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Stock market capitalism : welfare capitalism : Japan and Germany versus the Anglo-Saxons / Ronald Dore.

By: Contributor(s): New York : Oxford University Press, 2000Description: xiv, 264 pagesContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0199240612
  • 9780199240616
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HD70 DOR 2000
Contents:
Introduction -- A society of long-term commitments -- Sources of change -- Corporate governance: form the employee-favouring firm to the shareholder-favouring firm -- Trading relations -- The industry as community: the competition/cooperation balance among competitors -- The role of government in the economy -- Finanzplatz Deutschland -- The co-determined firm -- The organized community -- Nice guys finish last?
Summary: "This is a book about Washington Consensus capitalism and the controversies its encroachment causes in Japan and Germany. Many people in both those countries share the assumptions dominant today in Britain and America - that managers should be intent solely on creating shareholder value and that shareholders' financial logic alone should determine who buys what company on the stock exchange. That way efficiency (and hence global welfare) will be maximized." "The Japanese and German advocates of full-bloodied market capitalism are not having it all their own way, however. In both countries there are articulate defenders of what they consider to be a better way of life, informed by a more humane, more social-solidary, set of values." "Dore traces the fascinating debates which ensue on corporate governance, on worker rights, on supplier relations, on cartels and anti-trust, on pensions and welfare. He also analyses actual changes in economic behaviour - an essential means of sorting out a lot of the muddle and double-talk not just in the internal debates themselves, but even more in the foreign reporting of them." "These accounts of the battle for the national soul in Japan and Germany constitute one of the finest contributions to the 'diversity of capitalism' debate. Dore's account should be read by anyone who is interested to know whether, for all the talk of globalization, that diversity is going to survive.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books City Campus Library General Stacks City Campus Library Non-fiction HD70DOR 2000 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) c.1 Available 032863
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction -- A society of long-term commitments -- Sources of change -- Corporate governance: form the employee-favouring firm to the shareholder-favouring firm -- Trading relations -- The industry as community: the competition/cooperation balance among competitors -- The role of government in the economy -- Finanzplatz Deutschland -- The co-determined firm -- The organized community -- Nice guys finish last?

"This is a book about Washington Consensus capitalism and the controversies its encroachment causes in Japan and Germany. Many people in both those countries share the assumptions dominant today in Britain and America - that managers should be intent solely on creating shareholder value and that shareholders' financial logic alone should determine who buys what company on the stock exchange. That way efficiency (and hence global welfare) will be maximized." "The Japanese and German advocates of full-bloodied market capitalism are not having it all their own way, however. In both countries there are articulate defenders of what they consider to be a better way of life, informed by a more humane, more social-solidary, set of values." "Dore traces the fascinating debates which ensue on corporate governance, on worker rights, on supplier relations, on cartels and anti-trust, on pensions and welfare. He also analyses actual changes in economic behaviour - an essential means of sorting out a lot of the muddle and double-talk not just in the internal debates themselves, but even more in the foreign reporting of them." "These accounts of the battle for the national soul in Japan and Germany constitute one of the finest contributions to the 'diversity of capitalism' debate. Dore's account should be read by anyone who is interested to know whether, for all the talk of globalization, that diversity is going to survive.

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