The transition of finance in Japan and the United States : A comparative perspective

Financial liberalization since the mid-1970s has increased the role of competitive forces in both the Japanese and U.S. financial systems. This article assesses the role of competition as an explicit objective of the financial liberalization process and, in particular, focuses on recent arguments ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cargill, Thomas F.
Format: Book
Language:Undetermined
Published: Stanford, Calif. Hoover Institution Press 1988
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Institutions: Trung tâm Học liệu Trường Đại học Cần Thơ
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082 |a 332.0952 
082 |b C276 
100 |a Cargill, Thomas F. 
245 4 |a The transition of finance in Japan and the United States : 
245 2 |b A comparative perspective 
245 0 |c Thomas F. Cargill, Shoichi Royama 
260 |a Stanford, Calif. 
260 |b Hoover Institution Press 
260 |c 1988 
520 |a Financial liberalization since the mid-1970s has increased the role of competitive forces in both the Japanese and U.S. financial systems. This article assesses the role of competition as an explicit objective of the financial liberalization process and, in particular, focuses on recent arguments made about the relative degree of competition between the two financial systems. The article argues that enhanced competition has never been a major objective of financial reform and that the U.S. financial system has been and remains more competitive even after extensive liberalization in Japan. 
650 |a Tài chính,Finance 
650 |z Nhật Bản,Japan 
910 |b dqhieu 
980 |a Trung tâm Học liệu Trường Đại học Cần Thơ