1st Edition

History of Japanese Economic Thought

By Tessa Morris Suzuki Copyright 1992
    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    by Routledge

    Economics, in the modern sense of the word, was introduced into Japan in the second half of the nineteenth century. However, Japanese thinkers had already developed, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, a variety of interesting approaches to issues such as the causes of inflation, the value of trade, and the role of the state in economic activity. Tessa Morris-Suzuki provides the first comprehensive English language survey of the development of economic thought in Japan. She considers how the study of neo-classical and Keynesian economics was given new impetus by Japan's 'economic miracle' while Marxist thought, particularly well established in Japan, was developing along lines that are only now beginning to be recognized by the West. She concludes with an examination of the radical rethinking of fundamental economic theory currently occuring in Japan and outlines some of the exciting new approaches which are emerging from this 'shaking of the foundations.

    Acknowledgements -- Introduction: Japanese and Western economic thought -- 1. Economic thought in Tokugawa Japan -- 2. The introduction of Western economic thought: from the Meiji Restoration to the First World War -- 3. Economic debates in inter-war Japan -- 4. Post-war Marxian economics -- 5. Economic theory and the 'economic miracle' -- 6. Contemporary Japanese economic thought -- Bibliography -- Index.

    Biography

    Tessa Morris-Suzuki is Associate Professor in Economic History at the University of New England, Armidale, Australia. Her previous books include Showa: An Inside History of Hirohito’s Japan (1984) and Beyond Computopia: Information, Automation and Democracy in Japan (1988).