JAPAN IS A MODERN, thriving democracy, yet it retained a long and
esteemed imperial tradition. The Japanese take great pride in being
"unique," yet much of Japanese civilization is composed of selective
borrowings, from the Chinese written language in the sixth century A.D. to
United States semiconductors in the latter half of the twentieth century.
Although Japan lacks almost all raw materials, it is a highly urbanized
and industrialized economic power supplying vast export markets. Yet
farming interests still exert a strong influence on the political process
and on party trade policies. Japan is a rich country, ranking first among
major industrial nations in per capita gross national product, but many of its people are crowded into inadequate housing
lacking such basic amenities as indoor plumbing. Although the bushido (way
of the warrior) legacy of the feudal era still exerts a definite influence
on modern society, the ultra nationalism that it had spawned has been
repudiated, and the military machine that earlier in the twentieth century
had conquered much of the Asia-Pacific region had been replaced by the
streamlined Self-Defense Forces (SDF), well trained but under equipped and
barely able to defend the home islands.
Japan consists of the four main islands of Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku,
and Kyushu, along with a plethora of smaller islands, and is separated
from the Asian mainland by the Sea of Japan and bordered on the east by
the Pacific Ocean. Nearly 75 percent of the country's land
surface is covered by mountains, and the climate, although generally
humid, ranges from cool in the north to subtropical in the south.
Historically, when Japan was a predominantly agricultural country, its
varied climate made for regional diversity in economy and culture, and its
insular geography and rugged terrain helped it limit and control foreign
access. Since World War II, however, as Japanese society has become
overwhelmingly urban, industrial, and internationalized, climatic and
geographical effects have become much less significant.
The origins of Japanese civilization are buried in legend, with the
country's first written records dating from the sixth to the eighth
centuries A.D., after Japan had adopted the Chinese writing system. Early
in the sixth century, Chinese Buddhism was introduced to Japan by way of
Korea, and with it came many Chinese governmental and fiscal practices. A
society of individual military rulers, each responsible for his own area,
evolved into an imperial system codified in the Taiho-ryoritsu (Great
Treasure Code) of 701. Imperial control was gradually spread throughout
the main island of Honshu and eventually to all of Japan by military
conquest. The leaders of these conquests were rewarded with large
landholdings. By the tenth century, these military leaders had evolved
into a warrior class--the bushi, or samurai--that supplanted the central
authority of the emperor, and Japanese society evolved into a feudal
economy in which the large landholdings of the samurai were supported by
local peasants, artisans, and merchants. Beginning in the seventeenth
century, the Tokugawa shoguns, like earlier military rulers under the same
title, asserted control over a newly reunified Japan. They also closed the
country to outside influences and developed the national premodern
economy.
When Japan was reopened in the middle of the nineteenth century, the
traditional political, military, and economic systems were no match for
powerful foreign intruders, and the shogun's government failed. It was
replaced by a new oligarchy of strong regional leaders who brought about
the Meiji Restoration--the ostensible restoration of imperial power--in
1868. The Meiji rulers carried out wholesale radical reforms. The
government hired thousands of foreigners to teach modern science,
mathematics, and foreign languages and sent a multitude of students and
envoys to Europe and North America to learn the lessons that had bypassed
them during the years of exclusion. They returned to combine foreign
ideology and modern methods with Japanese traditions, devising a
governmental and economic system that was totally new yet uniquely
Japanese. The government also built factories and shipyards to help
private businesses get started. These businesses developed rapidly into
large conglomerates, some of which dominated the world of business in the
early 1990s. Transportation and industry were modernized; the military was
reorganized and equipped with up-to-date weapons; and under the 1889
constitution, Japan took the first steps toward representative government.
For the remainder of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth
century, the economy grew at a moderate rate, although it remained heavily
dependent on agriculture. After the development of a strong economic and
industrial base at home, successful wars annexing Taiwan and Korea, and
the growth of spheres of influence over a large part of the Chinese
mainland, Japan began to exert its influence throughout the Asia-Pacific
region. In the late 1920s, industry outstripped agriculture, and in the
1930s industry, little affected by the Great Depression plaguing the rest
of the industrialized world, continued to grow. Using the strong Japanese
economy to support their imperialistic designs, ultranationalist military
officers succeeded in stifling the young democracy and took control of the
government in the name of the emperor. With their power unchecked, the
militarist government led the nation into a series of military conflicts
that culminated in the almost total destruction of the nation during World
War II.
World War II destroyed nearly half of Japan's industry. Japan's economy
was completely disrupted, and the country was forced to rely on United
States assistance and imports of essential food and raw material.
Large-scale procurements by United States armed forces during the Korean
War (1950-53) revived Japanese industry, and the country invested heavily
in replacing the destroyed factories with modern, well-equipped factories.
By the mid-1950s, modern plants staffed by a well-educated, disciplined
work force had brought the Japanese economy back to pre-World War II
levels. For the remainder of the 1950s, however, Japan endured chronic
trade deficits. Unhampered by large military expenditures, the Japanese
economy continued to grow at a rapid pace into the next decade. Japanese
trade relations improved dramatically during the 1960s, attaining a
favorable balance, and Japanese industry felt confident enough to compete
in the international market in such heavy industrial products as
automobiles, ships, and machine tools.
The Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), formed in
1949, played a major role in the 1950s and 1960s in formulating and
implementing Japan's international trade policy, assisting the development
of domestic industry and protecting it from foreign competition. MITI's
authority gradually decreased as private industry and other ministries
took more responsibility on themselves. By the late 1980s, MITI's control
over international trade policy was greatly reduced. The Japan External
Trade Organization (JETRO) was established by MITI in 1958 to promote
Japan's external trade. Over the years, JETRO's role diversified; it went
from promoting exports to fostering all aspects of Japan's trade relations
and enhancing understanding with trading partners.
In the immediate postwar period, the operations of Japanese financial
institutions were severely restricted. In the 1970s, controls began to
loosen, and these institutions rapidly expanded their international
activities. By the late 1980s, they were major international players,
making Tokyo a world financial center and opening branches abroad to
foster foreign investments. During the late 1980s, Japan became the
world's largest creditor nation and was home to some of the world's
largest banking and financial institutions. Japanese securities firms
played a major role in international finances and were members of major
world stock exchanges. In 1988 the Tokyo Securities and Stock Exchange
became the world's largest, while the Osaka Stock Exchange ranked third
behind Tokyo and the New York Stock Exchange. Beginning in 1986, the Tokyo
exchange permitted foreign brokerage firms to be members. Japan also
played an increasing role in international economic organizations and
agreements, especially the Asian Development Bank and the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Japan has a strong private
enterprise economy, although public corporations played a very important
role in the early postwar period. By the 1980s, however, their role was
considerably decreased, and some of the largest were privatized. The
thriving private enterprise sector was dominated by large corporations
with affiliated smaller firms. Labor-management relations were generally
harmonious, and labor productivity was high.
In 1993 Japan's population of more than 124 million people was squeezed
into less than 400,000 square kilometers of land, much of which was
uninhabitable. But population growth, rapid in the last half of the
nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth century, had slowed
drastically by the 1980s. The low fertility rate, combined with high life
expectancy, was making Japan a rapidly aging society, placing an
increasing burden on the shrinking working-age population.
Women traditionally occupied an inferior position in Japanese society.
Even though they were given the right to vote in 1946 and were accorded
equal rights under the 1947 Constitution and the Civil Code of 1948, their
general status did not significantly improve. As Japan faced a shrinking
work force in the 1980s and 1990s, however, increasing numbers of women
were brought into the labor market, resulting in improved educational,
political, and economic opportunities. Nevertheless, women's status still
remained far below that of men.
Japan promoted exports by developing world-class industries and
providing incentives for firms to export. In the postwar period, export
incentives mainly took the form of tax relief and government assistance to
build export industries along with heavy import barriers. As Japanese
industry regained its strength in the 1960s, the government gradually
liberalized its trade policy, and tax incentives were eliminated. In the
1970s, a strong rise in the value of the yen under the new system of floating exchange rates and the oil
price shocks of 1973 and 1979 brought large trade deficits. The situation
spurred Japan to reduce its dependence on unreliable foreign petroleum by
conservation and diversification of sources and to sharply increase its
exports to offset the high cost of raw materials. In the 1980s, with the
dramatic drop in the cost of raw materials, Japan developed a large trade
surplus. Export policy shifted to export restraints on certain products
that were causing the greatest tensions with trading partners, and Japan
greatly increased its foreign investment. This trend continued through the
1980s. Japan continued to be the target of complaints from trading
partners, however, especially for nontariff barriers such as standards,
testing procedures, and restrictive distribution practices.
In the 1980s, manufactured imports still made up a share of GNP far
below that of other developed countries, and in 1989 Japan was named an
unfair trading partner by the United States government. Although certain
Japanese industries, such as automobile manufacturing, were heavily export
oriented, Japan exported a lower percentage of its GNP than most major
industrialized nations. During the 1960s and 1970s import growth kept up
with exports, but in the 1980s import growth fell off drastically, leading
to large trade surpluses. The United States was the largest single
destination of Japanese exports (34 percent in 1988) as well as its
largest single source of imports (22.4 percent). Japan's major
international industries in the late 1980s were motor vehicles, consumer
electronics, computers, semiconductors and other electronic components,
and iron and steel. The rapid increase in the value of the yen in the late
1980s made Japanese exports less price competitive and imports more price
competitive, but it was unclear in 1991 what effect the increased value of
the yen would have on the balance of trade in the long term.
Japan has traditionally run a deficit in services: transportation,
insurance, travel expenditures, royalties, licensing fees, and income from
investment. In the early 1980s, however, this deficit was somewhat offset
by the rapid growth of Japanese foreign investment. In the late 1980s,
increased travel expenses again produced a marked increase in the services
deficit despite a rapid growth in foreign investments. Although most
barriers to foreign investment were removed in the 1980s, Japan's heavy
investment in other countries remained a major cause of tension with those
countries.
Japan's foreign aid program, begun in the 1960s in the form of World
War II reparations to other Asian countries, grew rapidly during the
1980s. In the late 1980s, Japanese assistance consisted of bilateral
grants and loans as well as support to multilateral aid organizations.
With 99 percent literacy, Japan places great value on education. It
provides children with compulsory free education from first grade through
ninth grade. A high percentage of children also attend preschools and
continue through upper-secondary and higher education. Educational
standards are high, and Japanese students consistently finish at or near
the top in international academic tests. Teachers are held in great esteem
by Japanese society and are charged with imparting sound moral values to
their students along with academic information. Any antisocial behavior on
or off campus is considered to reflect on the teacher. Entrance to higher
education is by examination and is extremely competitive, causing great
stress to students trying to get into the "right" school. Education rarely
ends with graduation from the formal school system. Japan also has
extensive, well-attended adult education programs.
The Japanese have shown widespread interest in their traditional
culture: the tea ritual, calligraphy, flower arranging, classical works of
art, and No, Kabuki, and bunraku (puppet) theater. At the same time,
educated Japanese are expected to have a good understanding of classical
Western music and art, and modern Western music, drama, and art have been
imported and adapted to develop distinctive new Japanese forms. In
addition, extensive print and broadcast media provide information and
entertainment.
The Japanese do not consider themselves a religious people. Their
worldview, however, is guided by a basic philosophy deeply rooted in
ancient Shinto beliefs on human origins and relations with the spirit
world, modified by later adaptations of Confucian ideas on societal
relationships and order and Buddhist concepts of karmic causation and an
afterlife. The Japanese are very conscious of their position in society
and the various roles that they are expected to play throughout their
lives. They put a high premium on social harmony and will go to great
pains to avoid bringing disgrace on their families and other groups with
which they are associated by disrupting that harmony. For this reason,
more than any other, the overall crime rate remains low in comparison with
other major industrialized nations, and Japanese cities are among the
safest in the world.
The 1947 constitution, with its stipulation of a symbolic role for the
emperor, guarantees of civil and human rights, and renunciation of war,
remains the operative basis for Japanese government. By pragmatic
collaboration with big business, small business, agriculture, and
professional groups, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) dominated Japanese
politics from the time it was formed as a coalition of smaller
conservative groups in 1955 until it lost majority power in July 1993.
Although LDP fortunes have risen and ebbed over the years since its
establishment, opposition parties were unable to oust it from power.
However, in the early 1990s the LDP became so divided that enough factions
split away to weaken the LDP majority. Despite maintaining a plurality in
the House of Delegates, the LDP was forced to join a series of short-term
coalitions in order to maintain a voice in government.
In the postwar period, Japan concentrated on rebuilding its economy,
attempted to cultivate friendly ties with all nations, and relied on the
United States for military security. By the 1970s, this foreign policy
began to be called into question as Japan came into its own as a world
economic power. In the 1980s, Japan became a leading industrial nation,
the world's largest creditor nation and largest donor of foreign aid, and
a major actor in international financial institutions such as the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). People at home and abroad expect Japan to play a diplomatic
role proportionate to its economic power and its role in foreign
assistance, trade, and investment. But popular sentiment in Japan and its
Asian neighbors continues strongly to oppose Japan's assuming the military
role expected of a world power.
Because of their tragic experience with a military-controlled
government before and during World War II, the Japanese people readily
accepted the military restrictions written into the 1947 constitution at
the insistence of occupation forces and still generally interpret Article
9 of the constitution as forbidding the SDF from being deployed outside of
the country or possessing nuclear weapons. Japan still depends on the 1960
Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security with the United States, which
mandates that the United States will come to its aid in the event of a
large-scale invasion and which allows for United States provision of a
nuclear umbrella. There is little popular sentiment for change in this
arrangement.
As Japan moves toward the twenty-first century, it is faced with a
series of dilemmas. How can it continue to grow as a world economic leader
without assuming a greater political role? And how can it be considered a
political leader when it can not even provide for the security of its own
territory without foreign assistance? Its trading partners complain that
Japan enjoys an unfair advantage. Yet when Japanese firms invest in their
economies, they raise the specter of Japanese domination. Each
international crisis finds Western powers calling on Japan to "contribute
its fair share" to the peacekeeping forces. At the same time, the Japanese
people and their Asian neighbors, remembering the terrible lessons of
World War II, demand that there be no extension of Japanese military power
beyond its borders. With fewer than five years until the next century,
Japan has yet to come to grips with these questions.
As this revised edition of Japan - A Country Study was being completed for posting on
the Internet, the Japanese economy still had not emerged from two years of
recession, its longest since World War II. Economic growth was only 1.5
percent in 1992 and 0.2 percent in 1993. In 1991 the Tokyo stock market
index had plunged from nearly 39,000 to 20,000 and remained at that level
until late 1992, when the index dipped further to approximately 16,000. By
May 1994, however, the index had returned to the 20,000 level. Despite the
continuing recession, the unemployment rate was kept below 3 percent, and
the permanent employment system remained in place.
The Diet passed a law in June 1992 authorizing Japan's SDF to
participate in UN peacekeeping operations. The noncombat participation of
SDF personnel in conjunction with Japanese diplomatic efforts contributed
in large part to the successful elections in Cambodia and to a peaceful
resolution of the situation there. In May 1993, fifty-three members of the
SDF were sent to Mozambique to participate in UN peacekeeping operations.
Nevertheless, the dispatching of SDF personnel outside Japan's borders
remained a controversial issue, and members of the Social Democratic Party
of Japan (SDPJ) and other parties in the Diet continue to oppose the
foreign mobilization of SDF personnel, even to rescue endangered Japanese
citizens.
With the end of the Cold War and changing administrations in Japan and
the United States, Japan's relations with the United States entered a
period of uncertainty and friction. In late 1993, the successful
conclusion of the Uruguay Round of the GATT negotiations and Japan's
decision to allow some rice imports to make up for a reduced domestic crop
provided a basis for further progress on trade issues, but the growing
United States deficit in bilateral trade prompted Washington to demand
that Tokyo set specific objectives for opening its markets to United
States products. After fifteen months of sometimes contentious talks, on
October 1, 1994, Japan and the United States concluded an agreement to
open up three major Japanese markets to products from the United States.
These were the Japanese insurance market and government purchases of
telecommunications and medical equipment. The two sides failed to reach
agreement on the import of American-made automobiles, automotive parts,
and flat glass (used in automotive manufacturing and construction) to
Japan but agreed to reach some resolution in thirty days.
In late May 1994, high-level negotiators from Japan and the United
States, concerned that the trade frictions could jeopardize overall
relations, reached an agreement to restart the framework talks at an early
date. Despite the general failure of the framework talks, the two
countries revealed in May that they would be engaging in joint
high-technology research to develop ceramics used in high-density
integrated circuits, composite carbon fiber materials used in
manufacturing machinery, data collection using a crystal protein system,
and technology to build environmentally friendly factories.
Close security ties were considered extremely important to both Japan
and the United States. In March 1994, the first "two-plus- two" meeting of
the Japanese foreign minister and the Defense Agency director with the
United States secretary of state and secretary of defense was held in
Tokyo to discuss a coordinated approach to post-Cold War regional and
global security problems. Both sides indicated that they fully supported
the United States- Japan Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security.
Further, the United States thanked Japan for its strong host nation
support for United States forces stationed in Japan, and the two nations
agreed to begin consultations to renew the host nation support agreement
when it expires in 1996.
Japan's relations with Russia showed some improvement. In October 1993,
Russian president Boris Yeltsin, after two prior cancellations, arrived in
Tokyo for a state visit. He made no further concessions on the Northern
Territories dispute over the four islands northeast of Hokkaido, a major
obstacle to Japanese- Russian relations, but did agree to abide by the
1956 Soviet pledge to return two areas (Shikotan and the Habomai Islands)
of the Northern Territories to Japan. Yeltsin also apologized repeatedly
for Soviet mistreatment of Japanese prisoners of war after World War II.
In March 1994, then Japanese minister of foreign affairs Hata Tsutomu
visited Moscow and met with Russian minister of foreign affairs Andrei
Kozyrev and other senior officials. The two sides agreed to seek
resolution of the longstanding Northern Territories dispute, but the
dispute is not expected to be resolved in the near future. Despite the
territorial dispute, Hata offered some financial support to Russian
market-oriented economic reforms.
Although Japan has a few lingering doubts about Chinese political
succession and high inflation in China, the growing economic disparity
between coastal and inland regions of China, and China's military buildup,
Japan's economic and political relations with China greatly increased in
the early 1990s. China's imports from Japan grew by 64 percent from 1989
to 1993, and Japan's imports from China increased by 48 percent in the
same period. Japan was China's top trading partner, and China was second
only to the United States as a trading partner of Japan. In 1993 trade
between China and Japan totaled US$39 billion, a 54 percent increase over
1992. The relationship was reinforced by a visit to Beijing by then
Minister of Foreign Affairs Hata in early January 1994 and a reciprocal
visit to Japan in late February and early March by Chinese vice premier
Zhu Rongji. During his visit to China, Hata reiterated Japan's support for
continuing modernization of China's economic infrastructure and further
improvement in the private foreign direct investment environment and
sought Beijing's help in dissuading North Korea from developing nuclear
weapons, as well as China's support for a permanent seat on the UN
Security Council for Japan. On his visit to Japan, Zhu sought further
Japanese economic assistance and direct investment in a wide range of
Chinese industries and economic zones, as well as Japan's support for
China's membership in GATT. The Japanese government and private investors
seemed favorably disposed to Zhu's requests.
In early May 1994, Japan's friendly relations with China and other
Asian neighbors were briefly jeopardized by Minister of Justice Nagano
Shigeto's remarks denying Japan's aggression during World War II and
terming the 1937 Nanjing Incident a fabrication. Nagano was quickly
required to retract his remarks and resign, and the Japanese government
immediately and officially apologized to China, South Korea, and the
members of ASEAN. The apology appears to have been accepted, and serious
diplomatic repercussions were averted.
In January 1994, the minority coalition government of Prime Minister
Hosokawa Morihiro succeeded in obtaining passage of a compromise political
reform plan. This plan replaces the multiseat constituencies in the House
of Representatives with a combination of 300 single-seat constituencies
and 200 proportional- representation seats to be allotted based on the
popular vote in eleven electoral units.
On April 8, a little over a month after this political success,
Hosokawa was forced to resign as a result of a financial scandal. On April
22, the coalition chose Minister of Foreign Affairs Hata, and on April 25
he was elected prime minister. The next day, the SDPJ, the largest party
in the coalition, isolated by the attempt by Hata political ally Ozawa
Ichiro to form a right-leaning parliamentary group called Kaishin
(Innovation), removed itself from the coalition. This left the coalition
with only 130 members, far short of the number needed to get legislation
through the House of Representatives. This fragile coalition lasted for
only two months.
On June 25, 1994, faced with a no-confidence motion in the Diet, the
Hata cabinet resigned en masse. The LDP and the SDPJ, which had been in
strong opposition for thirty-nine years, formed a coalition with the
Sakigake party and nominated SDPJ chairman Murayama Tomiichi as prime
minister. Several members of the LPD and the SDPJ refused to support the
coalition and defected from their parties. Among the LDP defectors were
former prime ministers Nakasone Yasuhiro and Kaifu Toshiki. In the prime
ministerial election at the June 29 Diet session, members of the former
ruling coalition supported Kaifu. Murayama was elected prime minister on
the second ballot.
Murayama is Japan's second socialist prime minister, the first since
1948. As leader of the socialist opposition, he rejected the SDF as
unconstitutional and opposed some elements of Japanese foreign policy. Yet
thirteen of the posts in his twenty-one-member cabinet, including the key
foreign, trade, and defense portfolios, are filled by veteran LDP members,
Murayama himself has indicated that he is willing to accept some LDP
policies, including the constitutionality of the SDF. Observers at home
and abroad are eagerly waiting to see how successfully Murayama will be
able to resolve his differences with his coalition partners and govern the
country.
Article text is from Wikipedia and licensed under terms of
the
GFDL.
The original article can be found
here.
Japanese Culture &
Traditions: Related Links,
Resources & Shopping
Visit Hanami Web
to find special knowledge about Japan.