Japan's economy, once the envy of the world, has recently
experienced a period of malaise and stagnation. This is due in part
to over-regulation and resistance to change within the Japanese
bureaucracy. Many argue that this bureaucracy must be replaced with
a system similar to that in the United States, involving ruthless
competition, fluid job markets unhindered by notions of lifetime
employment, tolerance of business failures, and the elevation of
conflict over consensus in economic decision making. The author
argues that not only will the bureaucracy, in the form of the
Ministry of Finance, retain its position, it will also evolve to be
more consistent with the transformed economic system allowing the
Japanese economy to recover and retain its important role in the
global economy.
The book details the history of the Ministry of Finance and
Japan's financial markets since World War II. It describes the
economic crisis in Asia and Japan's attempts to transform its
bureaucracy to better compete in the global arena. Economists,
business practitioners, trade specialists, and anyone interested in
Japan's role in the world economy will find this lucid and detailed
book an invaluable resource.
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