"Rich Nation, Strong Army"
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Richard J. Samuels
About this book
Since World War II, Japan has become not only a model producer of high-tech consumer goods, but also-despite minimal spending on defense-a leader in innovative technology with both military and civilian uses. In the United States, nearly one in every three scientists and engineers was engaged in defense-related research and development at the end of the Cold War, but the relative strength of the American economy has declined in recent years.
What is the relationship between what has happened in the two countries? And where did Japan's technological excellence come from? In an economic history that will arouse controversy on both sides of the Pacific, Richard J. Samuels finds a key to Japan's success in an ideology of technological development that advances national interests.
From 1868 until 1945, the Japanese economy was fired by the development of technology to enhance national security; the rallying cry "Rich Nation, Strong Army" accompanied the expanded military spending and aggressive foreign policy that led to the disasters of the War in the Pacific. Postwar economic planners reversed the assumptions that had driven Japan's industrialization, Samuels shows, promoting instead the development of commercial technology and infrastructure. By valuing process improvements as much as product innovation, the modern Japanese system has built up the national capacity to innovate while ensuring that technological advances have been diffused broadly through industries such as aerospace that have both civilian and military applications.
Struggling with the uncertainties of a post-Cold War economy, the United States has important lessons to learn from the way Japan has subordinated defense production yet emerged as one of the most technologically sophisticated nations in the world. The Japanese, like the Venetians and the Dutch before them, show us that butter is just as likely as guns to make a nation strong, but that nations cannot hope to be strong without an ideology of technological development that nourishes the entire national economy.
Author / Editor information
Richard J. Samuels is Ford International Professor and Head of the Department of Political Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Director of the MIT-Japan Program. He is author of The Business of the Japanese State: Energy Markets in Comparative and Historical Perspective, also from Cornell, winner of the Masayoshi Ohira Memorial Prize.
Reviews
This book is a pleasure to read. It is a well-argued, lucid account and explanation of Japanese economic success since the Second World War; it is an excellent example of how, historically, to tackle questions of technology and technological innovation and their relation to economic change; and it provides fascinating insight into the debate about the role of national defense in either stimulating or suffocating economic activity.
---A masterful study of the Japanese arms and aircraft industries, analyzing the interrelationship between military and civilian technology since the mid-nineteenth century.
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
vii -
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PREFACE
ix -
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ABBREVIATIONS
xiii -
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CHAPTER ONE. The Strategic Relationship of the Military and Civilian Economies
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CHAPTER TWO. The Ideological Basis of Japanese Technonationalism
33 -
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CHAPTER THREE. Military Technonationalism and Arms Production in Imperial Japan
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CHAPTER FOUR. The Imperial Japanese Aircraft Industry
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CHAPTER FIVE. Girding the Nation's Loins for Peace
130 -
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CHAPTER SIX. Forces at Work: Rebuilding Japan's Defense Industry
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CHAPTER SEVEN. The Postwar Japanese Aircraft Industry
198 -
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CHAPTER EIGHT. Japan's Technology Highways
270 -
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CHAPTER NINE. Technonationalism and the Protocols of the Japanese Economy
319 -
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NOTES
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REFERENCES
411 -
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INDEX
443