Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 7-10 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
The Economic Emergence of Modern Japan is a useful book for those interested in how Japan succeeded in transforming an agricultural economy into an advanced industrial economy. This volume brings together chapters from The Cambridge History of Japan, Volumes 5 and 6, and The Cambridge Economic History of Europe, Volume 7, part 2. Each of the seven chapters, written by leading specialists in Japanese economic history, explains in an authoritative, detailed analysis how institutions, the behaviour of individuals and firms, and official policies changed in order to enable Japan to accumulate capital, adopt new technology, ensure a skilled labour-force, and increase exports of manufactured goods. The authors pay special attention to distinctive Japanese institutions and policies, the effect of the Tokugawa legacy, and the impact of various wars, and the global economy.
Preface Kozo Yamamura; 1. Economic change in the nineteenth century E. Sydney Crawcour; 2. Industrialization and technological change, 1885–1920 E. Sydney Crawcour; 3. Depression, recovery, and war, 1920–1945 Takafusa Nakamura; 4. The postwar Japanese economy, 1945–1973 Yutaka Kosai; 5. Capital formation in Japan, Kazushi Ohkawa, and Henry Rosovsky; 6. Factory labour and the industrial revolution in Japan Koji Taira; 7. Entrepreneurship, ownership, and management in Japan Kozo Yamamura.
"Handsomely produced, The Economic Emergence of Modern Japan adds considerable value to the Cambridge Catalog. No other single volume exceeds it in breadth and comprehensiveness, or in judicious construction of the evidence of more than two centuries of economic change." James C. Baxter, H-Net Reviews