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Beskrivning
This book gives a coherent explanation of the socio-economic dynamics of Japan from the thirteenth to the twentieth centuries by means of the evolution of internalized culture and the role of culture in the ordering of the market.
Juro Teranishi is a professor emeritus of Hitotsubashi University. From 1970 through 2006, he was a professor at the Institute of Economic Research of Hitotsubashi University and a visiting professor at Yale University from 1976 to 1978, and at the Australian National University in 1985 and 1986. He also served as an adviser to the Institute of Monetary and Economic Studies of the Bank of Japan, as a counselor of the Association of Economics of The University of Tokyo, and as an adviser to the Bureau of High-Level Education of the Ministry of Education and Science. He was on the editorial board of the Pacific-Basin Finance Journal, of Oxford Development Studies, and of The Developing Economies. Among the books he has edited are The Japanese Experience of Economic Reforms (St. Martin's and Macmillan Press, 1993) and Designing Financial Systems in East Asia and Japan (Routledge Curzon, 2004).
Innehållsförteckning
1 The culture and institutions of Japan.- 2 Mental models and the cost of institutions.- 3 The process of long-term growth before the Meiji Restoration.- 4 Religious changes in Kamakura-era Japan.- 5 Institutions and trust level during the Muromachi era.- 6 Cultural foundations of Tokugawa economic growth.- 7 Japanese economy and culture after the Meiji Restoration.- 8 Culture and collective behavior in Japan.- References.- Indices.