INCREASE OF RICE YIELD AND OF POPULATION [XXV].
| 1882 | 1913 | Percentage of Increase |
1918 | Percentage of Increase[A] | |
| Population | 36,700,000 | 53,362,000 | 45 | 66,851,000 | 55 |
| Rice crop (koku) | 30,692,000 | 50,222,000 | 63 | 53,893,000 | 75 |
[Footnote A: 1882-1918. The degree to which the increase in production will be maintained is of course a matter for discussion. As far as rice is concerned, it must be borne in mind that there is an increasing consumption per head.]
FARMERS' DIET [XXVI]. It is officially stated in 1921 that "the common
farm diet consists of a mixture of cooked rice and barley as the
principal food with vegetables and occasionally fish." The barley is
what is known as naked barley. Ordinary barley is eaten in northern
Japan, but two-thirds of the barley eaten elsewhere is the wheat-like
naked barley, which cannot be grown in Fukushima and the north. The
husking of ordinary barley is hard work. The young men do it during
the night when it is cool. They keep on until cock-crow. Their songs
and the sound of their mallets make a memorable impression as one
passes through a village on a moonlight night. Another substitute for
rice beyond millet is hiye (panic grass). In the south it is
regarded as a weed of the paddies, but in the north many tan are
planted with this heavy-yielding small grain.
TAXATION [XXVII]. Before 1906 national taxation was 2.5 per cent. of
the legal price of land. In 1900 it was 3.3 per cent., in 1904 5.5 per
cent., in 1911 4.7 per cent, and in 1915 4.5 per cent. But local
taxation increased in greater proportion.
FLAVOUR OF RICE AND PRICE FLUCTUATIONS [XXVIII]. Japanese rice has a
fatty flavour which the people of Japan like. Therefore the native
rice commands a higher price in Japan than Chinese or Indian rice.
With the exception of a small quantity exported to Japanese abroad,
Japanese rice is consumed in Japan. The supply of it and the demand
for it are exclusively a Japanese affair. Naturally, when the crop
fails the price soars, and when there is a superabundant harvest the
price comes down to the level of foreign rice. Here is the secret of
the enormous fluctuations in the price of
Japanese rice with which
the authorities have so often endeavoured to cope.
The Government granary plan is the third big effort of authority to manage rice prices. The Okuma Government, under the administration of which rice went down to 14 yen per koku, had a Commission to raise prices. The Terauchi Ministry, at a time when prices rose, touching 55 yen, had a Commission to bring prices down.
AREA AND CLIMATE [XXIX]. Japan Proper comprises a main island, three
other large islands in sight of the main island, and
archipelagos—4,000 islets have been counted. The main island, Honshu,
with Shikoku behind it, lies off the coast of Korea; the next largest
and northernmost island, Hokkaido, off the coast of Siberia, and the
remaining sizeable island and the southernmost, Kyushu, off the coast
of China over against the mouth of the Yangtse. The area of this
territory, that is of Japan before the acquirement of Formosa, Korea,
southern Saghalien and part of Manchuria, is about 142,000 square
miles in area, which is that of Great Britain in possession not of one
Wales but of four, or nearly 1 per cent. of the area of Asia. But
there are several million more people in Japan than there are
inhabitants of Great Britain and thrice as many as there are Britons
in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and India. (See also
Appendix XXX.) Japan, which lies between the latitudes of Cairo and
the Crimea, may be said to consist of mountains, of which fifty are
active volcanoes, with some land, either hilly or boggy, at the foot
of them. It is nowhere more than 200 miles across and in one place is
only 50. A note on the ocean currents which exercise an influence on
agriculture will be found on page 195. The protection afforded to the
eastern prefectures by mountain ranges is obvious. Generally the
summer temperature of Japan is higher and the winter temperature is
lower than is recorded in Europe and America within the same
latitudes.
"The mild climate and abundant rainfall," says the Department of Agriculture, "stimulate a luxuriant forest development throughout the country which in turn provides ample fountain heads for rivers. The rivers and streams run in all directions, affording opportunity for irrigation all over the country. The insular position of the country renders its humidity high and its rainfall abundant when compared with Continental countries. The rainy season prevails during the months of June and July, making this season risky for the harvest of wheat and barley; on the other hand it affords a beneficent irrigation supply to paddy-grown rice, which is the most important crop. The characteristic feature of the climate in the greater part of the islands is the frequency of storms in the months of August and September. As the flowers of the rice plant commence to bloom during the same period, these late summer storms cause much damage."
The weather in Tokyo in 1918 was as follows:
| Jan. | Feb. | Mar. | Apl. | May | June | July | Aug. | Sept. | Oct. | Nov. | Dec. | |
| Rain and snow (mm.) | 10 | 65 | 163 | 108 | 123 | 149 | 82 | 78 | 202 | 135 | 142 | 80 |
| Temp. (C.) | 1.6 | 3.6 | 6.7 | 11.7 | 16.7 | 20.2 | 26.0 | 26.0 | 22.6 | 16.0 | 10.4 | 3.9 |
The varied climate of Japan is indicated by the following statistics for centres as far distant as Nagasaki in the extreme south-west and Sapporo in Hokkaido:
| Nagasaki | Kyoto | Tokyo | Niigata | Aomori | Sapporo | |
| Days of rain or snow | 179 | 176 | 144 | 218 | 229 | 216 |
| Average temp. (C.) | 14.9 | 13.6 | 13.8 | 12.5 | 9.4 | 7.3 |
| Maximum | 36.7 | 37.2 | 36.6 | 39.1 | 36.0 | 33.4 |
| Minimum | 5.6 | 11.9 | 8.1 | 9.7 | 19.0 | 25.6 |
The italicised temperatures are below zero. Average dates of last frost: Tokyo, April 6; Nagoya, April 13; Matsumoto, May 17.
POPULATION OF JAPAN, MANCHURIA AND MONGOLIA [XXX]. The population of
the Empire according to the 1920 census was 77,005,510, which included
Korea, 17,284,207; Formosa, 3,654,398; Saghalien, 105,765; and South
Manchuria (that is, the Kwantung Peninsula), 80,000. In Old Japan
(Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu with the near islands, and Loo-choos and
Bonins) there were 53,602,043, and in Hokkaido (including Kuriles)
2,359,097.
Tokyo is the largest city, 2,173,000, followed by Osaka, 1,252,000. Kobe and Kyoto have a little more than half a million; Nagoya and Yokohama four hundred thousand apiece. Ten other cities have a hundred thousand odd.
In the following table the populations and areas of Japan, Great Britain and the United States are compared:
| Country | Area | Population | Population per sq. mile |
| Japan (excluding Korea, Formosa and Saghalien) |
142,000 | 55,961,140 (1920) | 394 |
| British Isles | 121,636 | 47,306,664[*] (1921) | 388 |
| United States (excluding Alaska and oversea possessions) |
3,000,000 | 105,683,108 (1920) | 35 |
* Ireland taken at 1911 census figures.
Japan's 394 per square mile is lowered by the population of Hokkaido (2,359,097), which is only 66 per square mile. The population of the three chief Japanese islands is: Honshu, the mainland (41,806,930), 471; Shikoku (3,066,890), 423; and Kyushu (8,729,088), 511. (These figures are for 1920.) "As regards density per square kilometre," writes an official of the Imperial Bureau of Statistics in the Japan Year-book, with the figures antecedent to the 1920 census before him, "it is calculated at 140 for Japan and this compares as follows with Belgium (1910) 252, England and Wales (1911) 239, Holland (1909) 171, Italy (1911) 121, Germany (1910) 120 and France 44. When comparison is made on the basis of habitable area Japan may be considered to surpass all as to density, for while in Japan it constitutes only 19 per cent, of the total area, the ratio is as high as 74 for Belgium, 73 for England and Wales, 67 for Holland, 76 for Italy, 65 for Germany and 70 for France." The Professor of Agricultural Science at Tokyo University says: "The area under cultivation, even in the densely populated parts, is comparatively smaller than in any other country."
In a statement issued in 1921 the Department of Agriculture reckoned the population at 145 per square kilometre and recorded the mean rate of increase "in recent years" as 12.06 per 1,000. It stated that the density of the rural population was 44 per square kilometre or 9.42 per hectare of arable, in other words that the density "is higher than that of France, Belgium, Switzerland and some other countries where the agriculture is marked by fairly intensive methods." Mr. Nikaido, of the Bureau of Statistics, writes in the Japan Year-book that the annual increase of Japan's population was 14.78 per 1,000 for 1909-13 and 12.06 for 1914-18, "a rate greater than in any civilised country, with the exception of Germany and Rumania in the pre-War years."
The birth rate is high, but so is the mortality. The death rate of minors is thrice that of Germany and Great Britain. Here the increasing industrialisation of the country is no doubt playing its part. The ratio of still births has steadily risen since the eighties. The ratio of births, other than still births, per 1,000 of population, which in 1889-93 was 28.6, increased by 1909-13 to 33.7; but the death rate fell only from 21.1 to 20.6. The ratio of unmarried, 63.22 in 1893, was 66.22 in 1918.
The following figures for Japan Proper are printed by the Financial and Economic Annual, issued by the Department of Finance:
| Year. | Total. | Annual Increase of Population |
Average Increase per 1,000 Inhabitants. | |
| 1910 | 50,716,600 | -- | 14.09 | }14.21 |
| 1911 | 51,435,400 | 718,800 | 14.17 | |
| 1912 | 52,167,000 | 731,600 | 14.22 | |
| 1913 | 52,911,800 | 744,800 | 14.28 | |
| 1914 | 53,668,600 | 756,800 | 14.30 | |
| 1915 | 54,448,200 | 779,600 | 14.53 | }14.50 |
| 1916 | 55,235,000 | 786,800 | 14.45 | |
| 1917 | 56,035,100 | 800,100 | 14.49 | |
| 1918 | 56,851,300 | 816,200 | 14.57 | |
| 1919 | 57,673,938 | 822,638 | 14.47 | |
| 1920 | 55,961,140 | -- | -- | |
It will be seen that for the year 1920 there was a big drop. The population of 55,961,140 for the year 1920 is the actual population as returned by the census; the figures of the preceding years are "based," it is explained to me, "on the local registrars' entries. The national census has demonstrated that the figures were larger than the actual number of inhabitants, the discrepancies being partly due to erroneous and duplicate registration and partly to the exodus of persons to the colonies or foreign countries whilst retaining their legal domiciles at home. But the table serves to show the rate of increase." A million and three-quarters is a substantial figure, however, to account for in this way. It would seem reasonable to suppose that the increased cost of living, marriage at a later age than formerly and increased mortality due directly or indirectly to the factory system have arrested the rate of increase of the population in recent years. For trustworthy figures of the Japanese population we must await the next census and compare its figures with those of the 1920 census, the first to be taken scientifically.
A considerable part of Japan is uninhabitable. Of how much of the British Isles can this be said? The fact that there are in Japan fifty more or less active volcanoes, about a thousand hot springs and two dozen mountains between 12,000 and 8,000 ft. high speaks for itself. Ben Nevis is only 4,400, Snowdon only 3,500 ft.
The population of Korea in 1920 (17,284,207) was 239 per square mile. According to Whitaker for 1921 the population of Manchuria (11 millions) is 30 per square mile, and of Mongolia (3 millions) 2.8.
SMALL FARMS DECREASING [XXXI].
| Year | Below 5 tan | Over 5 tan | Over 1 chō | Over 2 chō | Over 3 chō | Over 5 chō |
| 1908 | 37.28 | 32.61 | 19.51 | 6.44 | 3.01 | 1.15 |
| 1912 | 37.14 | 33.25 | 19.61 | 5.96 | 2.83 | 1.21 |
| 1918 | 35.54 | 33.30 | 20.70 | 6.33 | 2.82 | 1.31 |
| 1919 | 35.36 | 33.18 | 20.68 | 6.21 | 2.83 | 1.74 |
See also Appendix XLVII.
FORESTS [XXXII]. The following figures for 1918 show, in thousand
chō, the ownership of forests (bared tracts in brackets): Crown,
1,303 (89); State, 7,288 (392); prefectures, cities, towns and
villages, 2,894 (1,383); temples and shrines, 111 (15); 7,186 (1,630);
total, 18,782 (3,509). The largest yield is from sugi (cryptomeria),
pine and hinoki (Charmae-cyparis obtusa).
ARMAMENTS [XXXIII]. 1,505 million yen of the national debt is for
armaments and military purposes against 923 million yen for
reproductive undertakings (railways, harbours, drainage, roads,
steelworks, mining, telephones, etc.), 143 million for exploitation of
Formosa, Korea and Saghalien,
123 million for financial adjustment
and 98 million for feudal pensions and feudal debt. Of the expenditure
for 1920-1, 846 million, some 395 million were for the army and navy.
During a period of 130 years the United States Government has spent
nearly four-fifths of its revenue on war or objects related to war.
LANDOWNING AND FARMING [XXXIV]. Before the Restoration the farmers
were the tenants of the daimyos' vassals, the samurai, or of the
daimyos direct. When the daimyos gave up their lands the Crown made
the farmers the owners of the land they occupied. Its legal value was
assessed and the national land tax was fixed at 3 per cent, and the
local tax at 1 per cent. Various adjustments have since taken place.
The Japanese Constitutional Labour Party has insisted in a communication to the International Labour Conference at Geneva that Japanese tenant farmers are not properly called farmers but that they are "labourers pure and simple." See Appendix LXXVI.
STATE RAILWAYS [XXXV]. The railways, which were nationalised in 1907,
extended in 1919 to 6,000 miles. There were also nearly 2,000 miles of
light railways (in addition to 1,368 of electric street cars). Most of
the lines are single track. The gauge is 3 ft. 6 in. The Government
has proposed gradually to electrify the whole system.
ILLEGITIMACY [XXXVI]. In Japan illegitimacy is a question not of
morals but of law. That is to say, it is a question of registration.
If a husband omits to register his marriage he is not legally married.
Thus it is possible for there to be born to a married pair a child
which is technically illegitimate. If the child should die at an early
age it is equally possible for it to appear on the official records as
illegitimate. A birth must be registered within a fortnight. It may be
thought perhaps that it is practicable for the father to register his
marriage after the birth of the child and within the time allowed for
registration. It is possible but it is not always easy. An application
for the registration of the marriage of a man under twenty-five must
bear the signature of his parents and the signature of two persons who
testify that the required consent has been regularly obtained. In the
event of a man's father having "retired," the signature of the head of
the family must be secured. If
a man is over twenty-five, then the
signatures of his parents or of any two relatives will suffice. Now
suppose that a man is living at a distance from his birthplace or
suppose that the head of his family is travelling. Plainly, there may
be a difficulty in securing a certificate in time. Therefore, because,
as has been explained, no moral obloquy attaches to unregistered
marriage or to unregistered or legally illegitimate children,
registration is often put off. When a man removes from one place to
another and thereupon registers, it may be that his marriage and his
children may be illegitimate in one place and legitimate in another.
There is a difference between actual and legal domicile. A man may
have his domicile in Tokyo but his citizen rights in his native
village.
SAKÉ AND BEER [XXXVII]. Saké is sold in 1 or 2 go bottles at from 10
to 25 sen for 2 go. As it is cheaper to buy the liquor unbottled
most people have it brought home in the original brewery tub. There
are five sorts of saké: seishu (refined), dakushu (unrefined or
muddy), shirozake (white saké), mirin (sweet saké) and
shōchū (distilled saké). Saké may contain from 10 to 14 per
cent. of alcohol; shōchū is stronger; mirin has been described as
a liqueur. Japanese beers contain from 1 to 2 per cent. less alcohol
than English beers and only about a quarter of the alcohol in saké.
More than four-fifths of it is sold in bottles. Beer is replacing
saké to some extent, but owing to the increase in the population of
Japan the total consumption of saké (about 4,000,000 koku) remains
practically the same. In 1919 beer and saké were exported to the
value of 7,200,000 and 4,500,000 yen respectively.
MINERAL PRODUCTION [XXXVIII]. In 1919 the production was as follows:
gold, 1,938,711 momme, value 9,681,494 yen; silver, 42,822,160
momme, value 11,131,861 yen; copper, 130,737,861 kin, value
67,581,475 yen; iron, steel and iron pyrites, 169,545,050 kwan, the
value of the steel being 72,666,867 yen; coal, 31,271,093 metric tons,
value 442,540,941 yen.
JAPAN AS SILK PRODUCER [XXXIX]. In exportation of silk, Japan, which
in 1919 had under sericulture 8.6 of her total cultivated area and
17.1 per cent, of her upland, passed Italy in 1901 and China in 1910.
Her exportation is now twice that of China. In production her total is
thrice that of Italy.
France is a long way behind Italy. The
production of China is an unknown quantity.
As to the advantages and drawbacks of Japan for sericulture the Department of Agriculture wrote in 1921: "Japan is not favourably placed, inasmuch as atmospheric changes are often very violent, and the air becomes damp in the silk-culture seasons. This is especially the case in the season of spring silkworms, for the cold is severe at the beginning and the air becomes excessively damp as the rainy season sets in. The intense heat in July and August, too, is very trying for the summer and autumn breeds. Compared with France and Italy, Japan seems to be heavily handicapped, but the abundance of mulberry leaves all over the land and the comparatively rich margin of spare labour among the farmers have proved great advantages."
The length of the sericultural season ranges from 54 days in spring to 31 or 32 days in autumn, but there are variations according to weather, methods and seed. The season begins with the incubation period. Then follows the rearing. Last is the period in which the caterpillars mount the little straw stacks provided for them in order that they may wind themselves into cocoons. I do not enter into the technics of the retardation and stimulation of seed in order to delay or to hasten the hatch according to the movements of the market. Hydrochloric and sulphuric-acid baths and electricity are used as stimulants; storage in "wind holes" is practised to defer hatching.
Cocoons are reckoned both by the kwan of 8¼ lbs. and by the koku of approximately 5 bushels. The cocoon production in 1918 worked out at about 16½ bushels per acre of mulberry or 18 bushels per family engaged in sericulture. About 34 million bushels of cocoons are produced. In 1919 the production was 270,800,000 kilos. The average production of a tambu of mulberry field was 1.356 koku. In 1919 a koku was worth on the average 106.81 yen (including double and waste cocoons). The cost of producing cocoons rose from 4.105 yen per kwamme in 1916 to 11.284 yen in 1920. The daily wages of labourers employed by the farmers rose from 62 sen for men and 47 sen for women in 1910 to 1 yen 93 sen for men and 1 yen 44 sen for women in 1920. With the slump, the price of cocoons fell below the cost of production and there was trouble in several districts when wages were due. The labourers engaged for the silk seasons of 1916 numbered 341,577, of whom 30,000 came from other than their employers' prefectures. These people migrate from the early to the late districts and so manage to provide themselves with work during a considerable period. As many as 5½ per cent, of the persons engaged in the industry are labourers. Many employment agencies are engaged in supplying labour.
It has been estimated that the labour of 19.8 persons (200 per hectare) is needed for a tambu of mulberry field. The silkworms hatched from a card of eggs (laid by 100 moths) are supposed to call for the labour of 49.2 persons (1,456 per kilo, 2.204 lbs.)
The production of cocoons rose from 0.866 koku per card in 1914 to 1.105 in 1918, or from 4,412,000 to 6,832,000.
More than three-quarters of the raw silk produced used to be exported. Now, with the increase of factories in Japan (the figures are for 1918), only 67 per cent, goes abroad, the bulk of it to the United States, which obtained from Japan, in 1917-18, 75 per cent., and in 1919, it has been stated, 90 per cent, of its total supply. About 28 per cent, of the world's consumption is supplied by Japan. Whereas in 1915 the output of raw silk was 5,460,000 kwan valued at 217,746,000 yen, it was in 1918 7,891,000 kwan valued at 546,543,000 yen. While in 1915-16 the percentage of Japanese exporters to foreign exporters was 64-4, it had risen in 1919-20 to 77.5. Against 450 chō of mulberries in 1914 there were in 1918 508,993 chō. The total export of raw silk and silk textiles to all countries in 1920 was 382 and 158 million yen respectively. In 1919, 96 per cent. of the raw silk Japan exported went to the United States and 46 out of 101 million yens' worth of exported silk textiles (habutal). Japan's whole trade with the United States is worth 880 million yen a year. But the proportion of basins in the factories steadily increases. There are nearly five thousand factories, big and little. A well-informed correspondent writes to me: "You know of course of the big organisation subsidised by the Government to control prices and not to make too much silk. The truth is the silk interest became too powerful and the Government is not a free agent."
TUBERCULOSIS [XL]. Phthisis and tuberculosis sweep off 22 per cent,
and bronchitis and inflammation of the lungs 18 per cent., or together
more than a third of the population. See also Appendix LXIX.
WOMEN WORKERS [XLI]. In addition to women and girls working in
agriculture, in the mines, in the factories and & trades there are
said to be 1,200,000 in business and the public services. Teachers
number about 52,000, nurses 33,000, midwives 28,000 and doctors 700.
FACTORY FOOD AND "DEFIANCE OF HYGIENIC RULES" [XLII].
Dr. Kuwata says in the Japan Year-book (1920-1) that "in cotton
mills where machinery is run day and night it is not uncommon when business
is brisk to put operatives to 18 hours' work. In such cases holidays are
given only fortnightly or are entirely withheld. The silk factories in
Naganoken generally put their operatives to 14 or 16 hours' work and
in only a small portion are the hours 13."
Summarising a report of the Department of Agriculture and Commerce, he says of the factory workers: "The bulk of workers are female and are chiefly fed with boiled rice in 43 per cent. of the factories. In other factories the staple food is poor, the rice being mixed with cheaper barley, millet or sweet potato in the proportion of from 20 to 50 per cent. In most cases subsidiary dishes consist of vegetables, meat or beans being supplied on an average only eight times a month. Dormitories are in defiance of hygienic rules. In most cases only half to 1 tsubo (4 square yards) are allotted to one person." See also Appendix LXIX.
CHINESE COMPETITION WITH JAPAN [XLIII].
The Jiji called attention in the spring of 1921 to
the way in which spinning mills in China were an
increasing menace to Japanese industry. There were in China 810,000
spindles under Chinese management, 250,000 under European and 340,000
under Japanese, a total of 1,430,000, which will shortly be increased
to 1,150,000 against 3,000,000 in Japan only 1,800,000 of which are at
work. The 1919 return was: China, 1,530,000; Japan, 3,200,000.
HOODWINKING THE FOREIGNER [XLIV].
In the Manchester Guardian Japan
Number, June 9, 1921, the managing director of a leading spinning
company, in a page and a half article, states that among the reasons
why a large capitalisation is needed by Japanese factories, beyond the
fact of higher cost of machinery, is the "special protection needed
for Japanese operatives and the special consideration given by the
spinners to the happiness and welfare of their operatives." When will
Japanese believe their best friends when they tell
them that such attempts to hoodwink the foreigner achieve no result but to cover
themselves with ridicule?
TOBACCO [XLV]. In 1918-19 there was produced on 24,439 chō
10,308,089 kwan of tobacco. During the same period 9,681,274 kwan
were taken by the Government, which paid 19,114,803 yen or 1.974 per
kwan. In 1919 there was imported leaf tobacco to the value of
5,288,918 yen. Cigarettes to the value of 589,744 yen were exported.
The profits of the Tobacco Monopoly, estimated at 71 millions for
1919-20, were estimated at 88 millions for 1920-1.
ELECTORAL OFFENCES [XLVI]. There were candidates at the 1920 election
who spent 50,000 yen. It is not uncommon for the number of persons
charged with election offences to reach four figures. The
qualification for a vote (law of 1918) is the payment of 3 yen of
national tax. Under the old law there were about 25 voters per 1,000
inhabitants; now there are 54.
SMALLNESS OF ESTATES [XLVII]. The number of men holding from 5 to 10
chō was, in 1919, 121,141 and between 10 and 50 chō, 45,978. The
number holding 50 chō (125 acres) and upwards was only 4,226, and
400 or so of these were in Hokkaido. See also Appendix XXXI.
VEGETABLE WAX MAKING [XLVIII]. The wax-tree berries are flailed and
then pounded. Next comes boiling. The mush obtained is put into a bag
and that bag into a wooden press. The result is wax in its first
state. A reboiling follows and then—the discovery of the method was
made by a wax manufacturer while washing his hands—a slow dropping of
the wax into water. What is taken out of the water is wax in a flaked
state. It is dried, melted and poured into moulds. The best berries
yield 13 per cent. of fine wax. The variety of wax grown was oro
(yellow wax). There is another variety. The sort I saw is grafted at
three years with its own variety. The fruitful period lasts for a
quarter of a century. Roughly, the yield is 100 kwan per tan.
Formerly, wax was made from wild trees.
NAMES FOR ETA [XLIX]. Eta (great defilement) is an offensive name. The
phrase tokushu buraku (special villages), applied to Eta hamlets, is
also objected to. Heimin is the official name, but the Eta are
generally termed shin heimin (new common people), which is again
regarded as invidiously distinguishing them.
The name chihō is now officially
proposed for Eta villages. The fact that many Eta have
made large sums during the war has somewhat improved the position of
their class. Some Eta are well satisfied with their name and freely
acknowledge their origin. Year by year intermarriage increases in
Japan. A Home Department official has been quoted as saying that in
1918 as many as 450 marriages were registered between Eta and ordinary
Japanese.
The population of the village I visited, 1,900 in 300 families, was getting its living as follows: farming 682, trade 185, industry 31, day labour 97, travelling players 180, not reported 180. The Parliamentary voters were 10, prefectural 17, county 19 and village 57. There were 98 ex-soldiers in the community and one man was a member of the local education committee. The birth rate was above the local average. The crimes committed during the year were: theft 2, gambling 2, assault 1, police offences 3. Of the 300 families only one was destitute, and it had been taken care of by the young women's society.
A considerable proportion of the early emigrants to America were Eta. It is now recognised that it was a short-sighted policy on the part of the authorities to allow them to go.
PAPER MAKING [L]. A paper-making outfit may cost from 60 to 70 yen
only. The shrubs grown to produce bark for paper making are kōzo
(the paper mulberry), mitsumata (Edgworthia chrysantha) and
gampi (Wilkstroemia sikokiana). Someone has also hit on the idea
of turning the bark of the ordinary mulberry to use in paper making.
LIBRARIES, THE PRESS AND THE CENSORSHIP [LI]. There are 1,200
libraries in the country with 4 million books and 8 million visitors
in the year. About 47,000 books are published in a year, of which less
than half, probably, are original works. From one to two hundred are
translations, usually condensed translations. The largest number deal
with politics. There are about 3,000 newspapers and periodicals. In
1917 some 1,200 issues of newspapers and periodicals attracted the
attention of the censor and the sale of 600 books was prohibited. Some
sixty foreign books were stopped.
JAPANESE IN BRAZIL [LII]. Emigration to South America has latterly
been arrested through the rise in wages at home. During the past four
years an average of about 3,000 families has gone every twelve months
to Brazil, where about a quarter of a million acres are owned and leased by
Japanese. The Japanese Government spends 100,000 yen a year
on giving a grant of 50 yen to each emigrating family up to 2,000 in
number, through the Overseas Colonisation Company. The Brazilian
Government also offers a gratuity.
CATTLE KEEPING IN SOUTH-WESTERN JAPAN [LIII]. Tajima, the old province
which comprises about four counties in Tottori, is a large supplier of
"Kobe beef," but it is a cattle-feeding not a grazing district. The
number of cattle in Hyogo is double the cattle population of Tottori,
but no cattle keeper has more than a score of beasts. The usual thing
is for farmers to have two or three apiece. Some of the "Kobe beef"
comes from the prefectures of Hiroshima and Okayama. It is in the
north of Japan, where the people are not so thick on the ground and
cultivation is less intense, that cattle production has its best
chance.
VALUE OF LAND [LIV]. The value of land in the hill-village in which I
stayed necessarily varied, but the average price of paddy was given me
as 250 yen per tan. Dry land was half that. Open hill land, that is
the so-called grass land, might be worth 120 yen. The rise in values
which has taken place is illustrated by the following table of
farm-land values per tan in 1919, published by the Bank of Japan:
| Paddy | Upland | ||||||
| Good | Ordinary | Bad | Good | Ordinary | Bad | ||
| Hokkaido | 231 | 158 | 95 | 115 | 62 | 26 | |
| Honshu (main island) | {North} | 802 | 579 | 366 | 477 | 295 | 170 |
| {Tokyo} | 863 | 607 | 406 | 673 | 442 | 272 | |
| {middle} | 1,226 | 834 | 523 | 875 | 565 | 313 | |
| {west} | 1,226 | 840 | 525 | 727 | 443 | 244 | |
| Shikoku | 1,120 | 784 | 470 | 752 | 450 | 225 | |
| Kyushu | 960 | 652 | 416 | 538 | 300 | 175 | |
FRUIT PRODUCTION [LV]. The Japanese when they do not eat meat do not
feel the need of fruit which is experienced in the West. But there is
now a steady increase in the fruit crops. For 1918 the figures were
(in thousands of kwan): persimmons, 43,620; pears, 27,730; oranges,
73,660; peaches, 12,810; apples, 6,695; grapes, 6,240; plums (largely
used pickled), 6,190.
JAPANESE STUDENTS ABROAD [LVI]. During 1921 more than 200 young
professors or candidates for professorships were sent to Europe and
America by the Ministry of Education.
Probably another 300 were studying on funds
(£450 for a year plus fares is the grant which is
made by the Ministry of Education) supplied by the Ministries of
Agriculture, of Railways and of the Army and Navy (often supplemented,
no doubt, by money furnished by their families). If to these students
are added those sent by independent Universities, institutions,
corporations and private firms, the total cannot be fewer than 1,000.
The students stay from six months to two or three years, and when they
return others take their places. Counting diplomatists, business men,
tourists and students there are, of course, more Japanese in Great
Britain than there are British in Japan. There are fifteen hundred
Japanese in London alone.
TEA PRODUCTION [LVII]. Every prefecture but Aomori produces some tea,
but very little is grown in the prefectures of the extreme north. The
largest producers are in order: Shidzuoka, Miye, Nara, Kyoto,
Kumamoto, Gifu, Kagoshima, Shiga, Saitama, Osaka and Ibariki. In 1919
Shidzuoka produced 4 million kwan, valued at nearly 13 million yen.
But the statistics of tea production are unsatisfactory. Much tea is
produced and sold locally which is unreported. A great deal of this is
of inferior quality and produced from half-wild bushes. The 1919
figures are: area, 48,843 chō; number of factories, 1,122,164; green
tea—sencha, 7,205,886 kwan; bancha, 2,580,035 kwan; gyokuro,
75,826 kwan; black, 50,756 kwan; others, 234,868 kwan; sencha
dust, 249,862 kwan; other dust, 486 kwan. Total, 10,397,719
kwan; value, 33,377,460 yen. There was exported green tea (pan
fired), 12,420,000 yen; green tea (basket fired), 4,575,000 yen;
others, 1,405,000 yen. Of this there went to the United States
consignments to the value of 15,600,000 yen and to Canada of 1,700,000
yen. In 1918 the export to America was 50,000 tons; in 1919, 30,000;
and in 1920, 23,000; and a further decline is expected in 1921. The
total exports, which were, in 1909, 62 per cent, of the production,
were, in 1918, only 57 per cent, and, in 1919, 37 per cent.
THEINE PERCENTAGES.—The following percentages of theine in black and
green tea were furnished me by the Department of Agriculture:
| Green (Basket Fired) |
Green (Pan Fired) | Black | Oolong | |
| Theine | 2.81 | 2.22 | 2.26 | 2.35 |
| Tannin | 15.08 | 14.29 | 7.32 | 16.15 |
Theine or caffeine is a feathery-looking substance which resembles the material of a silk-worm's cocoon. There is more theine or caffeine in tea leaves than in coffee.
MISTAKES IN CROP STATISTICS [LVIII]. Generally speaking, it may be
said that cereals are under-estimated and cocoons over-estimated.
Cereals may be 20 per cent. under-estimated. The under-estimation may
no doubt be traced back to the time when taxation was on the basis of
the grain yield.
OCCUPATIONS FOR THE BLIND [LIX]. A third of the 70,000 sightless are
amma, about a quarter as many practise acupuncture and the
application of the moxa, while nearly the same number are musicians or
storytellers. The blind have petitioned the Diet to restrict the
calling of amma to men and women who have lost their sight.
WELL SINKING FOR GAS [LX]. The presence of gas, which is odourless, is
betrayed by the discoloration of the water from which it emanates and
by bubbles.
HEALTH, HEIGHTS AND WEIGHTS OF SCHOOL CHILDREN [LXI].
In 1917-18 the constitutions of 1,193,000 elementary school boys
were reported as 53 per cent. robust, 48 per cent.
medium and 4 per cent. weak. The constitutions of 1,016,000
elementary school girls were reported 49 per cent.
robust, 48 per cent. medium and 3 per cent. weak. Just as
women are often underfed in Japan, girls may frequently be less well
fed than boys. Elementary school boys of 16 averaged 4.84 shaku in
height and 10.85 kwan in weight. The average height and weight of
512 elementary school girls of the same age were 4.71 shaku and
10.83 kwan.
HEIGHT AND WEIGHT OF WRESTLERS [LXII]. In a list of ten famous
wrestlers the tallest is stated to be 6.30 shaku (a shaku is 11.93
inches) and the heaviest as 33.2 kwan (a kwan is 8.267 lbs.). The
average height and weight of these men work out at 5.84 shaku and
28.4 kwan. By way of comparison it may be mentioned that the
percentage of conscripts in 1918 over 5.5 shaku was 2.58 per cent.
The average weight of Japanese is recorded as 13 kwan 830 momme.
EXEMPTION FROM AND AVOIDANCE OF CONSCRIPTION [LXIII].
The age is 20 and the service two years (with four years in reserve
and ten years depot service). The only son of a parent over 60
unable to support himself or herself is
released. Middle school boys' service is
postponed till they are 25. Students at higher schools and
universities need not serve till 26 or 27. The service of young men
abroad (i.e. elsewhere than China) is similarly postponed. (If still
abroad at 37, they are entered in territorial army list and exempted.)
Young men of education equal to that of middle-school graduates can
volunteer for a year and pay 100 yen barracks expenses and be passed
out with the rank of non-commissioned officers and be liable
thereafter for only two terms of three months in territorial army.
There are about half a million youths liable to conscription annually.
To this number is to be added about 100,000 postponed cases. (In 1917,
47,324 students, 32,263 abroad, 15,920 whereabouts unknown, 5,069 ill,
3,147 criminal causes, 2,477 absentees, family reasons or crime.)
Evasions in 1917: convicted, 234; suspected, 1,582. There are two
conscription insurance companies with policies issued for 69 million
yen. In one place charms against being conscripted are sold—at a
shrine. Desertions in 1916 (7 per cent, officers) 956, of which 258
received more than "light punishment." The conscripts suffering from
trachoma were 15.3 per cent. and from venereal diseases 2.2 per cent.
Heights (1918): under 5 shaku, 10.95 per cent.; 5-5.3 shaku, 53.34
per cent.; 5.3-5.5 shaku, 33.13 per cent.; above 5.5 shaku, 2.58
per cent. In these four classes there was a decrease in height in the
first two of .39 per cent. and .57 per cent. respectively and an
increase in the second two of .80 per cent. and 15 per cent.
respectively.
HOKKAIDO HOLDINGS [LXIV]. There are only 28 holdings of more than
1,000 chō, 62 of over 500 chō, 161 over
100 chō and 80 over 50 chō. These large
holdings are used for cattle breeding alone. There are no more
than 620 holdings over 20 chō and only 6,756 over 10.
The number over 5 chō is 51,877, and over 2 chō 62,015. Under the
area of 2 chō there are as many as 40,928. Few of the largest
holdings are worked as single farms. They are let in sections to
tenants.
CLAUSES IN A TENANT'S CONTRACT [LXV]. (1) The tenant must make at
least 1 chō of paddy every year. (2) Rent rice must be the best of
the harvest, but the tenant may pay in money. (3) In the following
cases the owner will give orders to the tenants: (a) If tenants do
not use enough manure, (b) If there is disease of plants or insect
pests, (c) If the tenant neglects to mend the road or other
necessary work is neglected. (4) The owner will dismiss a tenant:
(a) If the
tenant does not pay his rent without reason, (b) If
the tenant is neglectful of his work or is idle, (c) If the tenant
is not obedient to the owner and does not keep this contract
faithfully. (d) If the tenant is punished by the law. (5) When
tenants leave without permission of absence more than twenty days the
owner can treat as he will crops or buildings. (6) In the following
cases the tenant must provide two labourers to the owner: mending
road, drainage canal or bridges; mending water gate and irrigation
canal; when necessary public works must be undertaken.
CULTIVATED AREA AND LIVESTOCK [LXVI]. The area of cultivated land in
Japan (counting paddy and arable) was, in 1919, 15,179,721 acres
(6,071,888 chō). The number of animals kept for tillage purposes was
1,199,970 horses and 1,036,020 homed cattle. The total number of
horses in the country was only 1,510,626 and of horned cattle,
excluding 207,891 returned as "calving" and 12,761 as "deaths,"
1,307,120. Sheep, 4,546; goats, 91,777; swine, 398,155. The number of
horned cattle slaughtered in the year was 226,108. Some 86,800 horses
were also slaughtered. In Great Britain (arable, pasture and grazing
area, 63 million acres) there were, in 1919, 11 million cattle, 25
million sheep, 3 million pigs and 1¾ million horses.
EGGS AND POULTRY [LXVII]. Even with the assistance of a tariff on
Chinese eggs and of a Government poultry yard, which distributes birds
and sittings at cost price, there were in 1919 14,105,085 fowls and
11,278,783 chickens. There was an importation of 3½ million "fresh"
eggs.
MEAT CONSUMPTION [LXVIII]. The present meat consumption by Japanese is
uncertain, for there were in 1920
[A]
3,579 foreign residents and
22,104 visitors, and there is an exportation of ham and tinned and
potted foods. The number of animals slaughtered in 1918 was: cattle
and calves, 226,108; horses, 86,800; sheep and goats, 9,587; swine,
327,074. Someone said to me that "the nutritious flesh of the horse
should not be neglected, for the farmer is able to digest tough food."
[A] In 1921 as many as 24,000 foreigners landed in nine months.
TUBERCULOSIS IN THE MILLS [LXIX]. When we remember early and
mid-Victorian conditions in English mills and the conditions of the
sweat shops in New York and other American cities (vide "Susan
Lenox"), we shall be less inclined to take a harsh view of industrial
Japan during a period of
transition. But it is to the interest of the
woollen industry no less than that of its workers that the fact should
be stated that a competent authority has alleged that 50 per cent. of
the employees in the mills suffer from consumption and that many girls
sleep ten in a room of only ten-mat size. Improvements have been made
lately under the influence of legislation and enlightened
self-interest—the president of the largest company is a man of
foresight and public spirit—but when I was in Japan, as I recorded in
the New East at the time, girls of 13 and 14 were working 11-hour
day and night shifts in some mills.
WOOLLEN FACTORIES [LXX]. In the Japanese woollen factory the cost of
the hands is low individually, but expensive collectively. An expert
suggested that it takes half a dozen of the unskilled girls to do the
work of an English mill-girl. It is much the same with male labour.
"An English worker may be expected to produce work equal to the output
of four Japanese hands." Labour for heads of departments is also
difficult to get. There are textile schools and probably a hundred men
are graduated yearly. But the men are not all fitted for the jobs
which are vacant. Therefore, one finds a man acting as an engineer
who, because of his lack of technical experience, is unable to
exercise sufficient control over the men in his charge. A curiosity of
the industry is the high wages which many men of this sort command.
They are really being paid better for inferior work than skilled men
in England. The capital of the factories in 1918 was 46½ million
yen with 32¾ million paid up. Before the War the companies made 8
per cent, as against the 2½ per cent, which contents the English
manufacturer, who has often side lines to help his profits. There was
more than 100 million yen invested in the woollen textile business,
manufacturing and retail. The industry did well during the War by
supplies of cloth to Russia and of yarn and muslin to countries which
ordinarily are able to supply themselves. In 1918 the production
(woollen fabrics and mixtures) was valued at 85 million yen (muslin,
32; cloth, 21; serges, 19; blankets, 3; flannel, 1; others, 8). The
imports of wool were 60 million and of yarn 251,000. In 1919 the
figures were 61 million and 710,000 respectively. In 1920 the exports
were: woollen or worsted yarns, 1,437,926 yen; woollen cloth and
serges, 3,019,382 yen; blankets, 1,024,540 yen; other woollens,
548,922 yen. The Nippon Wool Weaving Company, which in 1921
distributed a 20 per cent, ordinary and 20 per cent. extraordinary
dividend, has 15 foreign experts.
POPULATION OF HOKKAIDO [LXXI]. In 1869, 58,467; has risen as follows:
| Year | Population |
| 1874 | 174,368 |
| 1884 | 276,414 |
| 1894 | 616,650 |
| 1904 | 1,233,669 |
| 1914 | 1,869,582 |
| 1919 | 2,137,700 |
| 1920 | 2,359,097 |
EXTENSION OF CROP-BEARING AREA OF JAPAN [LXXII]. There is normally
added to the crop-bearing area about 53,000 chō (132,000 acres) a
year. From the new crop-bearing area every year is deducted the loss
of arable land from floods, the extension of cities and towns and
railways and the building of factories and institutions. This is
reckoned at nearly 8,000 chō in the year. One computation is that
there are 2 million chō (5 million acres) available for addition to
the crop-bearing area, of which 1 million chō would be convertible
into paddies. A decision was taken by the Government in 1919 to bring
250,000 chō under cultivation within nine years from that date, and
by 1920 some 20,000 chō had been reclaimed. Persons who reclaim more
than 5 chō receive 6 per cent, of their expenditure.
The increase in the area of cultivation has been as follows (in chō):
| 1905 | 2,841,471 | 2,540,906 | 5,382,378 |
| 1906 | 2,849,288 | 2,551,170 | 5,400,459 |
| 1907 | 2,858,628 | 2,639,680 | 5,498,309 |
| 1908 | 2,882,426 | 2,684,531 | 5,566,958 |
| 1909 | 2,902,899 | 2,777,453 | 5,680,352 |
| 1910 | 2,910,970 | 2,804,434 | 5,715,405 |
| 1911 | 2,923,520 | 2,836,002 | 5,759,522 |
| 1912 | 2,939,445 | 2,880,301 | 5,819,756 |
| 1913 | 2,953,947 | 2,902,445 | 5,856,392 |
| 1914 | 2,961,639 | 2,916,569 | 5,878,208 |
| 1915 | 2,974,042 | 2,948,075 | 5,922,118 |
| 1916 | 2,987,579 | 2,971,800 | 5,959,379 |
| 1917 | 3,005,679 | 3,012,685 | 6,018,364 |
| 1918 | 3,011,000 | 3,070,000 | 6,081,000 |
| 1919 | 3,021,879 | 3,050,008 | 6,071,887 |
Whereas the percentage of cultivated land to uncultivated was in 1909 14.6 per cent., it was in 1918 15.6 per cent.
USE TO WHICH THE LAND IS PUT [LXXIII]. Here are the details of the
division of the land in 1909 and 1918:
| Division of the Land | Years | Area in chō in 000's |
Percentage of Total Area |
| Total area | 1909 | 38,847 | 100.0 |
| 1918 | 38,864 | 100.0 | |
| Paddy fields | 1909 | 2,903 | 7.5 |
| 1918 | 3,011 | 7.7 | |
| Upland fields | 1909 | 2,777 | 7.1 |
| 1918 | 3,070 | 7.9 | |
| Total arable as above | 1909 | 5,680 | 14.6 |
| 1918 | 6,081 | 15.6 | |
| Meadows and pastures | 1909 | 39 | 0.1 |
| 1918 | 43 | 0.1 | |
| Grass lands and heather | 1909 | 1,941 | 5.0 |
| (excluding pastures) | 1918 | 3,509 | 9.0 |
| Forests | 1909 | 22,072 | 56.8 |
| 1918 | 18,783 | 48.3 | |
| Dwellings, factories, roads, railways, | 1909 | 9,115 | 23.5 |
| institutions, etc. | 1918 | 10,448 | 27.0 |
| Crop | chō | Yield |
| Rice (1919) | 3,104,611 | 60,818,163 koku; value, 2,891,397,063 yen |
| Mulberry (1918) | 508,993 | 6,832,000 koku; raw silk, 7,891,000 kwan; value, 546,543,000 yen |
| Tea (1919) | 48,843 | 10,397,719 kwan value, 33,377,460 yen |
| Barley (1919) | 534,279 | 9,664,000 koku |
| Naked Barley (1919) | 646,362 | 7,995,000 koku |
| Wheat (1919) | 548,508 | 5,611,000 koku |
| Soy Bean (1918) | 432,207 | 3,451,320 koku |
| Other Beans (1918) | — | 1,237,000 koku |
| Peas (1918) | — | 536,000 koku |
| Millets (1918) | — | 2,903,000 koku |
| Buckwheat (1918) | 136,313 | 852,000 koku |
| Sweet Potato (1918) | 314,012 | 918,328,000 kwan |
| Irish Potato (1918) | 132,090 | 323,930,000 kwan |
| Rape Seed (1918) | 116,300 | 856,880 kwan |
| Sugar Cane (1918) | 29,367 | 316,745,596 kwan |
| Indigo (1918) | 5,570 | 2,717,757 kwan |
| Hemp (1918) | 11,821 | 2,564,114 kwan |
| Cotton (1918) | 2,930 | 681,021 kwan |