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East Asia and the Global Economy: Japan's Ascent, with Implications for China's Future (Johns Hopkins Studies in Globalization)
 
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East Asia and the Global Economy: Japan's Ascent, with Implications for China's Future (Johns Hopkins Studies in Globalization) [Hardcover]

Stephen G. Bunker (Author), Paul S. Ciccantell (Author)

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Book Description

Johns Hopkins Studies in Globalization June 14, 2007

After World War II, Japan reinvented itself as a shipbuilding powerhouse and began its rapid ascent in the global economy. Its expansion strategy integrated raw material procurement, the redesign of global transportation infrastructure, and domestic industrialization. In this authoritative and engaging study, Stephen G. Bunker and Paul S. Ciccantell identify the key factors in Japan's economic growth and the effects this growth had on the reorganization of significant sectors of the global economy.

Bunker and Ciccantell discuss what drove Japan's economic expansion, how Japan globalized the work economy to support it, and why this spectacular growth came to a dramatic halt in the 1990s. Drawing on studies of ore mining, steel making, corporate sector reorganization, and port/rail development, they provide valuable insight into technical processes as well as specific patterns of corporate investment.

East Asia and the Global Economy introduces a theory of "new historical materialism" that explains the success of Japan and other world industrial powers. Here, the authors assert that the pattern of Japan's ascent is essential for understanding China's recent path of economic growth and dominance and anticipating what the future may hold.

(2008)

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East Asia and the Global Economy: Japan's Ascent, with Implications for China's Future (Johns Hopkins Studies in Globalization) + The Making of Northeast Asia (Studies in Asian Security)
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Editorial Reviews

Review

Bunker and Ciccantell offer a distinct and original explanation for Japanese growth based on how states, sectors, and firms collaborated to restructure raw material procurement and global transportation. An intellectual tour de force.

(David Smith, University of California at Irvine, author of Third World Cities in Global Perspective 2008)

East Asia and the Global Economy... is an interesting book and would be useful in both advanced undergraduate and postgraduate courses focused on economic development in general or on the East Asian region, in particular.

(Nicholas Thomas East Asia: An International Quarterly )

On the whole, this book offers an interesting discussion of an important aspect of Japan's economic success in the postwar years and helps increase our understanding of Japan's economic ascent in the postwar years.

(Kevin G. Cai Pacific Affairs )

About the Author

Stephen G. Bunker (1944–2005) was a professor of sociology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Paul S. Ciccantell is an associate professor of sociology at Western Michigan University. They are coauthors of Globalization and the Race for Resources, also published by Johns Hopkins.


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