Title: ECON 4337 Comparative Economic Systems
1ECON 4337 Comparative Economic Systems
- Lecture 6
- February 24, 2009
2Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
3Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
4Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Why do we classify Japan as a planned market
economy with traditional elements?
5Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Historical and Cultural Background
- Effect of Shintoism
- 6th-7th centuries Absorption of Chinese culture
- Chinese writing
- Buddhism, Confucianism
- Effect of Confucianism
- Loyalty and respect to ones immediate superiors
and state
6Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Historical and Cultural Background
- The Tokugawa Shogunate
- After 1185 ruled by military commanders known as
shoguns - In 1500s, first exposure to European culture
- Development of business, transportation
infrastructure, literacy took off
7Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Historical and Cultural Background
- 1853 Japan forcibly reopened to outsiders by
arrival of Commodore Matthew Perrys black
ships from the U.S. - 1868 Meiji Restoration
- Landless samurai overthrew the Tokugawa shogun
8Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Historical and Cultural Background
- 1868-1912 Meiji Restoration
- Sign of end of feudalism in Japan
- Dramatic opening to foreign influences and
technologies - Removal of all rights and powers of samurai who
later started businesses - Public investment in communication, railroads,
education, postal services - Start and support of new industrial enterprises
by state - Japan became the fastest growing economy in the
world
9Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Historical and Cultural Background
- 1894 War with China
- 1895 Japan conquered Taiwan
- 1905 War with Russia
- 1910 Japan took control of Korea
- 1920s Democratization and liberalization
- Growth of four zaibatsus by government
sponsorship - Mitsui, Mitsubishi, Sumitomo, Yasuda
- 1923 Tokyo earthquake (133,000 died)
10Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
Index of National Output (1897100)
Source Lecture notes by Assistant Prof. Hui He
11Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Historical and Cultural Background
- 1937 Japan invaded China
- 1941 Pearl Harbor
- On August 16, 1945 Japan surrendered
12Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Historical and Cultural Background
- American Occupation
- Japan was under American occupation until 1952
- A new constitution was written
- Japan was formally demilitarized
- Zaibatsus were broken up
- Land was redistributed
- Labor unions were legalized
13Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Historical and Cultural Background
- After the American Occupation
- 1960s harmonious labor-management relations
emerged - From mid-1950s to the 1970s, old zaibatsus
reformed as keiretsus - By 1955, real per capita income had reached its
highest prewar levels - By the late 1960s, large, persistent trade
surpluses emerged - In 1975, Japan became one of the G-7 countries
14Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
Index of National Output (1897100)
Source Lecture notes by Assistant Prof. Hui He
15Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Micro-foundations of Japanese Economy
- 1. Three sacred treasures of labor-management
relations - Lifetime employment
- Seniority-based wages
- Enterprise unions
16Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
17Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Micro-foundations of Japanese Economy
- 2. Industrial organization Keiretsu System
- Horizontal keiretsu Firms in different
industries all linked to a common bank and
trading company - Fuyo (Fuji Bank), Ikkan (Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank),
Sanwa (Sanwa Bank) - Mitsui, Mitsubishi, Sumitomo
18Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Micro-foundations of Japanese Economy
- 2. Industrial organization Keiretsu System
- Vertical keiretsu Suppliers and distributors
linked to a major industrial producer by
long-term contracts - Toshiba, Nissan
- Cross-holdings of stocks in all keiretsus
- Advantages?
19Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
Source Lecture notes by Assistant Prof. Hui He
20Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
SOURCE OECD, Economic Surveys of Japan, 1995-96,
156.
21Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Micro-foundations of Japanese Economy
- 3. Managerial decision making
- Masahiko Aoki (1990), Toward an Economic Model
of the Japanese Firm - J-mode vs. H-mode type of organization
- Japan J-mode type of organization
- Characterized by horizontal coordination among
operating units based on the sharing of ex post
on-site information (learned results)
22Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Micro-foundations of Japanese Economy
- 3. Managerial decision making
- Consensual decision making
- Input from the bottom up (ringi-shos)
- Long term strategic planning
- Long term bank financing
- Other leveling devices
23Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Micro-foundations of Japanese Economy
- 3. Managerial decision making
- U.S./Europe H-mode type of organization
- Characterized by hierarchical separation between
planning and implemental operation and the
emphasis on the economies of specialization
24Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Micro-foundations of Japanese Economy
- 4. Industrial policy making by government
- Ministry of International Trade and Industry
(MITI) - Main implementer of Japans industrial policy
- Sectoral financial targeting, encouragement of
bank rather than equity financing, encouragement
of better labor relations, use of selective
cartelization
25Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Micro-foundations of Japanese Economy
- 4. Industrial policy making by government
- MITI intervention related to product cycles
- At the beginning stage of an industry
- Rationalization cartels
- Infant industry tariffs
- Subsidies for capital investment
- MITI-financed RD project
- At the end of the product cycle
- Depression cartels
- Effectiveness?
26Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Macroeconomic Performance of Japanese Economy
- Most rapid rate of sustained economic growth
- Low unemployment and inflation rates
- Greater degree of income inequality
- Longest life expectancy
- Large trade surplus
- Technological leader in many areas
- Stagnation in the 90s
27Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
28Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
29Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
30Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
31Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Macroeconomic Performance of Japanese Economy
- Why high saving rates (since WW II)?
- High growth rates in income
- Effect of Confucianism
- High cost of housing
- Lumpiness of biannual bonuses
- No capital gains tax
- Saving for old age
32Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Macroeconomic Planning and Policy
- EPA (Economic Planning Agency)
- Puts forth macroeconomic plans with associated
sets of policy goals - Since the 1970s, actual growth has been below the
target - MOF (Ministry of Finance)
- In charge of implementing macro plans and of the
governments fiscal policy - Low levels of G and T
- Debt/GDP ratio 150 by 2002
33Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- Quality of Life
- High life expectancy
- Low crime rate
- More equal income distribution
- Workaholics in rabbit hutches?
- Environmental pollution problems
34Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
35Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
36Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
37Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
38Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- The End of the Economic Miracle
- After 1990, growth rate decelerated
- Savings-investment nexus
- In the early 1990s, overinvestment causing low
rate of return for large corporations - With the 1997 Asian crisis, credit problems
spread to large corporations - In the late 1990s, liquidity trap problems
- Capital outflows
39Japan A Planned Market Economy with Traditional
Elements
- The Collapse of the Bubble Economy
- In the late 1980s, high price/earning ratios of
Japanese stocks - High real estate prices played a role in
speculative bubble in stocks - Bubble economy ended with a decline in stock
prices