2021-02-04

Ramseyer, J. Mark. Odd Markets in Japanese History: Law and Economic Growth Ramseyer, J. Mark

Amazon.com: Odd Markets in Japanese History: Law and Economic Growth (Political Economy of Institutions and Decisions) (9780521563864): Ramseyer, J. Mark: Books

Odd Markets in Japanese History: Law and Economic Growth (Political Economy of Institutions and Decisions)
by J. Mark Ramseyer  (Author)
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Review
"This is a provocative and original book, one well worth reading and thinking about." Pacific Affairs

"J. Mark Ramseyer's Odd Markets in Japanese History is a stimulating, infuriating, and truculent series of essays..." David L. Howell, Monumenta Nipponica

"This is a provocative and original book, one well worth reading and thinking about." Stephan Salzberg, Pacific Affairs

"Viola's book opens a fascinating window on the peasant world....Viola forces us to ask new and different questions about collectivization. Her book will be a starting point for all serious thought on the subject." Book Reviews



Book Description
This book uses a rational-choice approach to study the impact of Japanese law on economic growth in Japan.
From the Back Cover
Using a straightforward rational-choice approach, Professor Ramseyer explores the impact that law had on various markets in Japanese history and the effect that those markets had on economic growth. In doing so, he applies an economic logic to markets in a different world in a different historical period with a different political regime and a different legal system. 

He looks hardest at those markets that have most often struck traditional observers as "exploitative" (e.g., the markets for indentured servants and for sexual services). 

Within those markets, he focuses on the way participants handled informational asymmetries in the contracting process. 

  • Ramseyer finds that Japanese courts generally defined important property rights clearly, and that
  •  Japanese markets generally protected an individual's control over his or her own labor. 
  • As a result, that the Japanese economy grew at relatively efficient levels follows directly from standard economic theory. 

  • He also concludes that the legal system usually promoted mutually advantageous deals, and that market participants (whether poor or rich, female or male) generally mitigated informational asymmetries shrewdly by contract. 
  • He finds no systematic evidence of either sex- or age-based exploitation.

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Product details
Publisher : Cambridge University Press (September 28, 1996)
Language : English
Hardcover : 212 pages
ISBN-10 : 0521563860
ISBN-13 : 978-0521563864
Item Weight : 1.06 pounds
Dimensions : 6 x 0.63 x 9 inches

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