The Political Economy of the Abe Government and Abenomics Reforms
Herausgeber: Hoshi, Takeo; Lipscy, Phillip Y
The Political Economy of the Abe Government and Abenomics Reforms
Herausgeber: Hoshi, Takeo; Lipscy, Phillip Y
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This volume examines the political economy of the Abe government and 'Abenomics' reforms. The Abe government represents a major turning point in postwar Japan. How did Abe remain in power for so long? How successful was Abenomics? What are the implications for broader debates in political science and economics?
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Karol ZakowskiGradual Institutional Change in Japan168,99 €
Jae-Jin YangThe Political Economy of the Small Welfare State in South Korea114,99 €
Phil GrammThe Triumph of Economic Freedom22,99 €
The Political Economy of the Eurozone164,99 €
Zaad MahmoodGlobalization and Labour Reforms45,99 €
Yongnian ZhengMarket in State49,99 €
Yanis VaroufakisAnd the Weak Suffer What They Must?9,99 €-
-
-
This volume examines the political economy of the Abe government and 'Abenomics' reforms. The Abe government represents a major turning point in postwar Japan. How did Abe remain in power for so long? How successful was Abenomics? What are the implications for broader debates in political science and economics?
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 574
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 930g
- ISBN-13: 9781108843959
- ISBN-10: 1108843956
- Artikelnr.: 60552400
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 574
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 930g
- ISBN-13: 9781108843959
- ISBN-10: 1108843956
- Artikelnr.: 60552400
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Part I. Introduction: 1. The political economy of the Abe government Takeo
Hoshi and Phillip Y. Lipscy; Part II. Political Context: 2. Expansion of
the Japanese Prime Minister's power and transformation of Japanese politics
Harukata Takenaka; 3. Why does the Abe government's approval rating always
recover? Masaru Kohno; 4. The LDP under Abe Yukio Maeda and Steven R. Reed;
5. The third arrow of Abenomics: est. in 2013 - or 2007? Takatoshi Ito;
Part III. Macroeconomic Policy: 6. Abenomics, monetary policy, and
consumption Joshua K. Hausman, Takashi Unayama and Johannes F. Wieland; 7.
The great disconnect: the decoupling of wage and price inflation in Japan
Takeo Hoshi and Anil K. Kashyap; 8. Abenomics, the exchange rate, and
markup dynamics in Japanese industries Kyoji Fukao and Shuichiro Nishioka;
9. The crisis that wasn't: How Japan has avoided a bond market panic Mark
Bamba and David E. Weinstein; Part IV. Third Arrow of Abenomics: 10. Abe's
slight left turn: how a labor shortage transformed politics and policy
Steven K. Vogel; 11. Abe's Womenomics policy: did it reduce the gender gap
in management? Nobuko Nagase; 12. Corporate governance reforms under
Abenomics: the economic consequences of two codes Hideaki Miyajima and
Takuji Saito; 13. Abenomics and Japan's entrepreneurship and innovation: is
the third arrow pointed in the right direction for global competition in
the silicon valley era? Kenji E. Kushida; 14. Japanese agricultural reform
under Abenomics Patricia L. Maclachlan and Kay Shimizu; 15. The politics of
energy and climate change in Japan under the Abe government Trevor Incerti
and Phillip Y. Lipscy; Part V. Foreign Policy: 16. Japan's defense reforms
under Abe: assessing institutional and policy change Adam P. Liff; 17. The
enduring challenges of history issues Mary M. McCarthy.
Hoshi and Phillip Y. Lipscy; Part II. Political Context: 2. Expansion of
the Japanese Prime Minister's power and transformation of Japanese politics
Harukata Takenaka; 3. Why does the Abe government's approval rating always
recover? Masaru Kohno; 4. The LDP under Abe Yukio Maeda and Steven R. Reed;
5. The third arrow of Abenomics: est. in 2013 - or 2007? Takatoshi Ito;
Part III. Macroeconomic Policy: 6. Abenomics, monetary policy, and
consumption Joshua K. Hausman, Takashi Unayama and Johannes F. Wieland; 7.
The great disconnect: the decoupling of wage and price inflation in Japan
Takeo Hoshi and Anil K. Kashyap; 8. Abenomics, the exchange rate, and
markup dynamics in Japanese industries Kyoji Fukao and Shuichiro Nishioka;
9. The crisis that wasn't: How Japan has avoided a bond market panic Mark
Bamba and David E. Weinstein; Part IV. Third Arrow of Abenomics: 10. Abe's
slight left turn: how a labor shortage transformed politics and policy
Steven K. Vogel; 11. Abe's Womenomics policy: did it reduce the gender gap
in management? Nobuko Nagase; 12. Corporate governance reforms under
Abenomics: the economic consequences of two codes Hideaki Miyajima and
Takuji Saito; 13. Abenomics and Japan's entrepreneurship and innovation: is
the third arrow pointed in the right direction for global competition in
the silicon valley era? Kenji E. Kushida; 14. Japanese agricultural reform
under Abenomics Patricia L. Maclachlan and Kay Shimizu; 15. The politics of
energy and climate change in Japan under the Abe government Trevor Incerti
and Phillip Y. Lipscy; Part V. Foreign Policy: 16. Japan's defense reforms
under Abe: assessing institutional and policy change Adam P. Liff; 17. The
enduring challenges of history issues Mary M. McCarthy.
Part I. Introduction: 1. The political economy of the Abe government Takeo
Hoshi and Phillip Y. Lipscy; Part II. Political Context: 2. Expansion of
the Japanese Prime Minister's power and transformation of Japanese politics
Harukata Takenaka; 3. Why does the Abe government's approval rating always
recover? Masaru Kohno; 4. The LDP under Abe Yukio Maeda and Steven R. Reed;
5. The third arrow of Abenomics: est. in 2013 - or 2007? Takatoshi Ito;
Part III. Macroeconomic Policy: 6. Abenomics, monetary policy, and
consumption Joshua K. Hausman, Takashi Unayama and Johannes F. Wieland; 7.
The great disconnect: the decoupling of wage and price inflation in Japan
Takeo Hoshi and Anil K. Kashyap; 8. Abenomics, the exchange rate, and
markup dynamics in Japanese industries Kyoji Fukao and Shuichiro Nishioka;
9. The crisis that wasn't: How Japan has avoided a bond market panic Mark
Bamba and David E. Weinstein; Part IV. Third Arrow of Abenomics: 10. Abe's
slight left turn: how a labor shortage transformed politics and policy
Steven K. Vogel; 11. Abe's Womenomics policy: did it reduce the gender gap
in management? Nobuko Nagase; 12. Corporate governance reforms under
Abenomics: the economic consequences of two codes Hideaki Miyajima and
Takuji Saito; 13. Abenomics and Japan's entrepreneurship and innovation: is
the third arrow pointed in the right direction for global competition in
the silicon valley era? Kenji E. Kushida; 14. Japanese agricultural reform
under Abenomics Patricia L. Maclachlan and Kay Shimizu; 15. The politics of
energy and climate change in Japan under the Abe government Trevor Incerti
and Phillip Y. Lipscy; Part V. Foreign Policy: 16. Japan's defense reforms
under Abe: assessing institutional and policy change Adam P. Liff; 17. The
enduring challenges of history issues Mary M. McCarthy.
Hoshi and Phillip Y. Lipscy; Part II. Political Context: 2. Expansion of
the Japanese Prime Minister's power and transformation of Japanese politics
Harukata Takenaka; 3. Why does the Abe government's approval rating always
recover? Masaru Kohno; 4. The LDP under Abe Yukio Maeda and Steven R. Reed;
5. The third arrow of Abenomics: est. in 2013 - or 2007? Takatoshi Ito;
Part III. Macroeconomic Policy: 6. Abenomics, monetary policy, and
consumption Joshua K. Hausman, Takashi Unayama and Johannes F. Wieland; 7.
The great disconnect: the decoupling of wage and price inflation in Japan
Takeo Hoshi and Anil K. Kashyap; 8. Abenomics, the exchange rate, and
markup dynamics in Japanese industries Kyoji Fukao and Shuichiro Nishioka;
9. The crisis that wasn't: How Japan has avoided a bond market panic Mark
Bamba and David E. Weinstein; Part IV. Third Arrow of Abenomics: 10. Abe's
slight left turn: how a labor shortage transformed politics and policy
Steven K. Vogel; 11. Abe's Womenomics policy: did it reduce the gender gap
in management? Nobuko Nagase; 12. Corporate governance reforms under
Abenomics: the economic consequences of two codes Hideaki Miyajima and
Takuji Saito; 13. Abenomics and Japan's entrepreneurship and innovation: is
the third arrow pointed in the right direction for global competition in
the silicon valley era? Kenji E. Kushida; 14. Japanese agricultural reform
under Abenomics Patricia L. Maclachlan and Kay Shimizu; 15. The politics of
energy and climate change in Japan under the Abe government Trevor Incerti
and Phillip Y. Lipscy; Part V. Foreign Policy: 16. Japan's defense reforms
under Abe: assessing institutional and policy change Adam P. Liff; 17. The
enduring challenges of history issues Mary M. McCarthy.







