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The American Great Depression and the Japanese Heisei-Era Depression Compared-From an Institutional Approach

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Authors

Shibata, Tokutaro

Issue Date
2004-01
Publisher
Institute of Economic Research, Seoul National University
Citation
Seoul Journal of Economics, Vol.17 No.1, pp. 85-116
Keywords
Japanese depressionGreat depressionBubble economyThe Land Standard
Abstract
This paper investigates the institutional causes of the Japanese Depression in the 1990s in comparison to those of the America Great Depression in the 1930s. The Japanese Depression has two similarities to the American Depression. (1) Both depressions followed the bubble economy. (2) The decades of the 1930s and 1990s were historical transition periods. The institutional causes of the bubble economy in Japan were following: (1) instability of the international monetary system, (2) transformation of the financial system from "regulation and relief' to "deregulation and relief," (3) transformation of the industrial relations, (4) the Japanese domestic institutions such as the cross-shareholding system, the tax system, "the land standard." and the underdeveloped welfare system. These institutional factors are currently obstructing economic recovery.
ISSN
1225-0279
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/1310
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