Crisis and Change in the Japanese Financial System

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Gewicht:
517 g
Format:
235x155x19 mm
Beschreibung:

1. The Japanese Financial System: An Introductory Overview.- I The Origins Of Japan S Banking Crisis.- 2. What Caused Japan's Banking Crisis?.- 3. Causes of Japan's Banking Problems in the 1990s.- II Responding To Crisis.- 4. The Stagnant Japanese Economy in the 1990s: The Need for Financial Supervision to Restore Sustained Growth.- 5. The Reorganization of Japan's Financial Bureaucracy: The Politics of Bureaucratic Structure and Blame Avoidance.- 6. The Disposal of Bad Loans in Japan: The Case of the CCPC.- 7. Bank Lending in Japan: Its Determinants and Macroeconomic Implications.- 8. The Postal Savings System, Fiscal Investment and Loan Program, and Modernization of Japan's Financial System.- III Financial Structure Change and the Big Bang.- 9. The Big Bang: Idea and Reality.- 10. The Big Bang in Japanese Securities Markets.- 11. Japan's Financial Big Bang: Its Impact on the Legal System and Corporate Governance.- 12. Big Bang Deregulation and Japanese Corporate Governance: A Survey of the Issues.
At the start of the twenty-first century, the Japanese financial system is undergoing a major transformation. This process is spurred by a sense of crisis. Dominated by large institutions, the Japanese banking system has suffered from serious problems with non-performing loans since the early 1990s, when the Japanese stock market and urban real estate market both crashed. Delays in responding to these twin asset bubbles, by both regulatory authorities and the banks themselves, made matters worse and led to a banking crisis in late 1997 and early 1998. Not anticipating this setback, in late 1996 the Japanese government inaugurated its Big Bang of comprehensive financial deregulation designed to complete the process of creating `free, fair, and open financial markets'. Beginning in late 1998 and early 1999 the government finally embarked on a major rehabilitation of the Japanese banking system, including making available some Yen 60 trillion (approximately USD 500 billion) of government funds to recapitalize fifteen major banks, adequately fund the deposit insurance program, and write off the bad loans of nationalized or bankrupted banks. One result of this reform process is that the Ministry of Finance (MOF), which dominated Japanese financial system policy for most of the post-war period, has been stripped of most of its former regulatory powers.
The purpose of this book is to describe, analyze, and evaluate the process that is transforming the Japanese financial system. The chapters address various issues relating to the transition of the Japanese financial system from a bank-centered and relationship-based system to a competitive market-based system. Questions taken up include: Why did Japanese banks get into such serious trouble? Why has the MOF lost its immense power? How will the Big Bang's financial deregulation further change the Japanese financial system, including the huge government financial institutions and postal savings system? What are some of the broader implications of this transition?
The book is divided into three parts: Part I considers the origins of Japan's banking crisis; Part II focuses on five particularly important areas of major actual and potential changes; Part III addresses the effects of the Big Bang, including its potential systemic externalities. Taken together, this book offers an unusually up-to-date, comprehensive and thorough appraisal and evaluation of the profound changes occurring in Japan's financial system.

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