Edward M. Feasel is the Dean of Faculty and Professor of Economics at Soka University of America, USA. He received his bachelor in Economics from Yale University and completed his PhD in Economics from the University of California, Berkeley. His research interests are in economic outcomes and societal values, regional economic issues - Orange County Economy, economic growth, and effects of monetary and fiscal policy.
1. Introduction: a comprehensive examination of Japan's aid 2. Japan's Remarkable Catch up and the Founding Principles of its ODA Policy 3. The Role of ODA in Japan's Economic Success Story 4. Case Studies of Japan's ODA, Exports and Diplomatic Relations in Developing Asia 5. The Aid Discourse and the Evolution of Japan's Aid Policy 6. The Influence of ODA and Economic Ties on the Perception of Foreign Governments 7. Japan's Aid: its effects on economic growth in recipient countries with a comparison to other donors 8. Lessons and Implications of Japan's Aid
In the twentieth century Japan emerged as one of the world's leading economic powers: rising from wartime destruction to a leading economic engine in world markets. Japan's economic aid policy, beginning with war reparations following its defeat in World War II, became a vehicle to help achieve this economic success. As the country continued to flourish, economic aid also became a means of expanding the country's influence in an era of increasing globalization, providing an alternative strategy for helping developing nations escape the traps of poverty: a strategy drawn from its own experience of reemergence. And as we stand at the beginning of a new century, Japanese aid policy may also serve as a potential model for other nations who are on the cusp of entering high-income status and the group of elite world donors: a model that in many ways lies in contrast to policies espoused by other advanced Western nations.
The book Japan's Aid examines the strengths and weaknesses of Japanese aid policy in all of these dimensions: in fostering economic growth in both its own economic success story and in the numerous countries to which it has served as the single largest bilateral donor over many years; and as a policy that other nations might emulate. Through a combination of insightful case studies and rigorous econometric investigation, the book presents a comprehensive examination of the pros and cons of Japan's aid.