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The Theory of Growth in a Corporate Economy
Management, Preference, Research and Development, and Economic Growth
This book investigates the growth of an economy with management-controlled corporations.
Hiroyuki Odagiri (Author)
9780521068314, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 10 July 2008
236 pages
22 x 15 x 1.4 cm, 0.35 kg
This book investigates the growth of an economy with management-controlled corporations. It begins by studying the behaviour of a corporation whose management maximizes the rate of growth constrained by the threat of takeover, and in which research and development efforts are made to raise labour productivity. The growth of an economy consisting of a limited number of such corporations is then analysed. In this economy the stocks of corporations are the sole means of wealth-holding available to households. This theory is compared with other well-established growth theories, and some extensions of the basic theory, including policy implications, are also presented. The book contains many important innovative features: the combination of micro- and macro-economic analyses, the consideration of research and development activity, and the role of corporate stocks in economic growth. These features contribute to the major conclusion that the behaviour of management – a product of its preferences and of its environment – is an important factor in economic growth. Applying this conclusion to compare corporate growth in Japan and the United States, the author finds that the Japanese business environment makes management pursue corporate growth more vigourously than in the United States.
Part I. Microeconomics: 1. Modern corporations and the management
2. Takeovers and managerial choice
3. The value and growth of the firm
Part II. Macroeconomics: 4. The role of corporate shares in general equilibrium
5. The model of economic growth
Part III. Why a new theory?: 6. Theoretical relevance: growth models compared
7. Empirical relevance: Japan's economic growth
Part IV. Fiscal and monetary policy: 8. Fiscal policy in a moneyless economy
9. Economic policy in a monetary economy
Part V. Toward a dynamic theory of a multisector economy: 10. The managerial sector versus the neoclassical sector.
Subject Areas: Microeconomics [KCC]