This paper discusses taxation in interwar Japan from the standpoint of rural–urban inequality, in order to assess whether fiscal extraction had a significantly negative impact on the economy of farmers. The first part reviews macroeconomic estimates on the distribution of the tax burden by either productive sector or territory, pointing to the limits of these approaches. The paper then turns to the analysis of sample surveys conducted in the 1910s–1930s, which provide information on both the horizontal and the vertical structure of the burden. Data show that taxes relevant to farmers were relatively inelastic with income and drained a large share of household surplus until the early 1930s. This problem, however, was primarily the consequenc...
The purpuse of this study is to clarify the changes of the decision making of land price assessment ...
On the eve of the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the nearly 300 semi-autonomous domains across Japan had...
The question we address in this paper is why the Japanese miracle didn’t take place until after Worl...
This paper discusses taxation in interwar Japan from the standpoint of rural–urban inequality, in or...
Tax systems are useful indicators of the economic and political conditions which concur to shape the...
This study examines the effect on the family farm economy of an agrarian reform and a tax reform. Fo...
Despite a steady industrialisation having taken place since the Meiji era, Japan remained a largely ...
There were regional increases and decreases in the number of farm households in pre-war Japan. The a...
This paper employs panel data for farm households from prewar Japan to examine how they coped with s...
This paper aims to clarify the feature of the income of farms of Sanin district in 1910s. This is th...
This paper addresses the question of continuity in the long-term development of the Japanese tax sys...
In this paper, I focus on statistics that have rarely played a leading role in research on rural lif...
This papers places the problem of Chinese rural taxation in the context of government regulation and...
This paper addresses the question of continuity in the long-term development of the Japanese tax sys...
The purpuse of this study is to clarify the changes of the decision making of land price assessment ...
On the eve of the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the nearly 300 semi-autonomous domains across Japan had...
The question we address in this paper is why the Japanese miracle didn’t take place until after Worl...
This paper discusses taxation in interwar Japan from the standpoint of rural–urban inequality, in or...
Tax systems are useful indicators of the economic and political conditions which concur to shape the...
This study examines the effect on the family farm economy of an agrarian reform and a tax reform. Fo...
Despite a steady industrialisation having taken place since the Meiji era, Japan remained a largely ...
There were regional increases and decreases in the number of farm households in pre-war Japan. The a...
This paper employs panel data for farm households from prewar Japan to examine how they coped with s...
This paper aims to clarify the feature of the income of farms of Sanin district in 1910s. This is th...
This paper addresses the question of continuity in the long-term development of the Japanese tax sys...
In this paper, I focus on statistics that have rarely played a leading role in research on rural lif...
This papers places the problem of Chinese rural taxation in the context of government regulation and...
This paper addresses the question of continuity in the long-term development of the Japanese tax sys...
The purpuse of this study is to clarify the changes of the decision making of land price assessment ...
On the eve of the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the nearly 300 semi-autonomous domains across Japan had...
The question we address in this paper is why the Japanese miracle didn’t take place until after Worl...