ISSN: 1057-1922
Series editor(s): Professor Terry Marsden
Subject Area: Sociology and Public Policy
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| Title: | Japan's Economic Ascent and its Extraction of Wealth from its Raw Materials Peripheries |
|---|---|
| Author(s): | Paul S. Ciccantell, Stephen G. Bunker† |
| Volume: | 10 Editor(s): Paul S. Ciccantell, David A. Smith, Gay Seidman ISBN: 978-0-76231-162-0 eISBN: 978-1-84950-314-3 |
| Citation: | Paul S. Ciccantell, Stephen G. Bunker† (2005), Japan's Economic Ascent and its Extraction of Wealth from its Raw Materials Peripheries, in Paul S. Ciccantell, David A. Smith, Gay Seidman (ed.) Nature, Raw Materials, and Political Economy (Research in Rural Sociology and Development, Volume 10), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp.187-207 |
| DOI: | 10.1016/S1057-1922(05)10009-2 (Permanent URL) |
| Publisher: | Emerald Group Publishing Limited |
| Article type: | Chapter Item |
| Abstract: | How did Japan rise to challenge the U.S. economic supremacy? We argue that the foundation of Japan's rise from a defeated nation in 1945 to an economic powerhouse is the raw materials that Japanese firms have turned into cars, ships, consumer electronics, and of other industrial products. A small island nation that lacked adequate domestic supplies of virtually all the raw materials essential to industrial production became a world leader in the production of steel and of products which required millions of tons per year of raw materials. Japanese firms and the Japanese state turned an apparent material and economic disadvantage, the need to import large volumes of raw materials, into a competitive advantage over the U.S., Europe, and the rest of the world economy by driving down the cost of importing raw materials over long distances. We argue that the strategies of Japanese firms and the Japanese state to resolve the problems of procuring bulk cheaply and reliably from multiple distant locales drove the technical and organizational innovations that underlay Japan's rapid industrial development and restructured the world economy in support of Japan's development. Contrary to claims that globalization supercedes the national state, we find that the actions of the Japanese state, in coordination with firms and industry sectors, were crucial in developing and applying these strategies. The linchpin of these strategies were the MIDAs (Maritime Industrial Development Areas) built on land reclaimed by the Japanese state. This economic success in Japan was also critically dependent on the extraction of billions of dollars of wealth from its raw materials peripheries, most notably Australia, Brazil, and Canada. |
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