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About Eamonn Fingleton
Author of In the Jaws of the Dragon; Unsustainable; In Praise of Hard Industries; Blindside; and the Penguin Money Book
Forty years of Foresight
A retrospective on Fingleton's record as a commentator
About In the Jaws of the Dragon
A 2008 book in which Fingleton challenges the Washington view that China is converging to Western values
About In Praise of Hard Industries
Published in 1999 and subtitled Why Manufacturing, Not the Information Economy, Is the Key to Future Prosperity, this was Fingleton's challenge to America's exaggerated hopes for the New Economy
About Blindside
Fingleton's controversial 1995 book on why the Japanese economic system is not capitalism -- and how "basket case" Japan secretly seized the lead in advanced manufacturing when Washington wasn't looking
About Unsustainable.org
Named for the headline over an article Fingleton published in the American Prospect in 2000, Unsustainable.org was founded in 2001 as the Internet's first site on America's trade disaster
Amazon.com on Hard Industries
Amazon's business editor named Hard Industries one of the ten best books of 1999
Business Week on Blindside
One of the best books of the year
Finding Fingleton's Books
Navigating Amazon's problematical catalog
中文 [For Chinese Speakers]
冯艾盟先生简介。。。馮艾盟先生簡介
日本語 [For Japanese Speakers]
エーモン・フィングルトン略歴
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Archives 2001--2007

About Eamonn Fingleton

Biographical note and contact information

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 VISIT MY NEW WEBSITE AT WWW.FINGLETON.NET

 

A former editor for Forbes and the Financial Times, Eamonn Fingleton has been monitoring East Asian economics since he met China's supreme leader Deng Xiaoping in 1986 as a member of a top U.S. financial delegation. The following year he predicted the Tokyo banking crash and went on in Blindside, a controversial 1995 analysis that was praised by J.K. Galbraith and Bill Clinton, to show that a heedless America was fast losing its formerly vaunted leadership in advanced manufacturing to Japan.

His 1999 book In Praise of Hard Industries: Why Manufacturing, Not the Information Economy, Is the Key to Future Prosperity anticipated the American Internet stock crash of 2000. (Click to view the Amazon page for the original 1999 edition)

In his 2008 book In the Jaws of the Dragon: America's Fate in the Coming Era of Chinese Hegemony, he issues a strong challenge to the conventional view among Washington policymakers and think tank analysts that China is converging to Western economic and political  forms and attitudes. His books have been read into the U.S. Senate record and named among the ten best business books of the year by Business Week and Amazon.com. 


For a detailed biographical note and contact information, see below. 

Eamonn Fingleton: Biographical Note 

Eamonn Fingleton is the author most recently of  In  the Jaws of the Dragon: America's Fate in the Coming Era of Chinese Hegemony   (New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2008). Based on more than two decades of on-the-spot observation of East Asian economic and political developments, the book challenges the conventional view that as living standards rise, China will become increasingly Western in its politics and economics. China is instead converging to the East Asian econo-political model, a much misunderstood hybrid system that is fundamentally incompatible with Western traditions and values. Pioneered by Japan after World War II and now widely espoused throughout the Confucian world, this model presages massive problems for today's Western-defined world order that -- thanks to the foreign trade lobby's success in fostering extreme pro-globalism attitudes in the American press and in Washington -- have hitherto been largely swept under the carpet in American discussions. 

Yet all the evidence is that when the Western and East  Asian systems are pitted in head to head competition, the East Asian  one proves decisively more effective in creating trade surpluses  and building national economic power -- while Western nations that pursue free trade find themselves increasingly hollowed out and more and more dependent on foreign creditors.

Fingleton is also the author of  In Praise of Hard Industries: Why  Manufacturing, Not the Information Economy, Is the Key to Future  Prosperity. Published by Houghton Mifflin in September 1999, this presented a point by point rebuttal of the exaggerated claims then being made for the New Economy. The book was soon vindicated when the Wall Street dot.com bubble burst in the spring of 2000. The book was named one of the ten best business books of 1999 by Amazon.com Business Editor Harry C. Edwards. It was also named one of the Ten Books that Matter by  The Industry Standard,  a now  defunct magazine for Internet professionals. It has been translated into Japanese and Korean. An updated edition of Hard Industries, with a new introduction, was published by Nation Books in New York under the title Unsustainable: How Economic  Dogma Is Destroying American Prosperity in 2003.  

Fingleton's earlier book, Blindside: Why Japan Is Still on Track to Overtake the U.S. by the Year 2000, was named one of the Ten Best Business Books of 1995 by Business Week. Excerpted in both Foreign Affairs and Fortune, Blindside was published in French and Japanese as well as in several English-language editions and was described as "a good book" by President Bill Clinton in a letter to Senator Fritz Hollings in July of 1995 (click here to view that letter http://72.167.117.219/pdf/hollings-letter.pdf). 
 
Blindside showed that, behind a cloak of exaggerated economic dysfunction, the Japanese economic system quietly surpassed the United States in the most advanced and geopolitically important areas of manufacturing during the 1990s. Fingleton predicted that this would power such a sharply contrasting trend in the two nations' trade performances that their ranking in the world economic pecking would be reordered. While for a time the Blindside argument seemed badly misconstrued (at least to those who had not read the book), Fingleton's point that Japan's economic and financial problems in the 1990s were greatly exaggerated is now widely, if tacitly, accepted by virtually every independent expert. As Fingleton has pointed out, many of his most influential intellectual opponents have had large, if hidden, vested interests in in pushing the basket-case story. For a start Japanese exporters have seen it as a way to keep the yen from being bid up on world currency markets. Meanwhile top trade officials have used it to fend off pressure from Western governments to open Japanese markets. Even Western investment bankers have seen advantage in grossly exaggerating Japan's problems. The hidden factor here is their involvement in the so-called "yen carry trade." The term refers to a complicated maneuver in which bankers can profit from keeping the yen as low as possible. In pursuit of this agenda, investment banking analysts have fed outright mendacities into the Western press to persuade currency traders and investors to sell the yen. Even prestigious thinktanks have had a hidden agenda. Not only do they receive much of their funding from investment banks and other entities actively engaged in promoting the "basket-case Japan" story, but the fact that as soon as Japan became widely considered perceived as a crippled economy the door was opened for them again to accept donations from Japanese corporations and even from Japanese government entities. This contrasts markedly with the position as of the late 1980s when any thinktank that accepted Japanese money was widely considered to suffer a serious conflict of interest. Fingleton has identified five top-rated investment analysts -- Peter Tasker, Alexander Kinmont, Kenneth Courtis, Robert Feldman, and Jesper Koll -- as having been particularly influential in promoting the basket-case story. On several occasions since 1998 he has issued invitations to each of them in turn to come forward to debate the "lost decade" story in public. All five have refused.

 

Fingleton maintains that it has become clear in retrospect that it was the United States, not Japan, that became an economic basket case in the 1990s. He points out that, with less than half of America's population, Japan passed the United States in net manufacturing added value during the "lost decade" and as of 2007  its exports to China had risen to more than twice those of the United States.  Between 1989 and 2007, Japan's current account surpluses had increased nearly fourfold. By contrast in the same period America's current account deficit had ballooned nearly sevenfold . 

Fingleton was born in Ireland in 1948 and won a scholarship to Trinity College Dublin, where he studied economics and mathematics and edited the student newspaper. On graduating in 1970, he joined the Irish Independent, Ireland's largest newspaper, as economics reporter. In 1973 he moved to London, working first as a reporter for Investors Guardian and later as personal finance editor of the  Financial Times. In 1979 he was selected by Sir James Goldsmith to join a "dream team" of top Fleet Street journalists who launched Now! magazine.  With Tom Tickell, he co-authored the Penguin Money Book  (London:  Penguin Books, 1981).   He moved to New York as an associate editor for Forbes  magazine in 1981.

In 1985 he was posted to Tokyo as East Asia bureau chief for Euromoney. He subsequently reported from most of East Asia's major economies and, as a member of a New York Stock Exchange delegation, met China's supreme leader Deng Xiaoping at Beijing's Great Hall of the People in 1986.  He quickly established a reputation for the depth of his understanding of the East Asian economic system and for boldly prescient judgments. Beginning in September 1987 (in an article billed on  Euromoney's cover as "Why the Japanese Banks are Shaky" -- click on this link to read http://72.167.117.219/pdf/euromoney-0987a.pdf ), he issued a series of  prescient forecasts of the Japanese banks' debt problems of the early 1990s, the Japanese real estate implosion, and the Tokyo stock market crash.  

His commentaries on East Asian economics and business have been published in the Atlantic, the New York Times,  the  Harvard Business Review, Challenge, the Washington Post, Time, GQ, Technology Review, and the New Republic.  He has been a contributor to or an interviewee on many broadcast media, including CNBC, CNN, National Public Radio, the BBC,  RTE, and Sky News. He has been the featured interviewee on major broadcast programs, most notably the BBC's famous Jimmy Young Show in 1976 and National Public Radio's Talk of the Nation program in 1999.  

He has interviewed many of the world's most prominent news sources — not just quotable business figures such as Rupert Murdoch, Lou Gerstner, Warren Buffett, Sanford Weill, Peter Lynch, and Donald Trump but fundamental  economic thinkers such as Robert Solow, Paul Samuelson, James Tobin, Milton Friedman, Friedrich von Hayek, and C. Northcote Parkinson. His work has been read into the record of the U.S. Senate by Senator Ernest F. Hollings and has been commended by, among others, James Fallows, Pat Choate, John Kenneth Galbraith, Ralph Nader, Roger Milliken, Robert Heller, and Chalmers Johnson.  

His writing on accounting matters at  Forbes won him the American accounting profession's 1983 award for excellence in financial writing. He is listed in Marquis Who's Who in the World and has testified  before the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission. His authority as one of the West's foremost experts on the East Asian economic system has been acknowledged by the U.S. Business and Industry Council, which in 2001 presented him with its American values award for his work on  Blindside and  In Praise of Hard Industries.   

His first wife was his Trinity College Dublin contemporary, the late Mary McCutchan. In common with the writer Mary Kenny, the gay rights activist Nell McCafferty, and the future President of Ireland Mary Robinson, Mary McCutchan was a founder of the Irish women's movement. An award-winning cookery writer, she went on to become an editor at a major British woman's magazine. She and their twins Tara and Andrew died in a car accident in London in 1974. 

In 1988, Fingleton married Yasuko Amako, a Japanese businesswoman. Educated at the Gakushuin series of schools in Tokyo, Yasuko headed Japan's American Field Service delegation to the United States in 1963.  Her Tokyo-based mail order distribution company specializes in importing European and American luxury goods.

He speaks with a "gravelly" intonation -- the result of an unlucky encounter with the Japanese healthcare system that was only partly rectified by throat surgery in New York.

 

Contact information

Address: Aoyama NK Building 2F, Minami Aoyama 4-3-24 Minato-ku Tokyo 107-0062 Japan Telephone: (81 3) 5770 5087 or 5476 8727 Fax: (81 3) 5770 5088 E-mail: efingleton@gmail.com He tries to acknowledge email from all new correspondents and generally replies promptly with an individual response. He reserves the right not to open messages that, judging from vague or ambiguous ubject lines, may be junk mail. Because e-mail has sometimes proved unreliable in the past, he suggests that snail mail may be more appropriate for some types of correspondence, particularly where a previous e-mail message has gone unacknowledged. His literary agent is: Fredrica S. Friedman President, Fredrica S. Friedman & Co., Inc. Literary Management 136 East 57th Street, 14th Floor New York, NY 10022 Telephone: (212) 829-9600 Fax: (212) 829-9669 fsf10@yahoo.com