ABSTRACT

David Ricardo’s theories were introduced in fragments in Japan after the Meiji restoration of 1868 and his work came into prominence late in comparison to other major thinkers figuring in the history of economic thought. 

The book seeks to analyse the studies in Japan from the year 1920 to the end of the 1930s – during the time before the outbreak of the Second World War, when even the study of classical economics became difficult. The book covers different aspects of his works and contains elements which may be interesting to foreign and even Japanese readers today without necessarily coming under the influence of Marx’s reading. It presents works on Ricardo that are at present, wholly unknown to the Ricardo scholars and more generally to the historians of economic thought outside Japan. 

This book is an essential read on the history of economic thought in Japan.

chapter |58 pages

Introduction

Ricardo studies in Japan during the interwar period

chapter 1|17 pages

Ricardo in the history of economic thought

(Three articles written from the end of Meiji era to the beginning of Taishō era – circa 1910)

chapter 2|4 pages

From my career of economic research

(Extract from the Preface to Outlines of political economy, Kaizōsha, 1928)

chapter 3|49 pages

Ricardo as apogee of the orthodox economics

(From ‘Part III: Political economy of David Ricardo' in Adam Smith, Malthus, Ricardo – studies of orthodox economics, Iwanami Shoten, 1934)

chapter 4|28 pages

Ricardo's theory of wages

(‘Theory of wages', chapter IV of Establishment of theoretical economics, Kōbundō, 1958)

chapter 5|40 pages

Essential aspects of Ricardo's theory of value

(From Studies on Ricardo's theory of value, Iwanami Shoten, 1926)

chapter 6|63 pages

Ricardo's theory of value and distribution

(Chapter 5 ‘David Ricardo' in Summary of the History of Economic Thought, Part I, Iwanami Shoten, 1937)