ABSTRACT

Japan will recover and its economic achievements will once again earn the world's admiration, with sustained annual growth of three percent, perhaps more, well within reach. This is the confident forecast that begins Japanese Phoenix: The Long Road to Economic Revival by the author of Japan: The System That Soured, which several years ago accurately predicted Japan's current travails at a time when others were prematurely pronouncing full recovery. Katz warns however that there is bad news to go with the good. So deep-seated are Japan's dysfunctions that, even if it did everything right today, it would take at least five years for truly vibrant growth to take hold. But Japan will not do everything right. Opposition to reform is deep-seated and a myriad of vested interests and millions of jobs are at stake. Still he notes, there is little doubt that reform will succeed. Japanese Phoenix tells the story of the struggle between the forces of reform and the forces of resistance. It dissects Prime Minister Koizumi's role in the process, and explains why Japan is in so much trouble and what needs to be done. It explore the debates among economists and gives a careful progress report on all the moves made so far in the name of reform - from greater direct foreign investment, to the financial "Big Bang", to ending one-party rule by the Liberal Democratic Party. Katz concludes that this is just the second round of a 15-round fight. Japan is a great nation currently trapped in obsolete institutions. As it has before, Japan will find a way to surmount its problems and regain its forward progress.

part |22 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

The Long and Bumpy Road to Revival

part One|80 pages

A Tale of Two Problems

chapter 2|15 pages

The Incredible Shrinking Japan

chapter 3|19 pages

Overcoming the Dual Economy

Backward Sectors Are the Key to Japan’s Revival

chapter 4|22 pages

Overcoming Anorexia

The Labors of Sisyphus

chapter 5|22 pages

The Banking Crisis

Dead Firms Walking

part Two|42 pages

Macroeconomic Policy Debates

chapter 6|12 pages

Fiscal Dilemmas

chapter 7|19 pages

Monetary Magic Bullets Are Blanks

chapter 8|9 pages

Japan Cannot Export Its Way Out

part Three|45 pages

Globalization

chapter 9|6 pages

Globalization

The Linchpin of Reform

chapter 10|12 pages

Imports

Too Many Captives, Not Enough Competitors

chapter 11|12 pages

Foreign Direct Investment

A Sea Change

chapter 12|13 pages

Financial Integration

The Iceberg Cracks

part Four|98 pages

Structural Reform

chapter 13|3 pages

What Is Structural Reform?

chapter 14|21 pages

Financial Reform

“Big Bang” Versus Financial Socialism

chapter 15|24 pages

Corporate Reform

No Competitiveness Without More Competition

chapter 16|7 pages

Competition Policy

Not Enough Competition, Even Less Policy

chapter 17|12 pages

Labor Reform

Mobility, Not Wage Cuts, Is the Answer

chapter 18|18 pages

Deregulation and State Enterprises

The Momentum Is Clear, the Destination Is Not

chapter 19|6 pages

Tax Reform

Don’t Exacerbate Anorexia

chapter 20|5 pages

Electoral Reform

Ending the One-Party State

part Five|20 pages

U.S.–Japan Relations in This Crisis

chapter 21|7 pages

The United States Is Not Japan

chapter 22|11 pages

How the United States Can Help

part |4 pages

Epilogue

chapter 23|2 pages

The Phoenix Economy