02122nam a2200301Ia 4500001001100000005001700011008004100028020001500069020001800084043003000102050002400132090001200156245016100168260004600329300003000375500002700405504005200432520052100484520063001005650002001635650002001655650002801675650002901703650002001732650002101752650003201773999001501805000001022120251012174621.0 820512s1983 ctua b 001 0 eng a0300029349 a9780300029345 aa-ii---aa-ja---an-us---00aHG187.I4bG643 198300a33221914aThe financial development of India, Japan, and the United States :ba trilateral institutional, statistical, and analytic comparisoncRaymond W. Goldsmith.  aNew HavenbYale University Presscc1983.  axiv, 120 p.bill.c22 cm. aErrata slip inserted.  aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 0 aGoldsmith focuses on trends in investment and saving; the devellopment of money and banking and other financiasl institutions; the methods of financing households, business, and government; and changes in the structure of national balance sheets. He a ttempts to identify the main factors-economic and noneconomic-that have been responsible for the remarkable differences among the three countries in the relationships between theeir financial superstructures and their infrastructures of national income and wealth.0 aIndia and Japan, which found themselves at roughly the same level of economic and financial development in the 1860s, have advanced since then at strikingly different rates: India very slowly, Japan with unprecedented speed. In this book, Raymond Gold smith highlights the essential differences between the financial structures of India and Japan and compares them to that of the United States, regarded as the prototype in this field. The data used aretaken, in the case of India and Japan, form two volumes published simultaneously (see back cover), which offer much more detail, as well as documented statistical evidence. 0aFinancezIndia. 0aFinancezJapan. 0aFinancezUnited States. 6aFinanceszâEtats-Unis. 6aFinanceszInde. 6aFinanceszJapon.17aFinancièele positie.2gtt c7336d7336