H-NET BOOK REVIEW Published by [EMAIL PROTECTED] (March, 2002)

Ronald Dore. _Stock Market Capitalism: Welfare Capitalism: Japan and
Germany versus the Anglo-Saxons_.  New York and Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2000. xii + 239 pp.  Table, index, notes, and preface.
$19.95 (paper), ISBN 0-19-924062-0.

Reviewed for H-Japan by Sandra Katzman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Department
of Foreign Languages, National Defense Academy of Japan

Capital!

This book provides a good guide of change in economic behaviors of
countries.  Although it challenges the less financially astute reader,
it makes more sense upon each reading.  It is well-documented.  The
author explicitly shows a warmth for people's daily lives as the basis
of economic systems.

_Stock Market Capitalism: Welfare Capitalism_ by Ronald Dore is about
"living people whose families and schools and tobacco advertisements and
sitcoms and politicians' speeches and work friendships have made them
into individuals who, in spite of their infinite variety can-most of
them at least-be discerned to belong to the genus Americana, the genus
Japonica, the genus Anglicana or Germanica" (p. viii).

Dore says that he set out originally to consider the future of
capitalism. But by the time he finished writing, an alternative form of
capitalism had already arrived.  And so his inquiry progressed to
"whether or not there will continue to be an alternative form of
capitalism" (p. xi).

Part 1, "The Original Japanese Model," starts with a chart of simple
dichotomies between the Anglo-Saxon firm and its Japanese counterpart.
In a long list, Dore compares the two models across various categories:
mergers and acquisitions, personal objectives of managers, indices used
to measure managerial performance, disciplinary constraints on managers,
social perception of the firm, behavior in a recession, responses to
secular decline of industry sectors, wages and salaries, the nature of
the employment contract, reward dispersion, role of workers' unions,
effort-inducing incentives, the nature of authority relations, and
pension funds.

Part II is titled "Change and Controversy in Japan."  Dore writes about
the extent of change.  For example: "But the charge that Japan has an
'insider system' over which shareholders exercise little monitoring
control remains true" (p. 79).  This broad statement is followed by many
supporting details.

Japanese and German terms appear sometimes side by side, as in an
explanation of a nineteenth century commercial code about auditors.
"(_Kansayakkai_ is the standard translation for the modern German
_Aufsichtsrat_)" (p. 101).

The book includes economic predictions.  "Firms' increased involvement
with the foreign financial community will undoubtedly be one further
route by which the shift to Anglo-Saxon notions of economic rationality
comes to permeate Japanese management" (p. 126).

The author writes with an authority that puts the culture in context
with a single sentence. "The egalitarian characteristics of the Japanese
system-the compressed reward differentials, the strong redistributive
element in the welfare system and the health service, the emphasis on
universal schooling-have all rested, not only on the benevolent
sentiments of the elite, but also on the power to make trouble possessed
by unions and opposition parties" (p. 129).

Dore often numbers the points of his discussion.  For example, "On the
third of the four features which mark Japanese economic structure and
behaviour off from the classical Anglo-Saxon model-a greater tilt
towards cooperation in the competition/cooperation balance among market
competitors" (p. 143).

Dore discusses Japanese industry associations including petrol retail,
domestic airlines, beer, and fire and accident insurance.

Part III is "German Parallels."  Dore describes Japan's similarity to
Germany.  "Japan's post-Confucian neighbors apart, Germany is the
country which most obviously resembles Japan both in being at the
beginning of the financialization/liberalization process and starting,
like Japan, with more deeply institutionalized, uncertainty-eliminating
structures and a much more 'productivist' culture than either Britain or
the United States" (p.  171).  He supports his statements by quoting
public opinion polls and new articles from the main German business
press.

Part IV is the "Conclusion," which addresses the effect of the
convergence of the economic models on countries' identities. "Germany
will clearly lose much of its separate identity as it is absorbed in, or
absorbs, Europe.  Japan will still for a long while to come be a much
more autonomous entity"  (p. 239).

Of the book's organization, the author cautions that although the
largest section is about Japan, the story is about "modern capitalism"
(p. 2).

Dore characterizes some of his research as "a trawl through the
references to the 1997 law introducing stock options in the _Nikkei
Shimbun_" (p.  68).

Dore expresses his opinions in appropriate ways.  In the "notes"
section, Dore refers to a "MITI-convened group, though the report bears
no trace of the fact." (p. 243).  A book about Japanese banking is
"permeated by the 'corruptions of insiderness' assumption" (p. 243).

A thoughtfully detailed book, it's worth the time to read and re-read.

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-- 

Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929
 
Tel. 530-898-5321
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