IntroductionJapan Again

We are in a worldwide period of tremendous change, driven by the global information technology (IT) revolution. But not all of Japan has embraced the transformation. The sad truth is that few Japanese political, business, or governmental leaders understand where we are and where we are going. In many important ways, Japan today is the same as it was in the Edo period, when our country was closed off to the world and the leaders of the shogunate1 paid no mind to the changes happening abroad.

Even though we are seeing massive global changes in the IT industry, Japan as a whole seems unable to participate in the process. We drift aimlessly. The IT revolution has created structural shifts that are bringing the world together as if it were one continent. And yet, in Japan, people continue to prefer conventional frameworks, believing that we should enjoy a separate, isolated kind of Galapagos island. People here do not even try to consider the current global reality. This is as true for cell phones as it is for corporate governance and international accounting standards. I believe that the old guard's refusal to allow society to change only results in lowered productivity and weaker competitiveness for Japan.

Nowhere is this problem more obvious than in our government bureaucracy, which has become so bloated and rigid that it should really be called state capitalism. The continuation of the bureaucracy-led economy can only create a situation in which innovation ...

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