
R. Taggart Murphy
The Weight of the Yen
"Murphy draws on an impressive array of skills
and experience in crafting his narrative of
America's troubled economic relationship with its largest
trading partner."--Clay Chandler, Washington Post
In eight years from 1980 to 1988America fell from
financial grace, becoming the world's largest debtor. This
happened because the United States spent and Japan saved. In the
early 1980s, Reagan's Washington discovered that Japan
would cheerfully lend their vast savings to the United States by
buying U.S. government bonds.
How the Japanese money accumulated, the system that
created it, and American fumbling that led to crippling debt
service, a loss of much of our manufacturing base, and
our economy's diminishing good jobs. The Weight of the Yen
explains it all, in an intriguing, jargon-free analysis of the past
fifteen years and the problems between America and Japan that
are yet to come.
R. Taggart Murphy has lived in Japan for the past fifteen
years. An investment banker, he has had articles and columns in
the Harvard Business Review and the New York Times.
"A very readable often
gripping account of the rise of Japanese economic power."--John Buell,
Commonweal
"A fast-paced account of an important
part of the late 20th century."--Jeffrey E. Garten,
New York Times Book Review
1997 / paperback / ISBN 0-393-31657-2 /
352 pages / economics
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