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El. knyga: Unlocking the Bureaucrat's Kingdom: Deregulation and the Japanese Economy

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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Dec-2010
  • Leidėjas: Brookings Institution
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780815719885
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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Dec-2010
  • Leidėjas: Brookings Institution
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780815719885
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Originally written as a joint study of economic overregulation commissioned by the Sasakawa Peace Foundation, this book explores the chronic economic crisis in Japan and explains how it can be solved. The 15 contributors include former Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone, Vice Minister of Finance Eisuke Sakakibara, and Japanese and American economists, journalists, and professors. The emphasis throughout is on the malfunctioning bureaucracy, prospects for reform, and deregulation. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

In this book, a cross-section of Japanese, American, and European journalists and authorities in the business, political, and economic sectors examine the problems caused by over-regulation, and offer solutions for reshaping the Japanese marketplace.

Japan today is caught up in chronic economic crisis, its financial system wracked by record-breaking bankruptcies and its companies hobbled by bad balance sheets, overproduction, and weak consumer demand. In turn, Japan's faltering fortunes have sent shock waves across Asia, triggering the collapse of economies in South Korea, Thailand, and other Asian countries that followed its model for rapid growth and development. While a growing chorus of Japanese politicians, business leaders, and economic analysts blame the current troubles on the misguided policies of Japan's Ministry of Finance, the root of Japan's malaise lies more fundamentally in the contradictory relationship that first made it an economic powerhouse: the combination of businesses that aggressively compete for profits in the best tradition of free enterprise with a government bureaucracy that controls the economy with a heavy thicket of regulation and guidance. And so far, despite ringing declarations of reform, the entrenched bureaucracy shows little willingness -- or ability -- to make the significant reforms that Japan (and its Asian economic disciples) needs to recover.In this book, a cross-section of Japanese, American, and European journalists and authorities in the business, political, and economic sectors examine the problems caused by over-regulation, and offer solutions for reshaping the Japanese marketplace. In Part One, former Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone, Vice Minister of Finance Eisuke Sakakibara, and some of America's and Japan's leading experts on the Japanese economy map out the long road to regulatory reform. They analyze the postwar origins of today's bureaucracy, current attitudes toward regulation among politicians and the public, and the changes in both policymaking and mind set that must occur to achieve true reform. Part Two focuses on the effects of over-regulation, using illuminating case studies involving Japan's financial system, insurance markets, non-profit industries, and regulatory agencies.It is time, as Japanese politician Ichiro Ozawa once famously put it, for Japan to become a "normal country." This book not only underlines the critical nature of the problem, but explains how it can be solved.
Foreword vii(6) Michael H. Armacost Preface xiii Introduction 1(18) Frank Gibney Part One: The Long Road to Regulatory Reform 19(72)
1. From Wartime Controls to Postwar Recovery 19(11) Tetsuji Okazaki
2. Reforming the Catch-Up Economy 30(11) Iwao Nakatani
3. Politicians, Bureaucrats, and Policymaking in Japan 41(12) Yasuhiro Nakasone
4. Deregulation in Japan and the United States: A Study in Contrasts 53(16) Edward J. Lincoln
5. Deregulating Japans Soul 69(10) Masao Miyamoto
6. Reform, Japanese-Style 79(12) Eisuke Sakakibara Part Two: The Protective Bureaucracy in Action 91(180)
7. Who Has Obstructed Reform? 91(25) Taro Yayama
8. Liberalizing Japans Insurance Market 116(26) Charles D. Lake II
9. Between Bureaucrat and Buyer: Japans Nonprofit Industry Groups 142(18) John P. Stern
10. Bureaucrats in Business 160(11) Ulrike Schaede
11. The Land Factor: An Economic Disaster 171(7) Richard Koo
12. The Making of Japans Failed Land Policy 178(26) Koichi Mera
13. The Myth of Regulatory Independence in Japan 204(16) E. B. Keehn
14. Japans Financial System 220(11) Christopher Wood
15. Two Years after the Kobe Earthquake 231(40) Edith Terry Whither Deregulation? An Epilogue to Japans Industrial Policy 243(28) Leon Hollerman Contributors 271(2) Index 273
Frank Gibney , author of Japan: The Fragile Superpower (rev. ed., Charles E. Tuttle, 1996), The Pacific Century (Scribner, 1992), and other works, is president of the Pacific Basin Institute at Pomona College and Vice Chairman of TBS-Britannica in Tokyo, Japan.