1st Edition

Japanese Capitalism in Crisis A Regulationist Interpretation

Edited By Robert Boyer, Toshio Yamada Copyright 2000
    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    The contributors to Japanese Capitalism in Crisis show that there can be a middle ground between the current extremes of the Japanese economy, and offer two proposals: a deeper understanding of long term development, and an extension of existing theory.

    Introduction: a puzzle for economic theories Robert Boyer and Toshio Yamada Part I Institutional interpretations and theories 1. Japanese capitalism and the companyist compromise Toshio Yamada 2. The hierarchical market-firm nexus as the Japanese mode of régulation Akinori Isogai, Akira Ebizuka and Hiroyasu Uemura 3. Disproportionate productivity growth and accumulation regimes Hiroyuki Uni Part II The wage labour nexus, forms of competition, financial regime: major structural transformations 4. The capital-labour compromise and the financial system: a changing hierarchy Hironori Tohyama 5. 'Industrial welfare' and 'company-ist' régulation : an eroding complementarity Masanori Hanada and Yasuro Hirano 6. The financial mode of régulation in Japan and its demise Naoki Nabeshima Part III What crisis and what futures? 7. The wage labour nexus challenged: more the consequence than the cause of the crisis Robert Boyer and Michel Juillard 8. Growth, distribution and structural change in the post-war Japanese economy Hiroyasu Uemura 9. Beyond the East Asian economic crisis Yasuo Inoue 10. Some limitations on Japanese competitiveness enjamin Coriat, Patrice Geoffron and Marianne Rubenstein Conclusion: an epochal change ... but uncertian future Robert Boyer and Toshio Yamada

    Biography

    Robert Boyer, Toshio Yamada