Book written by 1997 Abe Fellow Marie Anchordoguy based on her project “A Comparative Analysis of US and Japanese Regulation and Deregulation of the Telecommunications and Software Industries.”

How have state policies influenced the development of Japan’s telecommunications, computer hardware, computer software, and semiconductor industries and their stagnation since the 1990s? Marie Anchordoguy’s book examines how the performance of these industries and the economy as a whole are affected by the socially embedded nature of Japan’s capitalist system, which she calls “communitarian capitalism.”

Reprogramming Japan shows how the institutions and policies that emerged during and after World War II to maintain communitarian norms, such as the lifetime employment system, seniority-based wages, enterprise unions, a centralized credit-based financial system, industrial groups, the main bank corporate governance system, and industrial policies, helped promote high tech industries. When conditions shifted in the 1980s and 1990s, these institutions and policies did not suit the new environment, in which technological change was rapid and unpredictable and foreign products could no longer be legally reverse-engineered.

Despite economic stagnation, leaders were slow to change because of deep social commitments. Once the crisis became acute, the bureaucracy and corporate leaders started to contest and modify key institutions and practices. Rather than change at different times according to their specific economic interests, Japanese firms and the state have made similar slow, incremental changes.

Publication Details

Title
Reprogramming Japan: The High Tech Crisis under Communitarian Capitalism
Authors
Anchordoguy, Marie
Publisher
Cornell University / Cornell University Press
Publish Date
November 2005
ISBN
9780801441875
Citation
Anchordoguy, Marie, Reprogramming Japan: The High Tech Crisis under Communitarian Capitalism (Cornell University / Cornell University Press, November 2005).
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