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Japanese external trade during the Empire Of Japan and up to 1945, was highly significant. Japan was dependent on imported foods and raw materials for industry. It had to export energetically, and had one of the largest merchant fleets in the world, with a total of 6,800,000 tonnes of displacement, before December 1941 . Heavy naval losses during the Pacific War , to June 1944 , still left 4,700,000 tonnes. TRADE In spite of popular perception, during the 1930s Japan was exporting low-cost items successfully. However between the years of 1929 and 1938 foreign commerce dropped from 3.7% to 3.5%. Japan ran a Trade Deficit , selling a total of US$ 12.85 and buying US$ 15.25 per capita. This was in part brought on by the purchase of wartime materials. Japan's primary trading partners in order were:
Japan exported 32% of its total output to the United States, and purchased 21% of its foreign trade. Japan's imports were as follows:
Japan's exports were as follows:
Japan's primary exports were silk (from Silk Worm s) where they controlled 80% of the world's production, and tea, where they controlled 10%. Their total foreign trade was equivalent to Belgium , a country with less than 10% of Japan's population. In 1897 the local monetary unit, the Yen , was valued on the Gold Standard at a base level of 24.5 British Pence ; which permits the use in the figures of the Pound Sterling or gold-backed US dollars. (1 Yen = 24.5 British Penny or 10.8 Yen = 1 British Guinea = 1.05 Pounds Sterling) During the worldwide depression ( represented the one-third of exports and Processed Silk 10%. Other products for export were Rayon , cotton, processed silk and others; of these cotton represented 5% of the total. In 1934 the exports changed with crude silk falling to 13%, cotton maintained at 23%, rayon staying at 5%. On the other hand imports had raw cotton level at 32%, bwool at 8%, imported oil products at 4%. In 1937 exports were crude silk (13%), cotton fabrics (20%), rayon(5%). The imports were: raw cotton(23%), wool (8%) and oil imported products (6%). OTHER EXTERIOR COMMERCE STATISTICS Japan was the first Asiatic independent state to export manufactured objects (e.g., silks, fabrics) and import machinery and raw materials. Textile products represented around 60%. Metal-based manufacturing industry was not very active in 1918 exports, but porcelain, paper and matches were sold, and exported raw material was 7% with value of 1,879,657 Yen (1925), being sugar and tea from Formosa, coal, etc. In imports raw materials represented around 60%, as raw cotton, unfinished metals and machinery, and foodstuffs at 14%. For more numbers, see the following statistics from 1890 to 1927 : In 1915 , the exterior commerce are against local economy, with previous four year of great exports and present times of augment the these area over buyings. In 1925, external trade was equivalent of 404 French francs per inhabitant (the nominal monetary value of the Yen at the time was 12.72 Frs., with exchange variations between 13.60 in 1918 to 10.46 during 1925.) In 1926 , the general value of exports was 2,045 million Yen, the imports 2,377 million Yen. During 1927, numbers were slightly down at 1,992 million of Yen in sellings and 2,179 in buyings. Other Japanese statistics (1900 to 1925) in thousands of Yen (one Yen equalled 5 Spanish pesetas in 1925) The total of these exports in the same years:
CHOSEN'S EXPORTS More than 90% of Chosen 's exterior commerce was with Japan and Manchukuo. In 1939 Chosen was importing to the value of $300,000,000 and exporting to the value of $250,000,000, a deficit which continued for years. The principal articles for export were:
The principal imports were:
More than 16,000,000 tonnes of merchant vessels entered the province in 1936 via Fusan , the fourth largest port in the Japanese Empire. Japanese industry and commerce became focussed on export and foreign sales, and left unsatisfied the local market because of low demand. FORMOSA'S EXPORTS: (1929 TO 1933)
OTHER JAPANESE FOREIGN INVESTMENTS IN ASIA (PRE-WWII) Japanese companies had invested 18,560,000 Yen in the Dutch East Indies ( Sumatra and Borneo ) and some 51,195,000 Yen in Rubber plantations in the British Straits Settlements (British Malaya ) (260 km² in major production from 1927). Japanese capital investment in China to 1927 was 1900 million Yen. Apart from Manchuria, the Japanese interests were concentrated in the Yangtze Basin areas ( Shanghai , Hankow - Wuhan , Kiangsi ). Japanese banking interests financed 50% of the Chinese cotton industry sector. NAVAL CONSTRUCTION In 1893 naval construction was in the range 177,000 to 1,528,000 tons. In 1913 this increased to 3,565,000 tons. In 1924 there were 237 new vessels of 500 tons and another 11 of 10,000 tonnes, continuing the growth to 4,140,000 tonnes in 1928. The Imperial Japanese Navy was the third largest in the world behind the British and American navies, and dominated the West Pacific area before the war. The first modern shipyard was founded in 1891. From this time naval construction rapidly advanced. Japanese vessels of more 100 tonnes represented a registered tonnage total of 5,007,000 tonnes of which 1,198,000 corresponded to the naval construction period of 1936 to 1938. Old vessels were decommissioned or disarmed, while the regular fleet was efficient and modern. In peace time Japan constructed a lower annual figure of 500,000 tonnes of shipping. Japan still rivalled Norway for third place in the world merchant fleet. Its vessels were of lower quality. Almost 1,000,000 tonnes were of the modern type, but the larger part of the current fleet was antiquated, with only half-a-dozen vessels of tonnage over 10,000 tonnes. |
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