1st Edition

Japanese Economics and Economists since 1945

Edited By Aiko Ikeo Copyright 2000
    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this book, leading Japanese scholars present an objective study of Japanese economics since 1945, based on statistical data and analysis.
    The first half of the book assesses the impact and influence of Japanese economics within the international academy, demonstrating the increasingly important contribution of Japanese approaches to theoretical and mathematical economics. Part Two investigates the impact of Japanese economics on policy-making, dissecting the formulation of the famous 'industrial structure policy', and comparing Japanese economics with American and Korean models.
    Presenting a wealth of original empirical data, and a new perspective on international economic theory, this book will be of interest to historians, theoreticians and policy-makers alike.

    Introduction Aiko Ikeo Part 1. Japanese Economists and Academic Studies 1. Economists and learned societies Aiko Ikeo 2. Economics in the constitution of academics Kiichiro Yagi 3. Japanese contribution to international journals of economics Masahiro Kawamata 4. Marxian Economics Michio Akama Part 2. Japanese Economists and Policy Making 5. Economists and economic policy Aiko Ikeo 6. Economics as the background of administrators Kiichiro Yagi 7. Economists on reconstruction and growth Takeo Minoguchi, Tamotsu Nishizawa and Aiko Ikeo 8. Economists on the promotion of external liberization Asahi Noguchi 9. Economists on government, administration and market Aiko Ikeo Part 3. Korean Economics Chapter 10. Korean economics since 1945 Myoung-kyu Kang

    Biography

    Aiko Ikeo (Waseda University, Japan) (Edited by)

    'A valuable contribution to the current policy debate on economic liberalization and its varying meanings for different economists and bureaucrats.' - Social Science Japan Journal