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Traps Embraced Or Escaped: Elites In The Economic Development Of Modern Japan And China (Hardcover)
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Traps Embraced Or Escaped: Elites In The Economic Development Of Modern Japan And China (Hardcover)
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Countries commencing industrialization with relatively low levels
of agricultural productivity, hence low wages, enjoy advantages
that can also prove host to daunting challenges. The chief
advantage is a relatively elastic supply of labor for
manufacturing; the chief challenge is how to free up farm labor for
factory employment through the raising of labor productivity in
farming. Key to raising agricultural labor productivity is
providing incentives to increase effort levels including hours
worked - access to markets being crucial - and improving the
quality of labor as measured by health indicators and educational
attainment. The willingness of elites to promote improvements in
infrastructure - physical infrastructure in the form of roads and
railroads and hydroelectric systems; human capital enhancing
infrastructure augmenting the educational attainment and health of
populations in rural areas; and financial infrastructure - and to
invest directly in factories is crucial to the process by which
labor is transferred from farming to manufacturing activities.
During the period 1850 to 1935 elites in China tended to resist the
requisite changes while elites in Japan did not. This legacy played
a crucial role in shaping the nature of post-1950 economic
development in the two countries.
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