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DB: BASE de DATOS, Biblioteca del Centro Cultural de la Embajada de Japon
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作成日:2010/07/26 11:20:46 JST最終更新日:2020/08/15 00:12:24 JST
RUBRO ECONOMIA
TITULO How I Saved A Bank (With a Little Help from the Cosmos) (★)
AUTOR Tadahiko Ito (Translated by Deborah Iwabuchi)
EDITORIAL Kodansha International
ISBN 978-4-7700-3105-1
IDIOMA INGLES
CODIGO INTERNO E-0114
NOTA (★)(´How I Saved a Bank´ is the fascinating and timely story of the author´s years at the helm of a regional Japanese bank. Brought in when the bank was on the brink of collapse, Tadahiko Ito decided to conduct operations at the firm based on a people-first philosophy. From the start, he championed a framework of moral and ethical responsibility in the company´s banking methods, foreshadowing the demands people are making of today´s financial institutions worldwide. Ito´s system is anchored in his own spiritual ideals. He believes that a focus on a universal goal of prosperity rather than a narrow-minded approach centered entirely on profit and self-interest aligns us with the universe, and results in a harmonious system that encourages all participants and helps guide us on our way. His system resulted in a dramatic turnaround that more traditional experts believed impossible : Kansai Urban Bank recovered and now ranks as one of the top second-tier banks in Japan. In these pages, Ito recounts his experiences. He combines the most cogent ideas from his two Japanese bestsellers. The first part relates his successful solution to rescue a floundering bank. The second part goes more deeply into Ito´s Christian beliefs, as he explains how anyone can become a force for good, ultimately leading to our own happiness and success. But regardless of one´s spiritual leanings, Ito offers fresh ideas for age-old problems in the workplace. ◆Tadahiko Ito worked his way up through the ranks of a major Japanese bank, managing some of the largest branches before being sent out to deal with a small regional bank that was teetering on bankruptcy when the Japanese economy folded in the 1990s. His experience turning the bank´s fortunes around was the subject of his first book in Japanese,´Spiritual Management´, which was followed by ´Celestine Lifestyle´, about his philosophy on life and religious beliefs. He is presently chairman of the board of Kansai Urban Banking Corporation. Deborah Stuhr Iwabuchi is a native of California and graduate of University of the Pacific, Callison College, who came to Japan in 1978 as a missionary associate. For the past twenty years, she has worked as a writer and translator of books by such Japanese bestselling authors as Miyuki Miyabe and Jun-ichi Watanabe. She and her husband Ikuo make their home in Maebashi, Japan, where they are active members of Maebashi Church, United Church of Christ in Japan.)

   

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