Cart
Free Shipping in Australia
Proud to be B-Corp

Making Fiscal Policy in Japan Hiromitsu Ishi (Professor, Faculty of Economics, Professor, Faculty of Economics, Hitotsubashi University)

Making Fiscal Policy in Japan By Hiromitsu Ishi (Professor, Faculty of Economics, Professor, Faculty of Economics, Hitotsubashi University)

Summary

This study aims to explain the role and performance of fiscal policy as an integral component of macroeconomic policy, and the attendant effects on economic growth. The case explored here is post-World War II Japan, but the approach is one of international comparison.

Making Fiscal Policy in Japan Summary

Making Fiscal Policy in Japan: Economic Effects and Institutional Settings by Hiromitsu Ishi (Professor, Faculty of Economics, Professor, Faculty of Economics, Hitotsubashi University)

Making Fiscal Policy in Japan is written for those who want to understand the role and performance of fiscal policy as an integral component of macroeconomic policy, and the attendant effects on economic growth. The case explored here is post-Second World War Japan, but the approach is one of international comparison. Ishi traces and analyses the central features of postwar Japanese fiscal policy and considers the institutional framework and policy objectives which shaped the budget process. The first part of the book provides a detailed overview of the topic, with detailed institutional and empirical information. In particular, the role that government played in Japan's postwar economic growth is explored in depth, with specific focus on the four sub-periods of occupation, rapid economic growth, internationalization, and the bubble economy. Part II explains the basic framework of budgets, the budgetary process in Japan, and fundamental strategies of fiscal authority. It looks in depth at the unique aspects of the balanced budget policy for 1953-65 and then at how financial resources for budgeting were automatically generated in a growing economy. The final part analyses specific policy issues in the public sector, among them human resource development, the ageing population and the social security system, tax incentives for export promotion, the Fiscal Investment and Loan Programme, and intergovernmental grant policy. Ishi argues that the Japanese government has been generally passive in guiding the state's economic activities, using fiscal policy to support the private economy rather than directly to influence the economy through deliberate expenditure and tax policies. The approach has been one of enhancing the market rather than of government intervention.

Making Fiscal Policy in Japan Reviews

Ishi provides the reader with important insights into why things worked well in the past but have gone terribly wrong more recently ... the volume provides important background for those seeking to understand how fiscal policy-making has worked in the past in Japan. Moreover, in clarifying the nature of this process, the volume helps illuminate the salience of changes either underway or at the centre of debate today. * Social Science Japan Journal *
An important strength of the volume as a whole is its placement of Japan's experiences in a comparative context. * Social Science Japan Journal *
The book excels in two tasks. The first section does a nice job of contextualizing Japan's fiscal policy within its experience of rapid post-war growth. More importantly, the book provides a clear description of Japan's complicated fiscal system, which includes a variety of special accounts, revenue sources, and intergovernmental transfers ... delivered in a clear and rigorous manner. * Political Studies *

Table of Contents

PART I. OVERVIEW: THE POLICY ENVIRONMENT ; 1. The Preconditions for Post-war Economic Growth ; 2. Rapid Economic Growth and Its Effects ; 3. Structural Changes Towards a New Dimension ; 4. The Emergence of the Bubble Economy and its Aftermath ; PART II. FISCAL POLICY RESPONSES ; 5. Budget and Budgetary Process ; 6. Budget Orthodoxy and Strategies of Fiscal Consolidation ; 7. An Empirical Analysis of Balanced Budget Policy, 1953-1965 ; 8. How Financial Sources were Generated in a Growing Economy ; PART III. SPECIFIC ASPECTS OF BUDGETARY ACTIVITY ; 9. Public Expenditure Trends in Light of Human Resource Development ; 10. Ageing and the Social Security System ; 11. Tax Policy for Export Promotion, 1953-1964 ; 12. The Role of the Fiscal Investment and Loan Programme ; 13. The Budgetary Behaviour of Local Government and Intergovernmental Grant Policies

Additional information

NPB9780199240715
9780199240715
019924071X
Making Fiscal Policy in Japan: Economic Effects and Institutional Settings by Hiromitsu Ishi (Professor, Faculty of Economics, Professor, Faculty of Economics, Hitotsubashi University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2000-12-07
370
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Making Fiscal Policy in Japan