Bibliographic Information

The digital transformation and Japan's political economy

Ulrike Schaede, Kay Shimizu

(Cambridge elements, . Elements in politics and society in East Asia / edited by Erin Aeran Chung, Mary Alice Haddad, Benjamin L. Read)

Cambridge University Press, 2022

  • : pbk

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [70]-77)

ISSN for subseries "Elements in politics and society in East Asia": 2632735X

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Digital transformation and demographic change are usually seen as two separate but equally threatening events that foreshadow job replacement, industrial decline, and social bifurcation. Because Japan is the world's frontrunner in demographic change with an ageing and shrinking society, it is facing these two disruptions at the exact same time. This creates a 'lucky moment,' as it presents an opportunity to employ one as a solution for the problems caused by the other. For example, Japan's traditional sectors are replaced by digital systems that demand fewer people while offering new jobs. Emerging technologies are opening fresh opportunities for Japanese companies to compete globally. The twin disruptions are also upending Japan's political economy. As companies reinvent business strategies and employees reskill to pursue individual careers, the state is reorganizing to find a new role in balancing the unfolding demands of the digital economy.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Definitions: The digital transformation (DX) and demographic change
  • 3. Context: Japan's political economy in the post-WWII era
  • 4. The DX and business: new technologies, Industries, and global strategies
  • 5. The DX and people: new employment patterns and reskilling
  • 6. The DX and the State: toward a new political economy
  • 7. Conclusion: the DX and Japan's new political economy.

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