This paper explores the role of state capacity in the comparative economic development of China and Japan. Before 1850, both nations were ruled by stable dictators who relied on bureaucrats to govern their domains. We hypothesize that agency problems increase with the geographical size of a domain. In a large domain, the ruler's inability to closely monitor bureaucrats creates opportunities for the bureaucrats to exploit taxpayers. To prevent overexploitation, the ruler has to keep taxes low and government small. Our dynamic model shows that while economic expansion improves the ruler's finances in a small domain, it could lead to lower tax revenues in a large domain as it exacerbates bureaucratic expropriation. To test these implications, ...
On the eve of the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the nearly 300 semi-autonomous domains across Japan had...
Ancient China experienced various rounds of division and unification. Unification was maintained thr...
This book examines the economic and political rise of China from the perspective of Japan’s economic...
March 2013We develop a principal-agent model to study fiscal capacity in pre-modern China and Japan....
This article posits that the political institution of imperial China - its unitary and centralized r...
We provide a new framework to account for the diverging paths of political development in China and ...
During the feudal Edo period (1603-1868) in Japan, the shogunate government relied for regional cont...
The rise of modern public finance revolutionized political economy. As governments learned to invest...
27 November 2018Despite being the first Asian economy to achieve modern economic growth, Japan has r...
Tax extraction in Qing China was low relative to Western Europe. It is not obvious why: China was mu...
This article posits that the political institution of imperial China – its unitary and centralized r...
This thesis contributes to the literature on state capacity by revisiting a key theme in this field,...
Tax extraction in Qing China was low relative to Western Europe. It is not obvious why: China was mu...
The period of 1840 (when the Opium War broken out) till now is commonly regarded as China’s modern e...
One of the central themes of modern Chinese economic history is the puzzle of China s premodern succ...
On the eve of the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the nearly 300 semi-autonomous domains across Japan had...
Ancient China experienced various rounds of division and unification. Unification was maintained thr...
This book examines the economic and political rise of China from the perspective of Japan’s economic...
March 2013We develop a principal-agent model to study fiscal capacity in pre-modern China and Japan....
This article posits that the political institution of imperial China - its unitary and centralized r...
We provide a new framework to account for the diverging paths of political development in China and ...
During the feudal Edo period (1603-1868) in Japan, the shogunate government relied for regional cont...
The rise of modern public finance revolutionized political economy. As governments learned to invest...
27 November 2018Despite being the first Asian economy to achieve modern economic growth, Japan has r...
Tax extraction in Qing China was low relative to Western Europe. It is not obvious why: China was mu...
This article posits that the political institution of imperial China – its unitary and centralized r...
This thesis contributes to the literature on state capacity by revisiting a key theme in this field,...
Tax extraction in Qing China was low relative to Western Europe. It is not obvious why: China was mu...
The period of 1840 (when the Opium War broken out) till now is commonly regarded as China’s modern e...
One of the central themes of modern Chinese economic history is the puzzle of China s premodern succ...
On the eve of the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the nearly 300 semi-autonomous domains across Japan had...
Ancient China experienced various rounds of division and unification. Unification was maintained thr...
This book examines the economic and political rise of China from the perspective of Japan’s economic...