Japan's economy is the world's third-largest and second-most-sophisticated, accounting for nearly 10% of global economic activity. It has the lowest unemployment rate among leading industrial nations and, at the same time, a large and growing manufacturing presence around the world. Yet it has frequently been portrayed as an economic disaster - an Asian Greece or Argentina - on the verge of collapse and threatening to take down the world economy with it.
This view of Japan, long promulgated by Western media, is utterly wrong.
By using Japan's own plans and metrics, and finding the deeper story behind the country's powerful "InfoMerc" business model, Stealth Japan reveals an economic success story different from, and often more successful than, that of Western countries.
Unlike China, Japan has a modern, well-established legal system that increasingly protects contracts and intellectual property. The forced technology transfers of the last century have been replaced with an offshore-export-driven Japan that is nearly invisible to the rest of the world - a fact not lost on the country's leaders.
For decades, as the media has focused on internal GDP and demographic figures, Japan's business and political leaders have continued to favor the export-driven economics central to their post-WWII planning. In almost every respect, these plans have now succeeded: today's Japan is both onshore and offshore, its workers both Japanese and foreign, its production worldwide, and its income both domestic and in countries beyond GDP calculations.
How large is Stealth Japan's economy today? Perhaps no one knows, but readers of Stealth Japan: The Surprise Success of the World's First InfoMerc Economy will quickly discover the unexpected scale and details behind this dramatic success.
About the Author: Scott Foster is a research analyst and writer who worked for American and European investment banks in Japan and Korea for more than 25 years. He is currently Partner at TAP Japan, an investment consultancy in Tokyo, and Alliance Partner at Translink Corporate Finance, a multinational investment banking group headquartered in Europe. Scott is Asia editor of the Strategic News Service (SNS) Global Report, author of the quarterly SNS Asia Letter, and a member of the SNS Future in Review (FiRe) conference advisory board. He holds an MA from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (1982), a -first-degree black belt from the -Karate-no-Michi World Federation (KWF), and an instructor's (shihan) license from the -Tozan-ryu school of shakuhachi (end-blown Japanese bamboo flute) music.