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Japan's Economy in War and Reconstruction (Paperback, Minnesota Archive Editions Ed.)
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Japan's Economy in War and Reconstruction (Paperback, Minnesota Archive Editions Ed.)
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Japan's Economy in War and Reconstruction was first published in
1949. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make
long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published
unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press
editions.Dr. Cohen's substantial monograph is a carefully
documented account of Japan's economic development from 1937 to
1949. It describes with much statistical evidence a remarkable
experiment in planned industrial expansion prior to 1941, then
continues with a survey of the war years, showing both the
successes and failures of the planning, controlling, financing, and
developing of Japan's war industries.The last part of the book
deals with the post-war problems of Japan from the war's end to the
latter part of 1948--three years of occupation by the Allied
Powers. Dr. Cohen discusses the three key economic factors: the
basic reforms, the rapidly mounting inflation, and the slowly
increasing, but still low level of production.Dr. Cohen's first
chapter is devoted to the careful planning of the years before the
war. The next chapters discuss Japan's efforts to cope with the
problems of munitions, food supply, and labor as the Allied war
effort gradually wore her down. There are detailed studies of
separate industries, shipping, and agriculture, and a discussion of
the parts played respectively by air, sea, and land operations in
the destruction of Japan's ability to wage successful war.One of
the main theses of these chapters is that the increasingly
enveloping blockade of Japan shut off necessary industrial raw
materials, and so brought Japanese war production to a virtual
standstill before the main weight of the strategic air attack was
delivered, and so made it impossible for Japan to continue the
war.The author's grim picture of inter-service quarrels and
overlapping and inconsistent controls demonstrates that the
Japanese army, navy, and civil service, in spite of their
reputation for exact and strict organization, in practice failed to
make good use of their unlimited powers.
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