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Culture and Institutions in the Economic Growth of Japan (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
Loot Price: R3,419
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Culture and Institutions in the Economic Growth of Japan (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
Series: Studies in Economic History
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This book gives a coherent explanation of the socio-economic
dynamics of Japan from the thirteenth to the twentieth centuries by
means of the evolution of internalized culture and the role of
culture in the ordering of the market. The author argues that not
only institutions but also culture matters in the ordering of the
market and economic behavior. In the Occident, institutions have
been pivotal in structuring and ordering the market economy and
coordinating incentives of economic agents, as is emphasized by
Douglas North. The author of this book argues that culture, defined
as historically transmitted beliefs and values specific to each
nation, may fulfill similar roles by establishing conventions and
norms of behavior of individuals. Japan before the Meiji
Restoration (1868) seems to be a typical case. The book presents an
analysis of the formation of its internalized part of mental model,
owing to religious reform in Buddhism in the thirteenth century and
the consequent emergence of commerce-based growth driven by a
decline in transaction costs in the Tokugawa Era, from the
seventeenth through the mid-nineteenth centuries. Institutions had
been largely inefficient due to serious cultural conflicts among
classes, especially between the samurai and aristocrats. The
relative costs of establishing and enforcing institutions were low
in the Occident where internalized beliefs were based on the
concept of public, by and large common among individuals; by
contrast, in Japan, where internalized beliefs were strongly
influenced by others nearby, that differed significantly among
individuals, the costs were high because of difficulty in sharing
mental models. The economic development of the Occident owed
largely to the development of industrial technology nurtured under
the development of various institutional devices to coordinate
activities, whereas the economic growth of Japan during the
Tokugawa Era was caused by the decrease in transaction costs in
commercial activities owing to the standardization of conduct
nurtured through the deliberate development of culture and to the
efforts of small producers enhanced by religious motivation. After
the Meiji Restoration, Occidental institutions and industrial
technology flowed into Japan rapidly, and the Japanese
enthusiastically absorbed the Occidental cultural system
crystalized in Enlightenment values. At the same time, the struggle
of Meiji leaders to establish national integrity and spirit was an
attempt to adapt imported Occidental institutions to the
traditional internalized culture and to maintain the merits of
historical tradition as much as possible. The book argues that it
is not easy to implement fusion or substitution of traditional
internalized culture with any "advanced" culture of foreign
societies.
General
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