Abstract

This paper shows how Japanese ?rms and the Japanese state constructed a development model based on the steel industry as a generative sector that drove Japan’s economic ascent in the world-historical context of U.S. hegemony. We make three arguments in this paper. First, there is a new model of capital accumulation that does create new forms of social inequality by redistributing costs and bene?ts in very di?erent ways than earlier models. Second, Japanese ?rms and the Japanese state created this new model of capital accumulation and social inequality via mechanisms including joint ventures, long term contracts, and other forms of international trade and investment, not U.S.-based transnational corporations, as is usually assumed. Third, world-systems theory reconstructed through the lens of the new historical materialism explains this restructuring of the capitalist world-economy as the outcome of Japan’s economic ascent over the last ?fty years. Further, we argue that this new model of capital accumulation has had similar impacts on redistributing the costs and bene?ts of development between core and peripheral regions of the capitalist world-economy in a wide range of global industries. These strategies created a tightly linked set of technological and organizational innovations to overcome the natural and social obstacles to Japanese development, dramatically increase Japan’s international economic competitiveness by lowering production costs in all sectors of the economy, turn Japan into the world’s largest exporter of manufactured products, restructure a range of global industries, and recreate the world-system hierarchy in support of Japanese development. In particular, organizational inno-vations in the use of long term contracts and joint ventures in raw materials industries to foster global excess capacity and lower rents to resource extracting ?rms and states reallocated the costs of providing the material building blocks of Japanese development to the states and ?rms of its new raw materials periphery. This competitive advantage drove Japanese capital accumulation and economic ascent, and simultaneously drove underdevelopment in Japan’s periphery. These Japanese innovations became key elements of globalization as U.S. and European transnational corporations and states sought to compete with Japan. Joint ventures, long-term contracts, and other forms of inter?rm cooperation have replaced vertically integrated foreign direct investment, the earlier U.S. model of capital accumulation and international economic linkage, as the model for global industries.

Highlights

  • At the end of the twentieth century, many analysts argue that development theory is in crisis and unable to explain the functioning and consequences of the “new world economy”

  • Organizational innovations in the use of long term contracts and joint ventures in raw materials industries to foster global excess capacity and lower rents to resource extracting firms and states reallocated the costs of providing the material building blocks of Japanese development to the states and firms of its new raw materials periphery

  • This competitive advantage drove Japanese capital accumulation and economic ascent, and simultaneously drove underdevelopment in Japan’s periphery. These Japanese innovations became key elements of globalization as U.S and European transnational corporations and states sought to compete with Japan

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

At the end of the twentieth century, many analysts argue that development theory is in crisis and unable to explain the functioning and consequences of the “new world economy” (see, e.g., Evans 1999; Hamilton 1999; McMichael 1999). Historically one of the most localized industries in the world, experienced the most dramatic globalization, with seaborne trade increasing from 145 billion ton-miles in 1960 to 1,849 billion ton-miles in 1990. Japanese firms and the Japanese state created this new model of capital accumulation and social inequality via mechanisms including joint ventures, long-term contracts, and other forms of international trade and investment, not U.S.-based transnational corporations, as is usually assumed. World-systems theory reconstructed through the lens of the new historical materialism explains this restructuring of the capitalist world-economy as the outcome of Japan’s economic ascent over the last fifty years. Japan’s restructuring of the capitalist world economy over the past fifty years, and the conclusion outlines how the new historical materialism provides a model for understanding the causes and consequences of international inequality

NEW HISTORICAL MATERIALISM
JAPAN’S CONSTRUCTION OF ITS PERIPHERY SINCE WORLD WAR II
JAPAN’S RECONSTRUCTION OF THE WORLD ECONOMY AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
Findings
CONCLUSION
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