This is the second volume in Ishinomori's epic description of the Japanese economic - political system in manga (comic) book form. Deals with the banking, industrial and computer industries. Includes a chapter on economic cycles, sunspots, Kondratieff and Yoshimura cycles.
Shōtarō Ishinomori (石ノ森章太郎) was a Japanese manga artist and cartoonist. Known as the "King of Manga", he is regarded as one of the most influential manga artists of all time.
Written at the height of the "Japan bubble" -- when Americans were said to be fat and lazy by the Sony CEO -- this book now reads like the comic book version of hubris. Still, it was fun in the '80s. And they still make better cars.
Obviously in the bubble era there was a manga explaining Japanese capitalism. Intriguing if often boring and progressively much less horny as it goes on.
Not bad, but quite a bit out of date! This edition would have benefitted from a smoother translation, or better proofreading, or even consistent use of punctuation (usually absent in Japanese writing, but never in good English.) The stories told by the comic are generally informative, and easy to follow. The random footnotes and inserted tables, on the other hand, often feel out of place and have absolutely nothing to do with the part of the story they are interrupting. Those should have been placed with more care.
Uh, it's a manga that attempts to describe the 80's financial climate in Japan. I guess I just wanted to see a manga depiction of Ronald Regan - Does Not Disappoint.
If all text books were written in the form of a Japanese Manga, the world would be a much better place.
Not that many schools are probably using this book as a text anymore. It goes through complicated topics on currency, trade and fiscal policy using the oil crisis, 1980s VER with the U.S. and the other real-life situations as a backdrop. Of course, there's sex, lies and betrayal too squished between the complicated economic topics.
All that being said, I didn't appreciate Tsugawa, the union-busting businessman playboy with a penchant for luxury goods, being an obvious symbol for American business mentality. So racist.
Still, a great read for people who are huge nerds - I mean, really, it's dense economics mixed in with a manga...
great little short read about the culture and inner workings of the individuals who made the japanese economy the second most powerful in the world and their cars of better quality than america.
Surprisingly entertaining given all the economic jargon in it
I think this book just wasn't my style. I read to page 97 (middle of the second chapter), and I realized that I just didn't care much about what happened. So that was a minus on the storytelling side. I'm not wild about the art either. And I know this isn't terribly important in the grand scheme of things, but the placement and alignment of the English text in the dialog bubbles sized for the Japanese text drove me nuts. The words don't fit the bubbles, and it looks pretty sloppy.
I think the most interesting parts were the prose economics explanations that were interspersed within the pages of manga. Maybe I'll go back and scan through those.
Also, this book was published in 1988, which is before Japan had its big economic meltdown. In light of current events in the US, I was really hoping to read about how they addressed the problems with their country, not so much what was going on in their pre-downturn days.
A bit tough going given the topic is Japanese economics thirty years ago. But contains scraps of fascinating stuff like seeing financial paths beginning which would bloom over time. For example, the dawning realizations that it is more profitable to manipulate stocks and bonds and to do other financial machinations, than to actually make anything. And that labor markets were going to cheaper workers overseas, leaving home country workers unemployed.
Learned: Japan voluntarily restricted its exporting of cars to the United States for three years in the early 1980's. Voluntarily? Would that be possible today?
Also of note--characters recognizing that there is more to life than economics and profit, yet the Reader knowing the world would become more financially, and less culturally, focused over time.
Well its a manga about the financial history of japan from the late 70s through 80s. Its pretty relavent now'ndays if you want yet another monetarist explanation of how finance works. Also its pretty overly optimistic considering what happened in the 90s. Nevertheless, its a great piece of weirdness from japan and has some legit economics/finance teachings in it. It also has a manga version of Reagan, strip clubs, and a ripoff of "I Pencil" at the end.
Who'd have thought a book about the Japanese economy in the 80s could be so boring? Japan Inc. tries to be both an economics textbook and a narrative and doesn't do particularly well at either. The economics is light and often incompletely explained, and the characters in the story are almost painfully two-dimensional.
Uh, it's a manga that attempts to describe the 80's financial climate in Japan. I guess I just wanted to see a manga depiction of Ronald Regan - Does Not Disappoint.