Why Did Japan Stumble?
Causes and Cures
Craig Freedman(Editor)
Edward Elgar Publishing
Published on 27. October 1999
Book
Hardback
256 pages
978-1-85898-834-4 (ISBN)
Description
In this ground-breaking book, leading commentators on the Japanese economy analyse both the immediate and deep-seated causes that make a sustained economic recovery in Japan problematic. They debate the deep-rooted structural causes of Japan's decline and assess Japan's faltering financial system before prescribing policies to abate the continuing crisis.Starting with Japan's unanticipated economic collapse in the 1990s, the volume's contributors try to fathom the way forward for a seemingly catatonic economy. The first section deals with the entrenched structural causes of Japan's economic decline and demonstrates why sustained recovery is likely to be difficult. The second section tackles a more immediate difficulty impeding economic recovery - Japan's nearly bankrupt financial system - and discusses how regulators and politicians both helped to cause and can possibly combat this problem. All contributors agree that measures must be taken to ensure the synchronization of political, institutional and cultural structures to guarantee Japan's successful recovery. They are unable to agree on which measures will be effective and feasible.
This highly insightful and accessible volume will be of interest to scholars of Japanese studies, financial economics and international economics as well as anyone with an interest in the current Japanese crisis.
This highly insightful and accessible volume will be of interest to scholars of Japanese studies, financial economics and international economics as well as anyone with an interest in the current Japanese crisis.
Reviews / Votes
'. . . interesting, informative, and worthwhile reading. This reviewer recommends the book for anyone interested in understanding what happened to Japan in the 1990s.' -- Thomas F. Cargill, Journal of Economic Literature '. . . the publication of Why Did Japan Stumble? . . . is very welcome. In a single location, the reader can sample a wide variety of conflicting explanations, some of them by very influential Japanese thinkers. . . . Those interested in the state of debate among top rank participants would do well to include this book on their reading list.' -- Richard Katz, Journal of Japanese StudiesMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-85898-834-4 (9781858988344)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Edited by Craig Freedman, Director, Centre for Japanese Economic Studies, Macquarie University, Australia
Content
Contents: 1. The Catatonic Economy Part I: Future Directions 2. Why do I Expect Japan to Collapse? 3. Declining Population, the Size of the Government and the Burden of Public Debt: Some Economic Policy Issues in Japan 4. Japan's Business Culture and Society Part II: Current Problems 5. Why has the Japanese Economy been Stumbling for so Long? 6. Empirical Determinants of Banking Crises: Japan's Experience in International Perspective 7. Crisis? What Crisis? The Policy Response to Japan's Banking Crisis Index