... most inappropriate for Japan, industries such as steel, oil refining, petrochemicals, automobiles, aircraft, industrial machinery of all sorts, and electronics including electronic computers. From a short-run static viewpoint, encouragement of such... Asian Firms: History, Institutions and Management - 第 37 頁Frank B. Tipton 著 - 2008 - 432 頁有限的預覽 - 關於此書
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Ways and Means. Subcommittee on Trade - 1980 - 248 頁
...that in consideration of comparative cost of production should be the most inappropriate for Japan, industries such as steel, oil refining, petro-chemicals,...sorts, and electronics, including electronic computers. From a short-run, static viewpoint, encouragement of such industries would seem to conflict with economic... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Ways and Means. Subcommittee on Trade - 1980 - 244 頁
...should be the most inappropriate for Japan, industries such as steel, oil refining, petrc-chemicals, automobiles, aircraft, industrial machinery of all...sorts, and electronics, including electronic computers. From a short-run, static viewpoint, encouragement of such industries would seem to conflict with economic... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Banking, Finance, and Urban Affairs. Subcommittee on Economic Stabilization - 1983 - 1068 頁
...that in consideration of comparative cost of production should be the most inappropriate for Japan, industries such as steel, oil refining, petrochemicals,...automobiles, aircraft, industrial machinery of all sorts, and later electronics, including electronic computers. From a short-run, static viewpoint, encouragement... | |
| Andrew Gordon - 1993 - 514 頁
...minister of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), proclaimed in a 1970 speech that the Ministry of International Trade and Industry decided...According to Napoleon and Clausewitz, the secret of a successful strategy is the concentration of fighting power on the main battle grounds; fortunately,... | |
| Irfan-ul-Haque, R. Martin N. Bell - 1995 - 232 頁
...industries that in consideration of comparative cost of production should be most inappropriate for Japan, industries such as steel, oil refining, petrochemicals,...automobiles, aircraft, industrial machinery of all sorts, and later electronics, including electronic computers. From a short-term, static' viewpoint, encouragement... | |
| Stephen S. Large - 1998 - 336 頁
...minister of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), proclaimed in a 1970 speech that the Ministry of International Trade and Industry decided...According to Napoleon and Clausewitz, the secret of a successful strategy is the concentration of fighting power on the main battle grounds; fortunately,... | |
| Richard Katz - 1998 - 484 頁
...MITI itself. As MITI Vice Minister Yoshihisa Ojimi told the OECD: MITI decided to establish in Japan industries . . . such as steel, oil refining, petrochemicals,...sorts, and electronics, including electronic computers. From a short-run static viewpoint, encouragement of such industries would seem to conflict with economic... | |
| Vivek Suneja - 2000 - 302 頁
...cost of production should be the most inappropriate for Japan, industries such as steel, oilrefioing, petro-chemicals, automobiles, aircraft, industrial...sorts, and electronics, including electronic computers. From a short-run, static viewpoint, encouragement of such industries would seem to conflict with economic... | |
| Malcolm Trevor - 2001 - 316 頁
...technology, industries that in consideration of competitive cost should be the most inappropriate for Japan, industries such as steel, oil refining, petrochemicals,...sorts, and electronics, including electronic computers. From a short run, static viewpoint, encouragement of such industries would seem to conflict with economic... | |
| Elise K. Tipton - 2002 - 280 頁
...it. In 1970, for example, the Vice Minister of MITI modestly expounded on the ministry's prescience: The Ministry of International Trade and Industry decided...According to Napoleon and Clausewitz, the secret of a successful strategy is the concentration of fighting power on the main battle grounds; fortunately,... | |
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