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...Bunroku Yoshino, president of the Institute for International Economic Studies in Tokyo, predicted that Nakasone's modest plan would have little impact. He expects the Japanese growth rate to slip from 4.5% this year to 4% or even 3.5% in 1986, primarily because the country's exports will increase at a slower pace. The government is reluctant to adopt more potent stimulative measures, like large tax cuts, because it wants to keep the Japanese inflation rate, only about 2.5% this year, firmly under control...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Running Out of Steam | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

...long run, China could become the most attractive market of all. Already Japan sends more goods to China[*] some $9 billion worth so far this year--than any other country except the U.S. "We see no limit to economic relations with China," said Japan's Yoshino. In addition, China is building trade with less developed Asian countries, buying rubber and pig iron, for example, from Malaysia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Running Out of Steam | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

...Whatever happens legally, unless there’s a successful Constitutional challenge brought, Congress will always retain the right to close any loophole or any finding of compliance,” says Kenji Yoshino ’91, a Yale professor who specializes in discrimination and gay rights...

Author: By Elisabeth S. Theodore, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Yale Law Suspends Recruiting Policy | 10/3/2002 | See Source »

...Governor Masayasu Kitagawa of Mie prefecture unilaterally canceled a major nuclear power plant, a project as dear to Tokyo's planners as Nagano's dams. And in Tokushima, Governor Tadashi Ota won re-election in April 2002 by promising to stop construction of a giant sluice dam on the Yoshino River. In a recent referendum, 90% of Tokushima city voters opposed the dam. Nor is the trouble found only in outlying prefectures. Governor Akiko Domoto of Chiba, right on Tokyo's doorstep, announced in September 2001 that she was halting a project to fill in Sanbanze, Tokyo Bay's last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People Power | 9/9/2002 | See Source »

...should underestimate the long memories and dogged persistence of the bureaucrats either. Public resistance to the Yoshino dam project in Tokushima forced the River Bureau to "table" it. The bureau did not officially cancel the project, keeping the option of pursuing it later. A bureau spokesman commented that a blank page should not be allowed to appear in his ministry's history dating back to the Meiji period?institutional memory going back more than a century...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People Power | 9/9/2002 | See Source »

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