Business-Government Relations in Prewar Japan

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A01=Peter von Staden
Author_Peter von Staden
Category=KCM
Category=KJK
Category=KNJH
club
dan
Dan Takuma
economic history Japan
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eq_business-finance-law
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Friction
Fukoku Kyohei
General Wholesale Price Index
Government Relationship
Hold
ICJ
Ikeda Seihin
Important Historical Legacy
industrial amalgamation case study
industry
Industry Club
iron
iron and steel sector
Japanese industrial policy
Japanese Iron
Large Zaibatsu
Low Grade Iron Ore
meiji
Nation Building
Open Hearth Furnace
pig
Pig Iron
Pig Iron Producers
Political Merchant
Postwar
prewar economic transformation
Prewar Japan
production
Promotion Law
Reciprocal Consent
relationship
Reverberatory Furnace
Shingikai deliberation councils
state-business negotiation
steel
Steel Industry
takuma
Tariff Schedule

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415540995
  • Weight: 294g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jun 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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For the business and government relationship in Japan, the pre-war period was an era of considerable change. Framed by Japan’s nation-building efforts, the relationship adapted and evolved with the often fluid economic and political circumstances. As both business and government had vested interests in the direction and success of Japan’s industrialization process, on one level they became partners. At the same time, though, they were both stakeholders in the fiercely competitive iron and steel industry.

This book explores how that partner-competitor relationship worked during the amalgamation of this strategic industry from 1916 to 1934, demonstrating how both parties engaged in meaningful negotiation through the open forum of the Shingikai - or Councils of Deliberation - throughout the pre-war period. Drawing upon the original minutes of the debates, it shows the ways in which the participants defended their vested interests and sought to forge agreement, taking the forum seriously as a means of influencing outcomes, and not simply as a mere exercise of artifice deployed to shroud the real locus of decision-making.

Business-Government Relations in Prewar Japan is an important contribution to the literature on the relationship between government and business in pre-war Japan.

Peter von Staden is Lecturer in International Business at the Bristol Business School of the University of the West of England. His primary areas of research are the business and government relationship in Japan and its role in institutional adaptivity.

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