ABSTRACT

Since the late-19th century, Japan has made remarkable strides in industrialization. Beginning with the economic vision of Miura Baien in the 18th century, and employing a detailed comparison with the West, this book delves into the economic thought of the scholars who played a pivotal role in Japan’s modernization process.

The author takes Fukuzawa Yukichi’s theory of ‘civilization’ as the standard measure of Japan’s modernization and compares it with differing visions from various critics whose research focused on rural poverty and social problems, such as Maeda Masana, early socialists, Yanagita Kunio and Kawakami Hajime. Further, the book explores new liberalism (Ishibashi Tanzan, Fukuda Tokuzo) and Marxism (Yamada Moritaro, Uno Kozo) in the 1920s and 1930s. After discussing the dilemmas faced by economists during wartime (Takata Yasuma, Ryu Shintaro, Shibata Kei), the author concludes this intellectual history with the country’s post-1945 democratic reforms and their early demise.

This book is valuable reading for students and researchers of Japan’s intellectual history. However, due to the book’s comparative perspective, as well as the universality of the modernization experience, it will also appeal to students and researchers of the history of economic thought and modern intellectual history.

chapter 1|9 pages

Prologue

Before Meeting Western Economic Thoughts

chapter 2|17 pages

Miura Baien's Kagen

In Comparison with the Contemporary European Economic Thought 1

chapter 3|21 pages

Civilization and Political Economy in Fukuzawa Yukichi 1

Grounds for Laws of Political Economy

chapter 4|17 pages

Economic Liberalism and Industrial Promotion in the Meiji Era

Taguchi Ukichi and Maeda Masana

chapter 5|17 pages

Early Socialism and Social Policy from the 1900s to 1920s

Turn, Split, and Rivalry

chapter 6|16 pages

Yanagita Kunio's Rural Economy

Investigation into the Nationality of Japan

chapter 7|15 pages

Egoism and Altruism in the Sentiment of an Economist

Kawakami Hajime's Difficult Path to Marxism

chapter 8|17 pages

New Liberalism in the Far East

Ishibashi Tanzan and J. M. Keynes

chapter 9|17 pages

Introducing the Social into Economics

Power and Communal Elements in Takata Yasuma

chapter 10|17 pages

Marxian Economics and Japanese Capitalism

Reproduction with Semi-feudal Agriculture

chapter 11|16 pages

Collaboration and Reform under War Economy

Ryū Shintarō and Shibata Kei 1

chapter 12|14 pages

Epilogue

Revolving Door for Economists 1945–1950