1st Edition

Japan's Economic Aid Policy Making and Politics

By Alan Rix Copyright 1980
    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    Japan’s arrival since World War Two as a major industrial nation has meant that she has had to bear a greater share of the developed world’s contribution to the developing nations and foreign aid has become an integral part of foreign policy. This book describes the roots of Japan’s aid policy and shows that this side of her international economic policy is based largely on domestic conditions, structures and forces. To understand the pattern of Japanese aid as it stands today, it is important to appreciate the complexities of the Japanese decision-making process. This book clearly explains the patterns of Japanese aid policy-making.

    Part 1: Aid Ideas and Aid Structures  1. Foreign Aid and the Ministries  2. ‘Scrap and Build’: The Origins of JICA  Part 2: The Domestic Politics of Foreign Aid  3.Aid and the Governmental Process  4. Ministries and the Policy Process  5. Budgeting for Foreign Aid  Part 3: The Politics of Aid Relationships  6. Projects, Surveys and Consultants  7. Managing Bilateral Relations  8. Policy at Work: The Cycle of Aid

    Biography

    Alan Rix