- Shōwa financial crisis
The nihongo|Shōwa Financial Crisis|昭和金融恐慌| Shōwa Kin'yū Kyōkō was a
financial panic in 1927, during the first year of the reign of EmperorHirohito of Japan, and was a foretaste of theGreat Depression . It brought down the government of Prime MinisterReijiro Wakatsuki and led to the domination of the "zaibatsu " over the Japanese banking industry.The Shōwa Financial Crisis occurred after the post-
World War I business boom in Japan. Many companies invested heavily in increased production capacity in what proved to be a “bubble economy ”. The post-1920economic slowdown and theGreat Kantō earthquake of 1923 caused aneconomic depression , which led to the failures of many businesses. The government intervened through theBank of Japan by issuing discounted “earthquake bonds” to overextended banks. In January 1927, when the government proposed to redeem these bonds, rumor spread that the banks holding these bonds would go bankrupt. In the ensuringbank run , thirty seven banks throughout Japan (including theBank of Taiwan ), and the second-tier "zaibatsu"Suzuki Shoten , went under. Prime Minister Wakatsuki attempted to have an emergency decree issued to allow the Bank of Japan to extend emergency loans to save these banks, but his request was denied by the Privy Council and he was forced to resign.Wakatsuki was succeeded by Prime Minister
Giichi Tanaka , who managed to control the situation with a three weekbank holiday and the issuance of emergency loans; however, as a result of the collapse of many smaller banks, the large financial branches of the five great "zaibatsu" houses were able to dominate Japanese finances until the end ofWorld War II .References
*cite book
last = Smitka
first = Michael
authorlink =
year = 1998
title = The Interwar Economy of Japan : Colonialism, Depression, and Recovery, 1910-1940
publisher = Routledge
location =
id = ISBN 0815327064
*cite book
last = Yamamura
first = Kozo
authorlink =
year = 1998
title = Cambridge University Press
publisher = Routledge
location =
id = ISBN 0521589460
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