01743 a2200385 4500001001100000005001700011008003900028020001800067037003600085040000700121041000800128072001500136072001500151072001500166072001600181072001600197072001400213072001300227072001300240072001600253072001600269072002100285072002100306072002100327072002100348072002100369072002300390100002500413245010700438250000600545260003200551300001000583520074900593999001501342113836914420250317100404.0250312042020GB eng  a9781138369146 bTaylor & FranciscGBP 33.99fBB a01 aeng7 aKCL2thema7 aGTM2thema7 aKJK2thema7 a1FPJ2bisac7 a1FPC2bisac7 aKCLT2bic7 aGTB2bic7 aKJK2bic7 a1FPJ2bisac7 a1FPC2bisac7 aBUS0430302bisac7 aBUS0680002bisac7 aBUS0690202bisac7 aSOC0080002bisac7 aSOC0530002bisac7 a332.67352052bisac1 aAnn Rasmussen Kinney10aJapanese Investment in Manchurian Manufacturing, Mining, Transportation, and Communications, 1931-1945 a1 aOxfordbRoutledgec20200310 a188 p bThis book, first published in 1982, closely examines the Japanese investment in the industries of its puppet state Manchuria in the years 1930 to 1945. Attention is paid to industrial capital by source and type, facilitating the analysis of the relationship between the different investment components on one hand, and economic and institutional factors on the other. The course of inflation is also traced and its relationship to industrial investment studied. The Manchurian experience throws light on the volume of capital available through inflationary processes, the point up to which inflationary financing can successfully be carried, and the institutional factors necessary to make such a policy effective in increasing real investment. c1625d1625