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Economic Growth in Tokugawa Japan ( 徳川幕府・江戸時代 1600-1868)

Economic Growth in Tokugawa Japan ( 徳川幕府・江戸時代 1600-1868). Michael Smitka October 2009 Warren Wilson College. Issues. was Japan poor? -- standard of living was the economy static? -- growth process versus political process institutional, other legacies

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Economic Growth in Tokugawa Japan ( 徳川幕府・江戸時代 1600-1868)

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  1. Economic Growth inTokugawa Japan (徳川幕府・江戸時代1600-1868) Michael Smitka October 2009 Warren Wilson College

  2. Issues • was Japan poor? -- standard of living • was the economy static? -- growth process versus political process • institutional, other legacies • How hold together / integrate an empire • Curiosity: merely understanding Edo-era (1600-1868) Tokugawa hegemony

  3. Models • Not for today! – you’re not all econ people! • Solow one-sector model • Output as function of • technology • inputs of Kapital, Labour • diminishing returns • Lewis-Fei-Ranis two-sector model: agriculture, urban • population growth can eat up gains • hence agriculture is important • also core source of “industrial” inputs • Both highlight Malthus: demographics in a traditional, low savings-cum-investment economy

  4. Other factors besides “hard” tech • organizational & institutional change are both underrated • “Smithian” growth via specialization and trade: “classical” growth in all senses of the word • government provision of infrastructure, other public goods • development of business networks and accepted practices in markets: institutional infrastructure

  5. Demographics Low Population Growth Central! • population growth can swamp positive factors • indeed, for most of human history standards of living changed little • how about Japan? -- and if not, why? • Late marriage led to low fertility • Lots of evidence of conscious family planning!

  6. Shifts in Family Structure Average for Selected villages Suwa Region, modern Nagano Prefecture Avg. Household SizeAvg Couples per Household Nishiko YamauraNishiko Yamaura 1671-1700 7.87 8.55 1.97 1.83 1701-1750 6.14 9.93 1.41 2.34 1751-1800 4.66 6.94 1.32 2.05 1801-1850 4.22 4.73 1.25 1.37 1851-1870 4.31 4.48 1.20 1.30

  7. Population Growth Rates Region 1798 1804 1828 1834 growth1846‘98-’46 Kinki 93.5 93.5 0.0% Tokai 100.1 106.6 6.5% Kanto 85 86.6 1.9% Tohoku 86 88.7 3.1% Tozan 106.1 110.1 3.8% Hokuriku 105.3 117.6 11.7% San'in 118.8 120 129.9 132.7 11.7% 124.8 4.0% San'yo 106.8 109.9 119.8 121.8 14.0% 120.2 9.4% Shikoku 111.7 114.9 123.8 126.1 12.9% 126.8 10.4% Kyushu 105.3 107.3 111.3 112.2 6.6% 113.8 6.1% 1721 = 100 Kinki, Tokai, Kanto, Tohoku, Tozan all fell. 48 years Hokuriku slow growth selected regions,

  8. Basic Historical Overview • breakdown of old Muromachi order • continual warfare during 1500s, • large, musket-using armies made samurai obsolete and were equal to anything the Spanish had • but fielding 100,000 armed troops takes money • Symbol of economic growth • not possible before late 1500s • spread of irrigated rice, other new crops (cotton) • civil engineering techniques from China enabling much more irrigation

  9. Area of Indica(short-grain)Rice Cultivation–early 1700s–darker hatching indicates greater cultivation of indica rice–

  10. Geopolitical context • 1540: arrival of Francis Xavier & diffusion of muskets • Legitimate fears of invasion • Colonization of Philippines • Weakening & Collapse of Ming China • End of endemic war / unification under Oda Nobunaga & Toyotomi Hideyoshi • Trade in silver for silk: no bulk goods

  11. Tokugawa Ieyasu (1600) • Tokugawa shogunate organized in 1603 • Tokugawa Ieyasu & allies won final battle in 1600 • Only controlled 25% of country directly • Large “tozama” han (countries) never conquered • How to maintain the peace? • Foreign affairs • Sankin kotai - hostages, alternate attendance in Edo • Separate samurai from farmers • Compare with how Chinese rulers held together their various empires!

  12. The two 250’s • multiple “kuni” (country?!) • each headed by a semi-autonomous “daimyo” (lord) • variations in laws, economic structure • National cadastral survey was basis of land tax • roughly 250 political-economic units • Most extremely small • Samurai moved to cities: forestalls peasant revolts • Peasants disarmed • Peace for 250 years! • Europe has never managed that

  13. Mid-16th Century Han(“countries”) Uesugi Imagawa Mōri Hōjō Takeda Ōtomo Shimazu Chōsokabe

  14. 1664 Kuni(国countries)

  15. Growth stimulus? • Tokugawa control system had: • implications for macroeconomic resource flows in a two-sector context • implications for commercialization and monetization of the economy • Lewis two-sector model: forced flows? • Attendance in Edo (Tokyo) forced development of financial system and logistics

  16. RoadtoEdo江戸(Tokyo)

  17. Government role • 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

  18. 1685Japan Sea Route Pending

  19. Shipping Routes after 1720

  20. 1791Full Route with Ports & Distances

  21. 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

  22. Osaka Merchant District

  23. 蚕養図会画本宝能縷 1739 http://rarebook.ndl.go.jp/pre/servlet/pre_wa_fit.jsp;jsessionid=2419EDC4E5EBB686E3E2EDCC618A6D3A

  24. 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

  25. Osaka as an Entrepot (1714)Principal non-Rice Imports / Exports Imports Exports Marine products 20.2% Oil & beeswax 36.4% Agricultural items 19.5 Clothing & textiles 25.2 Clothing & textiles 15.4 Misc tools 7.5 Oilseed 12.9 Misc exports 7.3 Mining products 7.5 Processed food 6.1 Fertilizer 6.4 Accessories & decorations 5.8 Wood products 5.9 Lacquerware & pottery 4.6 Misc Imports 4.1 Seedcake (fertilizer) 3.4 Tea & tobacco 2.8 Furniture 0.5 Tatami 2.0 Weapons 0.5 Kyoto crafts 0.9 Arts & crafts 0.4% Total (Ag value) 286,561 kan Total 95,800 kan

  26. Extent of Cotton CultivationJapan remained able to shift land out of food crops

  27. Specialization in AgricultureCotton Production Koga county, Harima han near modern Kobe Irrigated Year fields Dryland Reclaimed Total 1801 0.4% 13.7% 28.5% 8.2% 1807 0.6 15.1 25.2 8.2 1813 3.0 41.5 36.9 17.3 1822 4.3 38.6 36.8 17.4 1832 0.5 34.5 34.8 13.4 1842 2.2 38.6 36.9 16.2 1847 1.5 35.2 35.2 14.5 Note: I find it surprising that any irrigated fields were used for cotton instead of rice! In the 1880s imports led to a sharp drop in domestic output, and production ceased by 1900.

  28. 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

  29. End of Tokugawa rule • 250 years of peace meant hard to forestall Western imperialists • Delicate political balance made it impossible to increase revenue • taxing goods & commerce would create big winners, politically out • Land tax meant fixed government revenues in a growing economy • US Adm. Perry (1854) and Russians in north forced opening of ports • Beefing up military crucial • Personalities ruled out restructuring Tokugawa domestic accord • Lack of national government, lack of standing army no longer tenable • Outside tozama han put together alliance and toppled the Tokugawa family in a nearly-bloodless coup • Only remaining national symbol - the Emperor - used by victors

  30. Kawaguchi Ironware

  31. Zaguri (silk weaving machine)

  32. Loom (karabikibata) c. 1770

  33. Spinning Silk

  34. Whale Processing Factory

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

  36. Structure of National Output– 1874 – • shortly after “opening” to the West • before significant structural change from • new technologies • convergence of domestic & international prices Agriculture rice Industry textiles food Other

  37. Queries • Was China a modern economy? • When? • Extent? • Cf. William Skinner on economic geography of Ming China • Cf. Kenneth Pomeranz on lower Yangtze river and limits to growth

  38. Data • Following slides provide select data and pictures of technology for Edo ear • See library for the period from 1868-1945, e.g. • Economic growth in prewar Japan / Takafusa Nakamura ; translated by Robert A. Feldman,Yale University Press 1983  HC462.8 .N25513 1983   • Cambridge History of Japan, various entries,DS835 .C36 1988   • The interwar economy of Japan : colonialism, depression, and recovery, 1910-1940 / edited with introductions by Michael Smitka. Garland Pub., 1998  HC462.7 .I584 1998   • Japanese prewar growth : lessons for development theory? / edited with introductions by Michael Smitka Garland Pub., 1998  HC462.7 .J385 1998

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