| | PROBLEMS OF MODERN ECONOMICS, N 3 (63), 2017 | | FROM THE HISTORY OF SOCIO-ECONOMIC THOUGHT AND NATIONAL ECONOMY | | Emel’yanova O. N. PhD student, Chair of History of Economics and Economic Teachings, Department of Economics, M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University
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| The article focuses on the experience of Japan, the first Asian county that started to successfully implement industrial technologies with regard to the experience of Western Europe and the USA. However, since Japan was late to join the era of industrial production and implemented the already existing Western technologies, its economic development is usually classified with the “catching up” model. Accelerated modernization allowed Japan to go through the first stages of the new economy in a shorter time. During the years of the first industrial growth (1885–1890) the country’s industrial infrastructure was created and its textile production enjoyed rapid development. Japan’s industrial experience presents interest for our time | Key words: Japan, history of economics, Meiji revolution, industrial politics, catching up development | Pages: 234 - 240 |
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