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.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!