R. Florida et M. Kenney, INSTITUTIONS AND ECONOMIC TRANSFORMATION - THE CASE OF POSTWAR JAPANESE CAPITALISM, Growth and change, 25(2), 1994, pp. 247-262
Institutions matter to economic development-particularly to the proces
s of economic transformation. New technologies and new ways of organiz
ing economic activity do not emerge in a vacuum, but bear the imprint
of institutional arrangements. Economic transformation thus entails in
stitutional adaptation as well as technological change-the emergence o
f new-ways of organizing production or production systems and new sets
of social and economic relationships which provide the institutional
context for economic growth and development. Just as importantly, new
institutional arrangements do not emerge tabula rasa, but reflect the
legacy of old social and institutional forms. Given particular social
and institutional legacies, different societies adapt differently to e
conomic transformation. This article employs a theoretically-informed
comparative examination of postwar Japanese capitalism to explore the
critical role played by institutions in the process of economic transf
ormation.