ABSTRACT

    This volume examines different aspects of the Japanese experience in a comparative context. There is much here of relevance to contemporary developing countries anxious to initiate the experience of miraculous growth and anxious to avoid the subsequent stagnation.

    Such issues of the role of government in providing the right amount of infant industry protection, the relevance of the financial system, the country’s peculiar corporate structure and the role of education in a comparative context serve to illuminate the lessons and legacies of this unique experience in development.

    The relationship between various dimensions of its domestic policy experience and Japan’s international experience in trade promotion and foreign aid is explored and is of special interest to an international audience of academics and policymakers.

    chapter |8 pages

    Introduction

    Post-war Japanese economic development in a global perspective

    chapter |16 pages

    Infant industry protection policy reconsidered

    The case of the automobile industry in Japan

    chapter |15 pages

    Cluster-based industrial development

    Applicability of Japanese experiences to contemporary developing countries

    chapter |23 pages

    The role of education in the economic catch-up

    Comparative growth experiences from Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and the United States

    chapter |31 pages

    The “Yoshida Doctrine” in the post-Cold War world 1

    ‘Pre-emptive' minimalist strategy in a multipolar world