The Weight of the Yen


Book Description

Discusses how America went from being the world's largest creditor to world's largest debtor in the eight years between 1980 and 1988, due to excessive borrowing from Japan during the Reagan presidency.







USITC Publication


Book Description




United States-Japan Relations


Book Description




Opening Japan's Financial Markets


Book Description

This book, first published in 1994, takes a broad look at the reasons behind the failure of foreign banks to penetrate Japanese financial markets. It accepts the common argument that the Japanese bureaucracy has skilfully limited the scope of foreign banks and discusses at length the methods used to do so. However, in examining the history of foreign banking activity in Japan, it becomes clear that ineptitude on the part of the foreign banks and governments has also been a major factor.




Adjustments of economics and enterprises in a changing world


Book Description

InhaltsverzeichnisInhalt: T. Dams, Unification of Germany in the Context of European Integration and Current Issues of East European Countries: A Comparative Economic System's Perspective - A. Oberhauser, Public Finance and the Transformation Process to Market Economies in the Countries of Eastern Europe - H.-H. Francke, The Franco-German Way Towards an European System of Central Banks - H.-J. Brink, Managerial Deficits and Solutions in the New Enterprises of East Germany as Consequences of Transition from a Planned Economy to a Market Economy - H. Okuno, The Restructuring of Financial Institutions in Japan - N. Okun / R. Futagami, Regional Income Inequality and Allocation of Public Investment: The Japanese Experience, 1958-1986 - N. Takeuchi / Y. Arayama, Interregional Difference and Public Finance - N. Takeuchi, Industrial Structures and their Fiscal Improvement - Y. Arayama, Prefectural Structure of Employment and its Determinants - R.-B. Schmidt, Models to Aid Decision Making under Economic Uncertainty. A Problem of Interdisciplinary Research - T. Kishida, Technological Innovation and Organizational Restructuring - W. Hilke, Information about R & D Activities in Annual Reports of German Corporations - T. Yoshida, On Technological Change and Interorganizational Relationships - F. Schober, Information and Planning Systems in Support of International Business Strategies - S. Hauser, Models Considering Current and Chaotic Structural Changes Exemplified by the Money and Stock Market




Routledge Library Editions: Business and Economics in Asia


Book Description

This set examines a vast range of topics covering all experiences of business and economics from across Asia. Dealing with early banking systems in China; the industrialisation of Korea and Taiwan; the evolution of Japanese business practices; economic development; protectionist policies; industrial investment; trade; tourism; and a host of other topics, the books collected here form a vital reference resource across a wide subject area.




Japan


Book Description

Japan is the great economic success story of the postwar period, growing at unprecedented rates to become one of the world's most advanced industrial nations. But since the early 1970s, Asia's economic giant has had to contend with many of the problems encountered by Western economies--slower growth, increased unemployment, rapid changes in the financial and industrial sectors--problems that have permanently transformed its economy and pose crucial challenges for its leaders. In this book, Edward J. Lincoln discusses Japan's burst of growth and the complex interplay of demographic, cultural, economic, and political forces that shaped the subsequent emergence of large domestic imbalances. The motivation and impact of Tokyo's successive attempts to deal with slower growth receive special attention: ballooning government deficits that supported domestic growth in the late 1970s, a determined switch to austerity measures in the 1980s as a surging current-account surplus conveniently buoyed the economy, and as yet uncertain responses to the recent appreciation of the yen that has capped the external surpluses. Lincoln focuses on the changes experienced by Japan's financial institutions and their implications for international economic transactions. Slower growth and altered monetary flows have brought increasing domestic and international pressures for deregulating financial institutions, and the government has responded cautiously. The study analyzes the resulting tensions and crosscurrents within Japan and the strains that have developed in relations with the United States. It concludes with a lucid presentation of Japan's options for stimulating domestic demand through reducing private-sector savings, increasing investment, and raising government spending, as well as appropriate U.S. policies to promote these outcomes. Whatever policy decisions Japan makes in the next few years will be shaped by the economic forces and institutional framework Linco