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Cooperative Capitalism Ulrike Schaede (Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego)

Cooperative Capitalism By Ulrike Schaede (Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego)

Summary

This text examines the effect that a reduced role of government regulation in Japanese industry is having on the openness of Japanese markets to foreign competition. It argues that Japanese trade associations have adopted self-regulation policies, setting and enforcing their own rules.

Cooperative Capitalism Summary

Cooperative Capitalism: Self-Regulation, Trade Associations, and the Antimonopoly Law in Japan by Ulrike Schaede (Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego)

The Japanese government is becoming less involved in shaping industrial policy–but what does this imply for the openness of Japanese markets to foreign competition? In an extensive study of 'post-development' Japan, Ulrike Schaede argues that, contrary to what many have suggested, the reduced role of government regulation may not result in more open markets. Instead, as has happened throughout Japanese history, deregulation and the recession of the 1990s have once again led Japanese trade associations to assume important regulatory functions of their own. They do this through 'self-regulation'–setting and enforcing the rules of trade for their industries, independent from the government. As a result, many Japanese markets are now effectively governed by incumbent firms, in particular in terms of structuring the distribution system. As the record of postwar antitrust enforcement reveals, Japan's antitrust system considers most activities of self-regulation, other than outright price-fixing, as legal. Using interviews and a unique database of trade association activities, this book concludes that increasing self-regulation renders both government deregulation programmes and international trade negotiations ineffective in opening Japanese markets. The implications of self-regulation for Japanese industry are mixed: while internationally competitive firms can use self-regulation to reduce competition at home in order to compete more forcefully abroad, some domestic industries, such as the financial sector, may suffer from increased self-protection.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction ; 2. Japanese Trade Associations ; 3. Antitrust Policy and Industrial Policy in the Postwar Period ; 4. Self-Regulation and the Antimonopoly Law ; 5. The Evidence: Antitrust Enforcement and Self-Regulation in Postwar Japan ; 6. Data Analysis: Trade Associations and Self-Regulation ; 7. The Historical Development of Self-Regulation in Japan's Trade Associations ; 8. The Implications

Additional information

NPB9780198297185
9780198297185
0198297181
Cooperative Capitalism: Self-Regulation, Trade Associations, and the Antimonopoly Law in Japan by Ulrike Schaede (Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2000-06-29
314
N/A
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