In Asias Flying Geese, Walter F. Hatch tackles the puzzle of Japans paradoxically slow change during the economic crisis it faced in the 1990s. Why didnt the purportedly unstoppable pressures of globalization force a rapid and radical shift in Japans business model? In a book with lessons for the larger debate about globalization and its impact on national economies, Hatch shows how Japanese political and economic elites delayed—but could not in the end forestall—the transformation of their distinctive brand of capitalism by trying to extend it to the rest of Asia.For most of the 1990s, the region grew rapidly as an increasingly integrated but hierarchical group of economies. Japanese diplomats and economists came to call them flying geese. The lead goose or most developed economy, Japan, supplied the capital, technology, and even developmental norms to second-tier geese such as Singapore and South Korea, which themselves traded with Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines, and so on down the V-shaped line to Indonesia and coastal China. Japans model of capitalism, which Hatch calls relationalism, was thus fortified, even as it became increasingly outdated. Japanese elites enjoyed enormous benefits from their leadership in the region as long as the flock found ready markets for their products in the West.The decade following the collapse of Japans real estate and stock markets would, however, see two developments that ultimately eroded the countrys economic dominance. The Asian economic crisis in the late 1990s destabilized many of the surrounding economies upon which Japan had in some measure depended, and the Peoples Republic of China gained new prominence on the global scene as an economic dynamo. These changes, Hatch concludes, have forced real transformation in Japans corporate governance, its domestic politics, and in its ongoing relations with its neighbors.
Introduction: External Sources of Continuity and ChangePart One: BASELINE1. Social Networks and the Power They Produce2. The Postwar Political Economy of Japan3. Leading a Flock of GeesePart Two: THE 1990S4. Maintaining the Relational S