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Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien

場所

ドイツ-日本研究所
〒102-0074 東京都千代田区九段南3-3-6
麹町ビル2階
電話:03(3222)5077
FAX:03(3222)5420


アクセス

'Positive Policy,' 'Negative Policy,' and the Economics of Taishō Democracy (積極政策、消極政策、と大正デモクラシーの構造)

2004年2月18日 / 6:30 P.M.

Mark Metzler, Assistant Professor of History, Oakland University

From its inception during the Taishō political crisis, the two-party politics of the Taishō democracy era was characterized by the opposition between the so-called “positive” and “negative” policies of economic expansionism and retrenchment. In fact, this economic issue was the most central and persistent policy element in the
opposition between the Seiyukai and the Kenseikai/Minseito. In the 1920s, the conflict between these (increasingly) “Keynesian” and “monetarist” policies became linked in turn to the question of restoring the gold standard, which worked to make Japan’s domestic policy confrontations conform in detail with the question of Japan’s relationship to the Anglo-American centered world economic order as a whole. This two-party policy dialectic echoed into the postwar era of one-party government.