1[1]Bernard Eocleston, 1989: State and Society in Postwar Japan, Oxford 1989, p. 97.
2[2]John Myles, 1990: Old Age in the Welfare State: the Political Economy of Public Pensions, Lawrence (KA) 1989 and Gosta Esping - Anderson, The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism, Oxford 1990.
3[3]World Population Prospects, 1994: the 1998 Revision, Volume Ⅲ, Analytic Report, United Nations 2000, p.168.
4[4]Eric Hobsbawm, 1994: The Age of Extremes, London 1994.
5[5]Gavan McCormack, 2002: "Japan' s Iron Triangle", New Left Review, new series No 13, January- February 2002.
6[6]Daniel Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw, 2000: The Commanding Heights: the battle between the government and themarket - place that is remaking the world, New York 1999 or Thomas Friedman, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, New York 2000.
7[7]Robert Brenner, 2000: "The Boom and the Bubble", New Left Review, new series No 6, November - December2000.
8[8]Franklin Allen and Gary Gorton, 1993: "Churning Bubbles", Review of Economic Studies, Vol 60, 1993, pp.813-36.
9[9]Rudolf Meidner, 1994: Employee Investment Funds: An Approach to Collective Capital Formation, London 1978.另外, 可以看 Jonas Pontusson on Sweden in Perry Anderson and Patrick Camiller, eds., Mapping the Western European Left, London 1994.
10[10]Eric Becker and Patrick McVeigh, 2001: "Social Funds in the United States: Their History, Financial Performance, and Social Impacts", in Archong Fong, Tessa Hebb, and Joel Rogers, eds., Working Capital. the Power ofLabor' s Pensions, Ithaca and London 2001, pp. 44-66; see also Amy Domini, Socially Responsible Investment,Chicago 2001, and the magazine Business Ethics: Insider' s Report on Responsible Business, published from Min-neapolis, MN.