1st Edition

Japan's Postwar Economic Recovery and Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1948-1962

By Noriko Yokoi Copyright 2003
    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    Ever since Japan's economy recovered in the 1960s, scholars have been searching for the reasons for its meteoric postwar success. Until now, much research has been based on the study of Japan's society, its political and economic infrastructure, and its particular model of capitalism. But now that American and British government documents from the 1950s have been released, it emerges that the United States - as part of its Cold War economic and military strategy in East Asia - played a large part in assisting Japan out of its economic difficulties, whereas Britain's role seems to have been more ambivalent and circumspect. This book sets out to rectify the lack of full research into Anglo-Japanese trade relations from the late 1940s up to the early 1960s, and to examine the impact of cultural differences and perceptions on diplomacy, as well as the influence of prevailing political considerations like the Cold War. This book highlights the ebbs and flows in bilateral relations as Japan increased its economic and financial presence in Southeast Asia and Britain retreated politically and economically from its Empire in the East.

    Contents 1. Introduction 2. Open Payments Agreement with Japan 3. Embarking on the Sterling Payments Agreement 4. Learning the Rules of Engagement 5. Britain at the Helm? 6. Limits to Britain's Policy towards Japan 7. Britain and Japan's GATT Entry 8. A Period of Lull 9. The Anglo-Japanese Commercial Treaty 10. Conclusions

    Biography

    Noriko Yokoi is currently an Associate Strategic Planner with Rapp Collins Worldwide in New York City, USA. She received her Ph.D from the London School of Economics and Political Science. She has taught Asian history at Pace University in New York. Her research interests include international history and Japanese history.