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The Japanese Economy, 4th Edition is for anyone curious about
economics, for it is impossible to appreciate economics without
vivid examples of its application. This book is also for anyone
broadly interested in Japan, for it is impossible to fully
understand Japan without learning what basic economics has to say
about it, which is much. To know Japan - or any country for that
matter - is more than an ability to recite a litany of facts about
its history, geography, institutions, and culture. Disciplined
thinking is needed to organize the disparate facts into a coherent
system that can be grasped whole. Modern economics is the academic
discipline underlying this book. The book uses economics and
explains it, but without presuming the reader has any prior
knowledge of it. The main object of interest is Japan. It starts
with Japan's economic history since the late sixteenth century
through the twentieth century. It then addresses contemporary
topics in Japan's economy, beginning with ones that require an
economy - wide perspective - economic growth and the business
cycle, exchange rates, and the balance of trade. The discussion
then moves on to sectors of the economy: the public sector,
industry and trade, the financial system, the labor market, and
more. The chapters can be read in any order, but four threads run
through all the chapters and link them: Japan's economic growth and
development, Japan's integration with the world economy, government
policies and their effects, and peculiar economic institutions and
practices.
Japan remains one of the dominant economic powers. Yet the Japanese
economy is one of the most misunderstood phenomena in the modern
world. Conventionally, Japan is presented as the exception to
mainstream economic theory: an exception to the standard models of
modern economics. This book demolishes that notion, bringing the
full analytical power of economic thought to all aspects of the
most dramatic economic success story in recent times. David Flath
concentrates on four main themes: Japan's economic growth and
development; Japan's integration with the world economy; Government
policies and their effects; Economic institutions and practices. By
applying common economic tools such as the Solow growth model,
Modigliani's life-cycle model of saving, Becker's theory of
investment, Samuelson's theory of revealed preference, Coase's
exposition of the problem of social cost, and the modern theory of
industrial organization, this book shows that the mainstream
principles of economics apply in Japan as successfully as they do
elsewhere. Revised and updated to take account of recent
developments in Japanese banking and macroeconomics, this book is
an indispensable resource for students and instructors alike. Lucid
explanations and comprehensive and rigorous analysis make it
natural choice for anyone interested in comprehending the rise of
the Japanese economy.
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