Japanese economic miracle

The foundations of the aviation industry survived the war.
Japanese-made TV sets during the economic boom
Japanese coal- and metal-related industry experienced an annual growth rate of 25% in the 1960s, with the steel plant of Nippon Steel Corporation in Chiba Prefecture being a notable one.
The low-cost Nissan Sunny became a symbol of the Japanese middle class in the 1960s.

The Japanese economic miracle (Japanese: 高度経済成長, romanizedKōdo keizai seichō) refers to Japan's record period of economic growth between the post-World War II era and the end of the Cold War. During the economic boom, Japan rapidly became the world's second-largest economy (after the United States). By the 1990s, Japan's population demographics had begun to stagnate, and the workforce was no longer expanding as quickly as it had in the previous decades despite per-worker productivity remaining high.


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