The time is ripe for a bold new initiative to recast the U.S.-Japan economic relationship for the 21st century. A new Japan is emerging. Foreign investment is on the rise. Tokyo is deregulating and restructuring its economy. A new generation of entrepreneurs and venture capitalists has emerged. But a more vibrant, sustainable Japanese economy is threatened by the crushing weight of Japans mounting public debt, the burden of its aging and shrinking population and the cumulative toll of years of economic stagnation. New governments in Washington and Tokyo have a unique opportunity to reinvigorate the U.S.-Japan relationship and to accelerate the pace and redirect the nature of change in the Japanese economy by creating a U.S.-Japan " open marketplace" --free of tariffs, with minimal regulatory impediments and an increasing freedom to do business--by the year 2010. This effort would include harmonization and mutual recognition of domestic regulations, meaningful enforcement of competition policy, deeper restructuring of the Japanese economy, and a dramatic increase in Japanese imports and greater acceptance of foreign investment. In this effort, the United States must assert its economic self-interest through new structural and sectoral trade initiatives and stepped up multilateral market-opening pressure through cases brought to the World Trade Organization. A New Beginning: Recasting the U.S.-Japan Economic Relationship, by Bruce Stokes, is a road map for U.S.-Japan economic relations in the 21st century.
In contrast to Johnson's concept of a dominant, strategic "developmental state," Calder argues that while the development of Japanese capitalism indeed has largely been strategic, it has been "corporate-led" rather than state (i.e., ...
The magic tree house takes Jack and Annie back in time to feudal Japan where the siblings learn about the ways of the Ninja.
"Sayonara Mama-san is the diary of Andrew Robertson (Bob) Grimwood, from his time with New Zealand's J Force as part of the British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) in Japan during 1947 and 1948.
This analytical history of American policy toward Japan fills that void; it does not simply chronicle events, it tries systematically to make sense of them.
With MacArthur in Japan
John Pearson: Japan Passage
Brown, Delmer, and Ichiro ̄ Ishida. The Future and the Past: A Translation and Study ... Cartas qve os Padres e Irma ̃os da Companhia de Iesus escreuera ̃o dos Reynos de Iapa ̃ & China. Evora, 1598. The Collected Works of Shinran. Vol.
Business Guide to Japan
2e de couverture: Designed to provide a useful and practical reference guide to the history of photography in Japan from its beginnings until 1912, this brings together in one volume the results of important new research and a mass of data ...
Japan, Caught in Time