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MICROWAVE PROCESSING-A REVIEW

The Bible of European soldiers for a thousand yearscopied from introduction of book


First rate study of the forgotten President Millard FillmoreFillmore was the last of the four Whig Presidents (although John Tyler was really a Democrat), only two of whom were elected (they both died in office), although he started off in politics as an Anti-Mason and ended up a Know Nothing. Consequently, Casey is careful to explain the changing political climates that saw the rise and fall of these various parties. I also find it interesting that Fillmore, as an up State New York politician, was opposed to the influences of Thurlow Weed in New York City, which does emphasize that his rise to the Presidency was an odd chain of events indeed. Young readers will also be struck by the harsh apprenticeships Fillmore served as a youth, which made his "hatred of the insolent tyrant" a key part of his political beliefs. Throughout his political career, Fillmore endeavored to help the weak against the strong.
I think those volumes in the Encyclopedia of Presidents series that are devoted to the lesser Presidents, such as Millard Fillmore, have an advantage over those on the great leaders like Washington and Lincoln. Almost everybody "knows nothing" about Fillmore, so every thing is new and fresh. I had just read the fine introductory juvenile biography of Fillmore in the "Our Presidents" series and I was impressed by Casey's command of detail. Furthermore, Casey succeeds in arguing out her claim about Fillmore, so there is an argumentative coherence to the biography rather than just a chronological array of historical details. The Encyclopedia of Presidents is the most informative of the various series devoted to the American Presidents, and this volume on Millard Fillmore is one of the best written of the bunch.


The Ministry of Finance: Bureaucratic Practices and the TranThe role of the Japanese government, in particular that of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), in shaping industrial policy and export success in Japan since World War Two has been much debated. In recent years, however, with evident failings in the operation of financial institutions, financial regulation and financial probity, it is the activities of the Japanese Ministry of Finance (MoF) that have come under scrutiny both inside and outside Japan. J. Robert Brown, Jr.'s book is the first English-language monograph to analyse the recent travails of Japan's Finance Ministry in the context of longer term developments. Brown describes how during the early post-war years the priorities set by economic recovery and capital shortages generated a system in which the MoF acted as the agent of stability and recovery. It acquired enormous domestic power from its control over the budget process, and an international reputation for its influence over financial markets, particularly in regulating th e division between banking and securities business initiated under the Occupation. Its position was rooted in informal and personal links and information flow, as well as administrative guidance. Brown describes how the operation of the ministry itself, and its locus in broader decision-making structures, engendered risk aversion, and hindered initiative, innovation and leadership, but the advantages of the system ensured that it continued to operate with a degree of effectiveness as long as the economy grew rapidly. By the early 1970s, however, the original raison d'etre of the banking-securities division was gone. The MoF accepted the need for financial reform, but less so the concomitant and inevitable reduction in its own influence. While the pressure for reform from outside Japan was considerable, the MoF was weak in the face of political pressure and vested interests, and progress was slow until the scandals of the 1980s brought the big securities companies into public disrepute.
The MoF was likewise slow in coping promptly with the banking difficulties that followed the collapse of the Bubble economy in the late 1980s. Historical memories of 1920s banking crises led officials to conceal the real extent of the problems that existed, and resulted in constant attempts to play for time. Banks, like securities companies, were effective in manipulating political pressure, and not until 1995 was the first commercial bank permitted to fail. Incidents such as the Daiwa scandal in New York and the jusen (housing loan companies) losses further exposed the inadequacy of informal reporting, and the need for greater openness for effective regulation.
In describing this course of events, Brown demonstrates a process of painful adjustment in which lessons have been learnt only slowly. He argues that the MoF is far from having overwhelming power, even over the budget, and that politicians have not hesitated to overrule MoF officials when it has been in their constituency or party interest to do so. As such, the ongoing reform of both the financial sector and the MoF itself has a political dimension. Brown concludes, however, that the resolution of the bureaucracy's role must rest with the bureaucracy itself. Japan should, moreover, think carefully before going down the path of any explicitly US model, or breaking up or excessively weakening the MoF.
Brown has written a readable and accessible book, informative for both non-specialist and specialist, for both practitioner and academic. Based on extensive interviews with MoF officials, politicians and private sector financial institution employees, as well as on written sources, it has a refreshing 'down to earth' quality about it. Unlike many works on contemporary Japan, it locates the current problems in a longer term perspective, and as such will be a useful source of reference for business historians. Despite its high price it is likely to be better used than many more learned volumes, and should be welcomed as a valuable addition to the literature.
Copyright 2000 Information Access Company, a Thomson Corporation Company; ASAP Copyright 2000 Frank Cass & Company Ltd. Business History


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