
A Modern Economic History of Japan: Sho Ga Nai (It Is What It Is)
- National experienceMoney market managementJapanese economic modelLessons from Japan
- Categories:Economics Finance Politics & Government Social Sciences
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication date:June,2025
- Pages:288
- Retail Price:(Unknown)
- Size:(Unknown)
- Publication Place:United Kingdom
- Words:(Unknown)
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Review
"Russell Jones has written a well-researched and readily accessible account of Japan's economic experience since the Meiji Restoration of 1868 - a story of rise, fall, rise and struggle, of hubris and nemesis, and one that is full of insights into what is still one of the world's most fascinating economies." - Saul Eslake, economic consultant and advisor to the Australian government
Feature
★#3 in Asian Studies on Amazon USA,#1 New Release in Economic History and #1 New Release in Macroeconomics on Amazon UK.
★A brand new work in 2025 by renowned macroeconomist, former Chief Economist for Asia at Lehman Brothers and head of the Foreign Exchange Research Department, Russell Jones!
★Highly recommended by John Llewellyn, former Head of International Forecasting and Policy Analysis at the OECD and advisor to the UK Treasury, and Saul Eslake, former Chief Economist at the Australia and New Zealand Banking Group.
Description
If Japan's progress before World War II was impressive, the decades following its subjugation and occupation by the US saw it record hitherto unheard of rates of economic growth. By the 1980s, such was Japan's record of unrelenting achievement, not only did it spawn a rising tide of political resentment among its competitors, but it also encouraged them to adopt important aspects of the country's economic model.
The belief at this time, both at home and abroad, was that Japan's success was set to continue. Such predictions, however, proved wide of the mark. The powerful forces that had driven its post-war boom had already been waning for some time, and its model of economic development was becoming increasingly ill-suited to the requirements of high-income country status.
Its rapid rate of expansion became more and more dependent on the unsustainable combination of asset price inflation and the rapid accumulation of private, in particular corporate, debt. This was bound to end in tears, and it did, although the extent of Japan's subsequent fall from grace came as a surprise to most.
By the early 2020s, Japan was again a far away country about which relatively little was known and a dwindling proportion cared less. Only a minority were aware, apart from in vague terms, of Japan's initial meteoric rise from impoverished backwater, the nature and extent of its wartime calamity, its remarkable mid-twentieth century economic miracle, and the manner in which it came to be held up as the exemplar for other nations. Instead, Japanification had emerged as a derogatory byword for stagnation.
But this was to undersell a still vitally important mature and sophisticated economy and to ignore the enduring lessons that Japan's experience could offer. These extended beyond the process of successful and enduring economic development, to the management of asset price cycles and the currency markets, the complexities of combating deflation, the painful trade offs implicit in successful structural reform, and perhaps most pertinently of all, how best to deal with the inexorable forces of demographic change.