Page 343


Notes


Complete authors' names, titles, and publication data for the works cited in short form are given in the Bibliography, pp. 36780.


One



1. One of the most prominent Japanese economists, Shinohara Miyohei, subsequently acknowledged that he had not always understood or approved of government policy but that with hindsight he had changed his mind. See Shinohara. For the influence of the London

Economist

's book, see Arisawa, 1976, p. 371.



2. William W. Lockwood, "Economic Developments and Issues," in Passin, p. 89; Uchino Tatsuro *,

Japan's Postwar Economic Policies

(Tokyo: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1976), p. 6.



3. Arisawa, 1937, p. 4



4. Kindleberger, p. 17.



5. See Goto*.



6. Richard Halloran,

Japan: Images and Realities

(New York: Knopf, 1970), p. 72.



7. Hadley, p. 87.



8.

Consider Japan

, p. 16.



9. Haitani, p. 181.



10. Kaplan, p. 14.



11. Ruth Benedict,

The Chrysanthemum and the Sword

(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1946), p. 316.



12. Titus, p. 312.



13. See Chen.



14. Hugh Patrick, "The Future of the Japanese Economy: Output and Labor Productivity,"

The Journal of Japanese Studies

, 3 (Summer 1977): 239.



15.

Ibid.

, p. 225.



16. Sahashi, 1972, p. 190.



17. Philip H. Trezise, "Politics, Government, and Economic Growth in Japan," in Patrick and Rosovsky, p. 782.



18. Campbell, pp. 2, 200. Slight Diet alterations of the budget also occurred in 1977 and 1978, during the period of thin majorities for the LDP.



19. Industrial Structure Council,

Japan's Industrial Structure: A Long Range Vision

(Tokyo: JETRO, 1975), p. 9.



20. Roberts, p. 439.



21. On the Three Sacred Treasures, see Shimada Haruo, "The Japanese Employment System,"

Japanese Industrial Relations

, Series 6 (Tokyo: Japan Insti-


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