Japanese Style of Business Accounting

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A01=Hidetosh Yamaji
A01=Shyam Sunder
Author_Hidetosh Yamaji
Author_Shyam Sunder
Business: International
Category=KFC
Category=KJMV1
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_nobargain
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781567202199
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 1999
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Japan has been, and will likely remain, the second largest economy in the world. In the four decades following the Second World War, it dazzled the world, its enviable social indicators, unprecedented fast and sustained with economic growth, process innovations, high productivity and high quality of manufactured product. In the nineties, the growth slowed down to a crawl, and a recession and deflation now threaten it. Could we foretell these historic ups and downs on the basis of financial reports of Japan's great corporations? The 14 chapters of the book take a sweeping view of accounting, covering methods, data, theories, and comparisons. Institutionalism has been a major force in accounting thinking in the United States as well as Japan. The influence of Marxian theory on Japanese accounting and social science thinking remains vastly underappreciated in the United States. A direct comparison of Japanese and U.S. factor markets, and Korean and German accounting practices also reveals important differences.

It is crucial for anyone interested in international investments, trade, and economics to understand Japanese financial reporting practices and how they differ from the United States practices . While a few comparative works on Japan and U.S. financial reporting are available, they rarely give the reader an in-depth understanding of the similarities and differences between the United States and Japan. In this volume, a Japanese and U.S. editor have collaborated to bring an understanding of Japanese accounting practices, perspectives, and their implications to the English speaking audience.

SHYAM SUNDER is James L. Frank Professor of Accounting, Economics and Finance at Yale University. He has published extensively and has served as a consultant to major corporations, United States government. He is a founder of the Economic Science Association and served as Director of Research for the American Accounting Association. His award winning book, Theory of Accounting and Control has been translated into Japanese and Korean.

HIDETOSHI YAMAJI is Professor of Finance and Accounting at the Research Institute for Economics and Business Administration at Kobe University. He has been a visiting scholar at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and is the author of 14 books including The Japanese Stock Market (Praeger, 1988).

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