The Chinese ideology : economic confrontation in the current world
著者
書誌事項
The Chinese ideology : economic confrontation in the current world
Focalpoint, 2023
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 459-475) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
How could the deteriorating trend of debt-driven world economy come to an end? What sort of logic is effectuating behind recent Chinese militaristic diplomacy in Asia-Pacific? Why Japan could not be a genuinely modern constitutionalist state, despite its spectacular economic comeback? The ancient ideology that once led successful Eastern civilization - yet still unknown to the West - is running all major economic powers in East Asia with a secretive political arrangement.
Since the 19th century, war and turmoil continued elsewhere after the arrival of two modern ideologies in Europe - Communism and Fascism/Nazism. The World, however, prevented its politics from going to the total destruction of economy on earth, as Berlin Wall was duly dismantled by the people's power in Germany. Why a similar political solution cannot be expected in East Asia?
The economic system that contributed so much to the expansion of Eastern Civilization for thousands of years and embedded in its religions, politics, social practice and culture, is emerging today to present an insoluble controversy in modern politics. We only can clarify the mechanism of such ancient ideology by concentrating on Political Economy - absent in modern social science, since the days of Thomas Robert Malthus and John Maynard Keynes.
This research work explains about a forgotten progress in the history of mankind and its ongoing reality under disguised double standard of Japanese Liberal Democracy and Chinese Communism against powerless international legal system, existing and functioning without a spirit of global modernization. An essential reading for keen professionals to find out the decisive turn round of intensifying economic crisis in our hyper-technological world.
目次
Lists of Maps and Illustrations
Preface
Introduction - The Trend in Eurasia
The Rise and Fall of Nazism
PART ONE - THE THEORY
Economic Crisis in East Asia
The Forgotten Ideology
The Chinese Mode for Expansion
A Centralized Regime and the Economic Cycle
The Nature of Chinese Growth
The Prototype - Yin-Zhou 'Revolution'
The Political Core
Chinese Characters and Its Rationalization
What is Arch-Bureaucracy?
The Original Chinese Pattern
The Korean Pattern
The Japanese Pattern
Resurgence of Anarchic Japan
Two Colliding Civilizations
The Political Core Trap
Control by Human Network
Fragmentation of Power
Areal Concept Without Strategy
End of expansion
PART TWO - THE PRACTICAL TREND
I - China and the Chinese Economic Area
Why Communism Still Flourish?
Problem of Socialist Market Economy
Advanced Arch-Bureaucracy
Chinese Democracy in Taiwan
Increasing Uncertainty in Hong Kong
Colonial Power in Singapore
Successful Immigration to South East Asia
II - South Korea
A Faltering Idealism
Catching up with Japanese Economy
Emerging Democracy
III - North Korea
A Drifting Autocracy
The Failure of People's Democracy
An Existing Deterrent in the Peninsula
Defeatism as a Major Stumbling Block
PART THREE - JAPAN IN CRISIS
I - The System
A Failed Democracy
The Invisible Power of Prime Minister
The Decisive Role of Emperor
Arch-Bureaucracy Revived Naturally
No Spirit of Capitalism
The Obscure Civil Liberty
The Mounting Obstacle in Front of Japan
Pleading Without Oath
No Real Sovereignty in the East
Factional Politics Must Go
The Deepening Division of West and East
II - The Origin of the Deflationary Spiral
The Established Chinese Ideology
Persisting Ancient Economic Cycle
Bubble that Failed to be Defined
Struggling Japanese Economists
Banking Bureaucracy and Its Failure
Impossible Ideology for Capitalism
A Failing 'Big Bang' in Japan
British Democracy with a Japanese Touch
MOF Rules Japan in Old Style
Quantitative Easing of Different Dimensions
Global Capitalism in Danger
III - An Impossible Reform
The Mandate Given
Yasukuni Shrine and Chinese Anger
Who Will Take the Responsibility This Time?
Surprise Visit to Pyongyang
Manifesto For Delay and No Decision
The Road Corporation Fiasco
A Perception Gap at Postal Corporation
The 'Main Castle' Intact
Conflicts Amongst Chinese Ideological States
Unstoppable Global Democratization
PART FOUR - THE CHANGE
The Land of Human Gods
Factionalism Forbids the Japanese Unification
Political Basis of Modern China
A Sense of Crisis
The Roman Empire and Christianity
Ideological Confrontation in Eurasia
European Expansion
Britain Led the Modern Economy
American Growth
America on the Alert
US Politics Needs a Reinforcement
No Valid Social Science
The Global Source of Intelligence
Can Japan take the Responsibility?
How long Must This Ideology Continue?
Japan as the Cornerstone for Global Democracy
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
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