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GraSPP Research Seminar by Hugh Whittaker

December 8, 2025

Details

Type Lecture
Intended for General public / Enrolled students / Applying students / International students / Alumni / Companies / University students / Academic and Administrative Staff
Date(s) December 17, 2025 12:15 — 13:00
Location Hongo Area Campus
Venue TAISEI Conference Room, 14th Floor
International Academic Research Building
Hongo Campus, The University of Tokyo
Entrance Fee No charge
Registration Method Advance registration required
Registration Period December 5, 2025 — December 17, 2025
Contact GraSPP Research Seminar Secretariat
Graduate School of Public Policy
The University of Tokyo
graspp.pr.j[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp
(please replace [at] with @)
GraSPP Research Seminar: “Building a New Economy: Japan’s Digital and Green Transformation”

[Overview]
Japan is attempting to build a new economy. It goes by various names, such as ‘Society 5.0’, ‘sustainable capitalism’, and ‘new form of capitalism’. It is to be constructed through digital and green transformation, and a ‘virtuous cycle of growth and distribution’. The effort faces strong headwinds, including demographic decline and ageing, Japan’s external energy dependence and geopolitical turbulence, and the legacies of Japan’s ‘lost decades’. Nonetheless, since 2015 a path has been identified that steers between Big Tech market oligopoly on the one hand, and an overbearing state on the other. For others facing the same post-neoliberal, sustainability transformation challenges as Japan, this public-private coordinated building effort is noteworthy. Building a New Economy uses an evolutionary conceptual framework of states-and-markets, organizations-and-technology, and institutional change. It shows how the institutional coherence of the manufacturing-centred postwar model broke down, and was followed by the ideological and institutional dissonance of the ‘lost decades’. However, new institutional building blocks have been identified and (partially) assembled which could lead Japan towards a new model which is more open and adaptive. These blocks include a reconfigured developmental state, and new forms of coordination with and within the corporate sector, at times encompassing civil society. Importantly, for a country that has favoured social stability over creative destruction, and has struggled with change, the path forward may require ‘controlled dis-equilibrium’ of institutions rather than tight coherence. ‘Society 5.0’ and the ‘new form of capitalism’ claim to be people-centred; making them so will be the crucial challenge.

[Language]
English

[Speaker]
Hugh Whittaker (Professor, Oxford University)
 
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