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When Why Has Japan 'Succeeded'? (1982) was published, Japan was still a country of "capitalism from above". For the past ten years the country's economy has faltered and declined. It is turning towards 'capitalism from below' despite Japan's weak democracy. This directional change is investigated through a variety of standpoints, using an in-depth knowledge of the Japanese ethos, national history, educational background, as well as the sociology of the Japanese economy and business world. The author offers a long-term forecast for the future of Japan.
Contemporary general equilibrium theory is characteristically
short-run, separated from monetary aspects of the economy, and as
such does not deal with long-run problems such as capital
accumulation, innovation, and the historical movement of the
economy. These phenomena are discussed by growth theory, which
assumes a given or shifting production function, and in turn cannot
therefore deal with the fundamental problem of growth, namely how
the production function is derived. Thus traditional theories have
a common weakness in that they divorce real economic growth from
the activities of the financial sector. This book provides a
much-needed synthesis of growth theory and monetary theory.
Professor Morishima draws on the work of Schumpeter, Keynes and the
pre-war neoclassical economists to formulate a capital-theoretic
general equilibrium theory.
When Professor Morishima's book Why has Japan 'Succeeded'? (1982)
was published, Japan was still a country of 'capitalism from
above'. For the past ten years the country's economy has faltered
and declined. It is turning towards 'capitalism from below' despite
Japan's weak democracy. This directional change is investigated
through a variety of standpoints, using an in-depth knowledge of
the Japanese ethos, national history, educational background, as
well as the sociology of the Japanese economy and business world.
The author offers a long-term forecast for the future of Japan.
This book brings together in a single coherent framework a research
programme begun by the author in the forties. The main model around
which the analysis is built is Hicksian in character, having been
drawn in large part from John Hicks's Value and Capital. The model
is extended so as to include money and securities. In respect of
the theory of the firm the model focuses on demand and supply
plans, on inputs and outputs, on inventories, and on dependencies
between them. The stability of temporary equilibrium is discussed
for linear and non-linear cases. Because the concept of structural
stability is important for understanding non-linear cases, it is
defined and applied to the case of economic motion generated from
the temporary equilibrium analysis. The addenda focus on
developments in economic theory following the publication of the
main model.
This volume examines central questions about the nature of economic
theory, its historical development and its explanatory power. What
determines economic distribution - can pure economic theory itself
explain the fundamentals of distribution or is a broader economics
incorporating theories of power in society necessary? The book
presents the debate through classic statements of each position
from two leading economists of the century, Joseph A. Schumpeter
and Yasuma Takata. A substantive introduction from Michio Morishima
assesses and places in context the work of both Schumpeter and
Takata.
This work brings together in a single coherent framework a research
programme begun by the author over 40 years ago. The main model
around which the analyis is built is Hicksian in character having
been drawn in large part from John Hicks's Value and Capital. The
model is extended so as to include money and securities. In respect
of the theory of the firm, the model focuses on demand and supply
plans, on inputs and outputs, on inventories, and on dependencies
between them. The stability of temporary equilibrium is discussed
for linear and non-linear cases. Because the concept of structural
stability is important for understanding non-linear cases, it is
defined and applied to the case of economic motion generated from
the temporary equilibrium analysis. The addenda focus on
developments in economic theory following the publication of the
main model."
Contemporary general equilibrium theory is characteristically
short-run, separated from monetary aspects of the economy, and as
such does not deal with long-run problems such as capital
accumulation, innovation, and the historical movement of the
economy. These phenomena are discussed by growth theory, which
assumes a given or shifting production function, and in turn cannot
therefore deal with the fundamental problem of growth, namely how
the production function is derived. Thus traditional theories have
a common weakness in that they divorce real economic growth from
the activities of the financial sector. This book provides a
much-needed synthesis of growth theory and monetary theory.
Professor Morishima draws on the work of Schumpeter, Keynes and the
pre-war neoclassical economists to formulate a capital-theoretic
general equilibrium theory.
This book, together with Marx's Economic and Walras' Economics,
completes a sequence of titles by Professor Morishima on the first
generation of scientific economists. The author's assessment of
Ricardo differs substantially from the established views adopted by
economists and historians of economic thought. While economists
such as Pasinetti, Caravale and Samuelson have concentrated on
macroeconomic interpretations of Ricardo, and historians of
economic thought have emphasised his labour theory of value,
Morishima takes a different course. In this book the author
concentrates on Ricardo's main work, The Principles, and shows that
his economics is the prototype of mathematical economies without
the symbols and formulae. Morishima then translates Ricardo's
economics into mathematical language to find a general equilibrium
system (very similar to Walras') concealed within. The analysis
also contradicts the conventional view that marginalism emerged in
opposition to classical economics, showing instead that Ricardian
analysis is firmly based on marginalist principles, using prices,
wages and profits rather than labour values. The book ends with a
discussion of the historical character of economic theory and an
attempt to specify the epoch of Ricardian economics.
This book is a stimulating and original introduction to the
economics of industrial society. It is intended for use as a
student text, but will also be of interest to all those - whether
students or teachers - looking for new ways of understanding the
economic problems of industrialised countries. It provides an
effective critique of current economic theories, and develops an
original model of the economics (whether neo-classical, Marxist, or
Keynesian) of modern industrial society. Throughout the book the
analysis is oriented towards the solution of problems in the real
world, and towards explaining the operation of economic
institutions in different countries. The work looks at the way
individual markets operate, the determination of foreign exchange
rates, the problem of unemployment, and the fiscal and monetary
policies needed to tackle unemployment. This book analyses the case
of an industrial country entirely dependent on other countries for
its raw materials.
Originally published in 1977, this book is a companion to Professor
Morishima's book Marx's Economics which was published in 1973. As
he did so successfully with Marx, Morishima intended with this book
to change the standard assessment of his subject's contribution to
the development of economic thought. The standard view was that
Walras provided, in the second half of the nineteenth century, the
basis for general equilibrium theory. He was thus regarded as a
microeconomist, a founder of marginalism; but Morishima argues
that, while Walras certainly made important contributions in that
area, it is his attempt to build a macroeconomics on that
foundation that should be regarded as his main achievement. This
book will provoke great interest amongst all economists and
advanced students of economic theory and its history.
Professor Morishima concentrates on the three volumes of Das
Kapital and their contributions to the major topics of traditional
Marxian economics. He provides a rigorous mathematisation of the
labour theory of value, the theory of exploitation, the
transformation problem, the reproduction scheme, the law of
relative surplus population, the falling rate of capital and the
turnover of capital. After proving Marxian propositions in a
rigorous way, he argues that in order to combine Marx's model with
von Neumann's in a new growth theory it is necessary to abandon the
labour theory of value. Professor Morishima feels that this
sacrifice is well worth making, because it enables Marxian
economics to be integrated with orthodox theory into a new Marx von
Neumann theory of growth, and this to make an important
contribution to the development of the subject.
This volume was originally published in 1976. The difference types
of society in the world - capitalist, socialist, mixed, etc. - have
many features in common, despite their dissimilarities. The object
of this book is to make clear the economic logic of society in
general, which applies to socialist as well as capitalist
economies. Taking the Japanese economy as an example, part of the
book tries to explain how an actual economy can deviate from the
'ideal' laws of motion, and shows that such aberrations themselves
obey certain rules. In a broad sense, it belongs in the domain of
the theory of comparative systems. The book is based on lectures
which Professor Morishima gave to students at Osaka University in
1967 1968. It is translated from the Japanese by D. W. Anthony.
A lively and novel interpretation of the current success of the Japanese economy. By placing the rise of Japan in the context of its historical development, Morishima shows how a strongly-held national ethos has interacted with foreign ideas to produce highly distinctive cultural traits.
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