Japan’s Modern Economy September 11, 2007 Economics 272.

17
Japan’s Modern Economy September 11, 2007 Economics 272

Transcript of Japan’s Modern Economy September 11, 2007 Economics 272.

Page 1: Japan’s Modern Economy September 11, 2007 Economics 272.

Japan’s Modern Economy

September 11, 2007

Economics 272

Page 2: Japan’s Modern Economy September 11, 2007 Economics 272.

Models of growth

• Extensive growth– Expansion of margins

• Constant returns to scale; quantitative not qualitative

• Intensive growth– Higher output per inputs

• Labor productivity – Y/L: Y is GDP, L is pop or LF

• Total factor productivity – Relative to inputs of labor and capital

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Why growth?

• Solow capital intensive– Hits diminishing returns, cf. old USSR

• Smithian growth– Specialization and trade

• Leads to higher productivity• “Division of labor is limited by the extent of the market”

• Schumpeter technology-led growth– “Modern” growth

• Historically all fought against Malthus!

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Dfn “Modern” = ?

• Smithian “division of labor”– Non-farming population, esp urbanization– Commercial agriculture– Within monetary economy– Transportation / extent of market– Public order

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Government role

• Government taxation paid for urbanization– Created a huge (cash) market– Edo was world’s largest city from by 1700

• the Edo “bakufu” fostered navigation– port and lighthouse development– maps etc. all by around 1720

• formal financial markets promoted– rice futures market in Osaka by 1720– transferring money in place of in-kind taxes– insurance markets (esp. casualty)– local (rural) finance by 1800s

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Market-oriented economy

• especially intense development in several regions– cash-crop farms around Osaka (farmers bought food!)– large urban consumer market

• commercial elite for whom political advancement was foreclosed (cf. English Dissenters)

• education spread.– ukiyoe were for mass-market (wedding presents…)– lots of agricultural handbooks - 200+ titles in print

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Specialization by the “kuni”(export products)

• Silk, cotton, salt, lumber, paper, fish

• Some regions largely industrial

• Seasonal “proto-industry” often accompanied

by regional migration

• Both men & women active in wage labor

outside the home

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Standard of Living

• transformation of consumption– various rough fibers replaced by cotton; silk worn by more than just

elite

– new (and better foods). peppers, sweet potatoes / taro, corn, etc.

– new and better housing: tatami mats off the ground

– vast increases in protein-laden soybean-related consumption (miso, soy sauce)

• Education– Literate society, perhaps more so than England!

– Vast outpouring of books, circulated through lending libraries

– Even nascent “western” studies, esp. in 1800s

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Mid-16th Century Han(“countries”)

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Shipping Routes after 1720

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Loom (karabikibata)c. 1770

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Agriculture Outgrows Population

50.00

46.00

42.00

38.00

34.00

30.00

26.00

22.00

18.00

14.00

10.001600 1650 1700 1720 1730 1750 1800 1850 1872

Tokugawa Population & Agriculture

Population (millions) Arable Land (100,000 í¨) Agricultural Output

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Osaka as an Entrepot (1714)Principal non-Rice Imports / Exports

Imports ExportsMarine products 20.2% Oil & beeswax 36.4%Agricultural items 19.5 Clothing & textiles 25.2Clothing & textiles 15.4 Misc tools 7.5Oilseed 12.9 Misc exports 7.3Mining products 7.5 Processed food 6.1Fertilizer 6.4 Accessories & decorations5.8Wood products 5.9 Lacquerware & pottery 4.6Misc Imports 4.1 Seedcake (fertilizer) 3.4Tea & tobacco 2.8 Furniture 0.5Tatami 2.0 Weapons 0.5Kyoto crafts 0.9 Arts & crafts 0.4%Total (Ag value) 286,561 kan Total 95,800 kan

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Growth of a National MarketRice Price Movements Converged in the 17th Century

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Structure of National Output

– 1874 –

• shortly after “opening”

to the West

• before significant

structural change from

– new technologies

– convergence of domestic

& international prices