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The Economic Development Of Modern Japan |
The late Shigeto Tsuru, formerly Professor Emeritus, Hitotsubashi University and Chairman of Village Shonan Inc., Japan
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| 1995 |
384 pp |
Hardback |
978 1 85898 023 2 |
£89.00 |
on-line discount
£80.10 |
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‘Shigeto Tsuru has been the bridge between mainstream economics and Japanese Marxist thought. Ten years at Harvard and a key player in the post-war MacArthur Administration, he was Schumpeter’s personal assistant and a recognized expert on Keynes and Marx. Tsuru’s collected papers are a testament no one interested in Japanese intellectuals should miss.’ – Paul A. Samuelson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US
Japan’s emergence as a modern state in the middle of the nineteenth century was a unique socio-political event. The accompanying economic development – achieved without tariff autonomy and with practically no injection of foreign capital – was certainly no less remarkable. A major portion of this important volume discusses how this transformation was accomplished.
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This book is part of the Economists of the Twentieth Century series. To view the rest of the series, please use the link.
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Economists of the Twentieth Century series books 
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