8: International Trade

  • 9: Industrial Policy

  • 10: Public Economy, Part 1: Government Spending

  • 11: Public Economy, Part 2: Taxes

  • 12: Environmental Policy

  • 13: Industrial Organization

  • 14: Finance

  • 15: Marketing

  • 16: Labor

  • 17: Technology



About the author

David Flath is Professor of Economics at Ritsumeikan University, and Professor Emeritus of North Carolina State University, where he was employed from 1976 to 2007. He has previously been Adjunct Professor of Economics at the Osaka University Institute of Social and Economic Research (2009-13), and Visiting Professor of Economics at Kyoto University (2001-2), and at Osaka University (1995-6). Flath is the author of numerous academic articles on the Japanese economy. His Japan-related research has been supported by an Abe Fellowship and by grants from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, the Social Science Research Council, and the Japan-US Friendship Commission. His early forays into Japan were supported by the North Carolina Japan Center and by the Fulbright Program.

Summary

This book provides a comprehensive survey of Japan's economic history and current situation. It offers a concise description of Japanese economic institutions and events, integrated with cogent explanations rooted in economic logic. Extensive annotation to the scholarly literature.

Additional text

In conclusion, one really cannot fault this book and it was a pleasure to read. While it is not a history of the Japanese economy per se, one can open the book at almost any page and learn something about Japan's history in the context of its economy. It is a well-written, lucid and attractive book, and should be recommended reading for all students of Japan's economy and business. Its broad historical sweep should make it appealing to business historians, too, particularly those with an interest in economics.

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