Why is the United States unable to compete effectively with
Japan? What explains the inability of American political leaders to
devise an industrial policy capable of focusing the energies of
American business on the task of meeting the Japanese challenge?
How can America emerge from the shadow of the Rising Sun? This book
addresses these questions and proposes a controversial
decision.
To get at the political roots of American economic decline,
businessman-scholar William Dietrich puts the disciplined thinking
of political philosophy, comparative politics, and international
political economy to effective use in analyzing the source and
nature of American institutional weakness.
Unlike many who have written on U.S.-Japanese relations,
Dietrich does not seek a solution a particular new policy or
institutional innovation, such as an American counterpart to
Japan's MITI. Rather, he emphasizes the systemic nature of
America's problems. The failures of management, finance, and
politics are interlocking and reinforcing, he shows, and thus a
change in the others that spell doom for any partial approach.
Most fundamental, however, are the political weaknesses of the
system. It is in the basic political inheritance of America,
reflected in the very design of the Constitution and the long
dominance of Jeffersonian individualism over Hamiltonian statism,
that we must locate the roots of American impotence in the face of
Japan's challenge.
As the problem is systemic, so must the solution be equally
wide-ranging. Nothing short of "fundamental institutional reform,"
Dietrich argues, will succeed in reversing America's downward
course.
Boasts about the victory of free-market capitalism in the wake
of the collapse of the Communist state-directed system are
premature and distract attention form the necessary recognition
that it is the Japanese combination of the free market with a
strong central state and a highly skilled professional bureaucracy
that has really proved triumphant in our modern age of advanced
technology. Only if we fully understand the reasons for Japanese
success and American decline can we begin the arduous but crucial
task of reconstructing the American polity to give it the power
required to formulate and implement a national industrial policy
that can regain for the United States its preeminent place among
the world's industrial powers.
The alternative, Dietrich describes in a chilling scenario, is a
"Pax Nipponica" that will find America playing second fiddle to
Japan with economic, cultural, and political consequences that will
make Britain's eclipse by the United States earlier in this century
seem mild by comparison.
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