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Politics, Pressure, and Economic Policy: Explaining Japan's Use of Economic Stimulus Policies
While supplementary budgeting has long been part of the Japanese fiscal cycle, substantive and procedural aspects of the process have changed. First, since the late 1970s, supplementary budgets have been used to fund government economic stimulus efforts (keizai taisaku), and second, since the late 1...
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Published in: | World politics 2001-07, Vol.53 (4), p.499-523 |
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description | While supplementary budgeting has long been part of the Japanese fiscal cycle, substantive and procedural aspects of the process have changed. First, since the late 1970s, supplementary budgets have been used to fund government economic stimulus efforts (keizai taisaku), and second, since the late 1980s, these budgets have been assembled several months after the announcement of the actual stimulus packages. Such stimulus policies do not fit the prevailing model of the Japanese electoral business cycle, which emphasizes the targeting of benefits by the Liberal Democratic Party (ldp) at its constituents at election time. This article addresses this anomoly by developing a theory of how governing parties use the economic policy process to serve their electoral interests, particularly through broadly gauged policies designed to improve macroeconomic conditions. The authors amend the prevailing model to allow an adequate test of their electoral theory to be conducted. The results suggest that Japanese economic stimulus policies were the result of governing parties' attempts to expand their support at election time and to satisfy U.S. pressure to usefiscalpolicy to stimulate domestic demand. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1353/wp.2001.0019 |
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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Project Muse:Jisc Collections:Project MUSE Journals Agreement 2024:Premium Collection; PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; JSTOR Archival Journals |
subjects | Budgets Business cycles Decision-making Economic activity Economic Conditions Economic models Economic Policy Economic relations Economic stabilization Elections Fiscal policy Government and politics Government cabinets International politics Japan Macroeconomics Parliamentary system Political economy Political elections Political Parties Political science Politics Public policy Statistical significance Stimuli Stimulus packages United States |
title | Politics, Pressure, and Economic Policy: Explaining Japan's Use of Economic Stimulus Policies |
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