Japan's first decade of the twenty-first century is often called
the "second lost decade," following the post-bubble "lost decade"
of the 1990s, characterized by policy paralysis and overall
lackluster economic growth. For those studying Japan more closely,
however, the same decades reveal nothing short of a broad
transformation in numerous core tenets of Japan's postwar political
economy. How can we best capture this transformation?
Each chapter in this volume examines a different aspect of
Japan's political economy within a longer historical trajectory,
from multiple angles, to depict a flexible but resilient system.
They include: a comprehensive overview of the political economy;
Japan's financial system; corporate reorganization; the politics of
reform; small and medium enterprises and the labor market;
compensation systems; and foreign multinational corporations. The
editors characterize Japan's process of change as syncretism
--practices foreign, domestic, old and new were selectively
adopted, mixed and matched, along the way creating a new and unique
hybrid system.
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