Crisis and Compensation: Public Policy and Political Stability in Japan
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(as of Sep 02, 2023 06:37:11 UTC – Details)
Why does Japan, with its efficiency-oriented technocracy, periodically adopt welfare-oriented, economically inefficient domestic policies? In answering this question Kent Calder shows that Japanese policymakers respond to threats to the ruling party’s preeminence by extending income compensation, entitlements, and subsidies, with market-oriented retrenchment coming as crisis subsides. “Quite simply the most ambitious and strongly argued interpretation of a key dimension of Japanese political life to appear in English this decade.”–David Williams, Japan Times “Historically dense and conceptually rich…. [Forces] readers’ attention to the domestic underpinnings of Japanese foreign policy.”–Donald S. Zagoria, Foreign Affairs “Punctures the myth of Japan Inc. as a cool, rational monolith….”–Kathleen Newland, Millennium “A bold reinterpretation of Japanese politics that will force us to rethink many of our current assumptions and will influence our research agenda.”–Steven R. Reed, Journal of Japanese Studies
ASIN : B08VF9N41D
Publisher : Princeton University Press (April 13, 2021)
Publication date : April 13, 2021
Language : English
File size : 8731 KB
Text-to-Speech : Enabled
Screen Reader : Supported
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
X-Ray : Not Enabled
Word Wise : Enabled
Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
Print length : 580 pages
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