In this book, Takeo Hoshi and Anil Kashyap examine the history of the
Japanese financial system, from its nineteenth-century beginnings
through the collapse of the 1990s that concluded with sweeping reforms.
Combining financial theory with new data and original case studies, they
show why the Japanese financial system developed as it did and how its
history affects its ongoing evolution.
The authors describe four major periods within Japan's financial history
and speculate on the fifth, into which Japan is now moving. Throughout,
they focus on four questions: How do households hold their savings? How
is business financing provided? What range of services do banks provide?
And what is the nature and extent of bank involvement in the management
of firms? The answers provide a framework for analyzing the history of
the past 150 years, as well as implications of the just-completed
reforms known as the Japanese Big Bang.
Hoshi and Kashyap show that the largely successful era of bank dominance
in postwar Japan is over, largely because deregulation has exposed the
banks to competition from capital markets and foreign competitors. The
banks are destined to shrink as households change their savings patterns
and their customers continue to migrate to new funding sources.
Securities markets are set to re-emerge as central to corporate finance
and governance.