6-11, Nihonbashi Hongoku-cho 4-chome Chuo-ku,
Tokyo
103
Japan
History of Japan Pulp And Paper Company Limited
Japan Pulp and Paper Company Limited (JP&P) is the largest Japanese pulp- and paper-trading company. It is 40%-owned by paper manufacturers and acts as a trading organization to procure raw materials and distribute finished products. When consignment sales carried out for clients are added to its own operations, it is the largest pulp- and paper-trading company in the world. Nonetheless, nearly all sales are domestic.
JP&P operates through a series of representative offices in Asia, North America, and South America; six subsidiaries in Asia, the United States, and Europe; and four non-Japanese Asian affiliates. During the early 1990s this network was beginning to explore export sales. Since Japanese paper companies can supply their own market with finished paper products yet rely on other nations to supply their raw materials, JP&P's overseas activities primarily involve trade rather than distribution.
Saburobei Nakai, a Meiji Restoration-era entrepreneur, set up Echigoya Saburobei Shoten, a private company, in 1845. Located in Kyoto, Echigoya Saburobei Shoten traded in traditional Japanese paper, or washi, an industry then controlled by trade guilds. The company was the first in Japan to sell machine-made paper in 1876 and expanded its distribution by creating a branch office in Osaka two years later.
Still a regional company, it formed a distribution agreement with Oji Paper Company in 1882. Such a business relationship was typical of prewar Japan. Before World War II, Oji Paper supplied 90% of the nation's paper. By 1889 Echigoya Saburobei Shoten had two more branches--in Tokyo and Nagoya--that intensified its presence throughout central Japan.
In 1916 the venture reorganized, became a limited company and was renamed Nakai Shoten Limited. That year it had sales of ¥2 million. During World War I, wartime demand created shortages that lasted through the 1940s of many raw materials. During this period Nakai Shoten slowed its geographic expansion. It was not until 1925, when the company established a branch office in Kyushu, that the company expanded again.
Following World War II, in 1947 the Allied powers permitted civilian trade to resume and Nakai Shoten set up a Sapporo branch office the following year. This office gave the company national distribution for the first time.
With the war's end began dramatic changes in the way Nakai Shoten did business. The Allied occupation government dismantled the zaibatsu, the banking and commercial organizations that had controlled much of Japanese industry before the war. Oji Paper, which Nakai Shoten served, was broken up into three smaller companies. These companies--Jujo Paper Company, Honshu Paper Company, and Oji--still retain partial ownership of Japan Pulp & Paper. JP&P also owns shares in Honshu, as well as other paper companies unaffiliated with the original Oji Paper group.
Most of the company's international activity had to do with the collection of raw materials to supply its manufacturers. During the postwar era the company increased its international presence but remained mainly a domestic company. In 1951 it established an export division, and by 1956 had representative offices in Hong Kong and Bangkok that acted as trading offices.
Contact with other Asian markets led to limited diversification. In 1958, seven years after its first international activity, the company began trading in plastic products. These plastics have been employed largely in packaging, and eventually in building materials.
In 1962 the company established a Sendai branch office--its second office north of Tokyo. The following year the company shortened its name to Nakai Limited.
In the late 1960s the company expanded beyond Asian markets and expanded the scope of products that it dealt with. In 1967 it opened a representative office in New York. The following year it began trading in pulp--a commodity necessary to papermakers. The company's trading in pulp ensured adequate supply and procurement at optimal price, and in 1968 sales reached ¥100 million for the first time.
During the 1970s the company centralized its organization, expanded its product line and made use of its burgeonning capital. In 1970 Nakai Limited merged with Fuji Yoshiten Company, another paper dealer. The new organization was named Japan Pulp and Paper Company Limited. The following year it completed the union by consolidating its national business with a unified wholesale network.
The company immediately began marketing construction materials and machinery for the paper industry and set up a representative office in Jakarta. Construction materials marketed by Japan Pulp and Paper then included more than plywood, particleboard, and other wood products, which are commonly associated with paper and forestry companies. The company sold concrete products for building foundations and interior finishing materials made of ceramics and plastic.
The company went public, listing on the Tokyo Stock Exchange's second section in 1972 to increase its flow of capital. JP&P took advantage of the cash influx and established its first European sales office, in Düsseldorf. It aggressively pursued this new market.
In 1973 JP&P transformed the new Düsseldorf office into its first subsidiary, Japan Pulp and Paper GmbH. Due to its growth the company was soon elevated to the first section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
The following year two more subsidiaries were created in its existing markets. In Seattle, Washington, the Japan Pulp and Paper (U.S.A.) Corporation was created, and in Hong Kong, Japan Pulp and Paper Co. (H.K.), Ltd. This latter venture incorporated the existing sales office. In only six years the company's sales had doubled to ¥200 million. By 1980 after another six years, sales jumped another ¥100 million.
Continually increasing its trading capacity, the company also upgraded its information network. In 1979 the company created the JP Information Center Co., Ltd., serving domestic paper companies. The following year information on the distribution of paper would be incorporated.
As the 1980s dawned, JP&P expanded its Asian presence into Beijing with a representative office. It also moved its U.S. subsidiary headquarters to Los Angeles, and closed its sales office in Seattle.
During the 1980s the company diversified into finished paper products and papermaking machines. Serious growth evaded the Japanese paper industry in the early- and mid-1980s. Although the Japanese paper industry later rebounded, JP&P diversified. In 1985 it ventured for the first time into real estate, creating JP Planning Co. Ltd. It complemented this subsidiary with JP Household Supply Co., Ltd.
Papers that accompany office technology saw significant growth in the 1980s. Electronic office automation through such tools as computers and fax machines greatly increased demand for certain paper grades. In 1982 JP&P intensified its pursuit of this growing market by selling automated office equipment in addition to the paper that the machines require. JP&P markets paper for photocopiers, facsimile machines, and computer printers, as well as business forms and carbonless papers. By trading in office equipment, JP&P tracks and keeps pace with changes in that market segment for paper products. Selling facsimile machines, for instance, identifies buyers for compatible papers.
During the 1980s Japanese industry spent more on advertising, leading to a publishing boom. The growth spurred JP&P's sales of newsprint, publication papers, plastics, and printing machinery. The company provides newsprint to five of the six largest newspapers in Japan. By the end of the 1980s, JP&P sold nearly 25% of the newsprint used in Japan. In addition, promotional materials like mass mailings and catalogs grew tremendously in Japan during the 1980s, which also served to increase paper demand. Coated papers for magazines also saw explosive growth. JP&P has significant access to suppliers of this product. Kanzaki Paper Manufacturing, which owns 6.2% of JP&P shares and has 3.3% of its shares owned by Oji, holds the largest domestic market share of coated papers. In addition, Jujo Paper, which owns 10.9% of JP&P, owns nearly 33%. of Nippon Kakoh Seishi, another major supplier of coated papers to the Japanese market.
By 1989 only 61.9% of JP&P's sales were of paper. Packaging received emphasis by Japanese consumer product manufacturers during the decade. By 1988 paperboard accounted for about 40% of the paper made in Japan. Other packaging grades available to the company include kraft paper, heavier grades of paperboard for boxes, and plastic materials for packaging.
In the late 1980s the company's subsidiaries carried out their own expansion. A second European office opened in 1986 in London. In 1988 the company opened Japan Pulp and Paper (SP) Pte. Ltd. in Singapore. By 1990 the company had two more U.S. sales offices, creating one in Atlanta, Georgia, and reopening one in Seattle.
In 1988 reflecting the company's domestic focus, JP&P went into debt to finance a 10,000-ton-capacity warehouse--strategically located near Tokyo's port of entry. JP&P owned 11 distribution companies and this new warehouse accounted for 10% of the company's storage capacity. Japanese investment in paper-production technology reached record highs during the late 1980s, and JP&P income growth kept pace with the national average.
JP&P serves paper manufacturers in more ways than simply through distribution. JP&P has marketed computer systems designed for paper wholesalers and sold them to more than 170 Japanese wholesalers between 1970 and 1989. The company planned to expand its computer software development. It also markets heavy equipment like industrial printing presses.
JP&P's role as the distribution leader in the Japanese paper industry is exemplified by its VAN system, begun in 1989. The on-line system coordinates information from ten other paper traders and makes ordering and distribution information available to customers. Such service capacities, and finance activities, will continue to be emphasized in the company's future.
Japan Pulp and Paper Company procures and supplies printing papers, paperboard, pulp and fiber, plastics, printing and papermaking machinery, and construction materials. The company imports raw materials in the form of paper for finishing, pulp, and wastepaper. It exports machinery, electronics, and paper. Nonetheless, exports are only about 10% of total sales. The Tokyo office controls the trading activities of six regional offices and information from more than 1,000 suppliers worldwide. During the late 1980s Japan started to import more paper. Asia and Oceania are likely to surpass Japan as producers of paper and paperboard, but JP&P is extremely active as a trader in its hemisphere.
Principal Subsidiaries: Japan Pulp and Paper Co., (H.K.) Ltd. (Hong Kong; Japan Pulp and Paper (SP) Pte. Ltd. (Singapore); Far East Paper Pte. Ltd. (Singapore); Japan Pulp and Paper (U.S.A.) Corp., Japan Pulp and Paper Gmbh (Germany).
Related information about Japan
Local name Nihon (Nippon)
Timezone GMT +9 Area
377 728 km²/145 803 sq mi
population total (2002e) 127 347 000 Status
Monarchy Capital Tokyo Language Japanese (official)
Ethnic groups Japanese (99%), with Korean minorities
Religions Shintoist (40%), Buddhist (39%), Christian (4%)
Physical features Island state comprising four large islands
(Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku) and several small islands;
consists mainly of steep mountains with many volcanoes; Hokkaido
(N) central range runs N-S, rising to over
2000 m/6500 ft, falling to coastal uplands and plains;
Honshu, the largest island, comprises parallel arcs of mountains
bounded by narrow coastal plains, and includes Mt Fuji,
3776 m/12 388 ft; heavily populated Kanto plain in
E; Shikoku and Kyushu (SW) consist of clusters of low cones and
rolling hills, mostly 1000–2000 m/3000–6000 ft; Ryukyu
chain of volcanic islands to the S, largest Okinawa; frequent
earthquakes notably in Kanto (1923), Kobe (1995). Climate
Oceanic climate, influenced by the Asian monsoon; heavy winter
rainfall on W coasts of Honshu and in Hokkaido; short, warm summers
in N, and severe winters, with heavy snow; variable winter weather
throughout Japan, especially in N and W; typhoons in summer and
early autumn; mild and almost subtropical winters in S Honshu,
Shikoku, and Kyushu; average annual temperatures 5°C (Jan), 25°C
(Jul) in Tokyo. Currency 1 Yen (JPY) = 100 sen
Economy Limited natural resources (less than 20% of land
under cultivation); intensive crop production (principally of
rice); timber, fishing, engineering, shipbuilding, textiles,
chemicals; major industrial developments since 1960s, especially in
computing, electronics, and vehicles. GDP (2002e)
$3·651 tn, per capita $28 700 Human Development
Index (2002) 0·933 History Originally occupied by the
Ainu; developed into small states, 4th-c; culture strongly
influenced by China, 7th-9th-c; ruled by feudal shoguns until power
passed to the emperor, 1867; limited contact with the West until
the Meiji Restoration, 1868; successful war with China, 1894–5;
gained Formosa (Taiwan) and S Manchuria; formed alliance with
Britain, 1902; war with Russia, 1904–5; Russia ceded southern half
of Sakhalin; Korea annexed, 1910; joined allies in World War 1,
1914; received German Pacific islands as mandates, 1919; war with
China; occupied Manchuria, 1931–2; renewed fighting, 1937; entered
World War 2 with surprise attack on the US fleet at Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii, 1941; occupied British and Dutch possessions in SE Asia,
1941–2; pushed back during 1943–5; atomic bombs dropped on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki by allied forces in 1945, ending World War 2
with Japanese surrender; allied control commission took power, and
Formosa and Manchuria returned to China; Emperor Hirohito became
figurehead ruler, 1946; full sovereignty regained, 1952; joined
United Nations, 1958; strong economic growth in 1960s; regained
Bonin, Okinawa, and Volcano Islands, 1972; a constitutional
monarchy with Emperor as Head of State; government consists of a
Prime Minister, Cabinet, and bicameral Diet (Kokkai), with a House
of Representatives and a House of Councillors. Located in the
Pacific Ocean, it
lies to the east of China,
Korea, and Russia, stretching from the
Sea of Okhotsk in
the north to the East
China Sea in the south. Its capital is Tokyo.
At over 377,872 square kilometres (145,898 sq mi), Japan is the 62nd largest country by area. It encompasses over 3,000
islands, the largest of which are Honsh?, Hokkaid?, Ky?sh? and Shikoku. Most of Japan's islands are mountainous, and
many are volcanic,
including the highest peak, Mount Fuji. The Greater Tokyo Area, with over 30 million
residents, is the largest metropolitan area in the world.
Archaeological
research indicates that people were living on the islands of Japan
as early as the upper paleolithic period. The first written mention of
Japan begins with brief appearances in Chinese history texts
from the 1st century AD. Its
culture today is a mixture of outside and internal
influences.
Since it adopted its constitution on May
3, 1947, Japan has
maintained a unitary constitutional monarchy with an emperor and an elected
parliament, the Diet, which is one of the oldest legislative bodies in
Asia. Japan is an economic
world power with the
world's second largest economy, and is the sixth largest
exporter and importer and is a member of the
United Nations,
G8, G4, and APEC. -->
Jomon and Yayoi eras
The first signs of civilization appeared around 10,000 BC with the
Jomon culture,
characterized by a mesolithic to neolithic semi-sedentary hunter-gatherer
lifestyle of pit dwelling and a rudimentary form of agriculture.Many believe
that the Ainu, an
indigenous people found mostly on the northern island of Hokkaid?, are descended from
the Jomon and thus represent descendants of the first inhabitants
of Japan. The Jomon people made decorated clay vessels, often with
plaited patterns.
- Alternatively, the Metropolitan
Museum of Art's Timeline of Art History www.metmuseum.org/toah/splash.htm
notes "Carbon-14 testing of the earliest known shards has yielded
a production date of about 10,500 B.C., but because this date
falls outside the known chronology of pottery development
elsewhere in the world, such an early date is not generally
accepted". www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/02/eaj/ht02eaj.htm.
The Yayoi
period, starting around 300 BC, marked the influx of new
practices such as rice
farming and iron and
bronze-making brought by
migrants from continental East Asia. Japan first appears in written history in 57
AD, in China's Book of Later Han, as "the people of Wa, formed from more than
one hundred tribes." In the 3rd century, according to China's
Book of Wei, the
most powerful kingdom in Japan was called Yamataikoku.
Classical era
The Yamato
period, from the 3rd century to the 7th century, saw the
establishment of a dominant polity centered in the Yamato area whence arose
the Japanese
imperial lineage.
The kingdom of Baekje
introduced Buddhism to
Japan, and it was promoted by the Japanese ruling class. ISBN
0804705232) Prince
Sh?toku devoted his efforts to the spread of Buddhism and Chinese culture in
Japan. He is credited with bringing relative peace to Japan through
the proclamation of the Seventeen-article constitution.
Starting with the Taika Reform Edicts of 645, the Yamato court intensified
the adoption of Chinese cultural practices and reorganized the
government and the penal code based on the Chinese administrative
structure of the timeThis is in reference to the Ritsury?. This period also saw
the first use of the word as a name for the emerging state.
The Nara period of
the 8th century marked the first emergence of a strong Japanese
state, centered around an imperial court in the city of Heij?-ky?. According to
them Japan was founded in 660 BC by Emperor Jimmu, a descendant of the Shinto deity Amaterasu (the Sun Goddess).
Historians, however, believe the first emperor who actually existed
was Emperor ?jin,
though the date of his reign is uncertain.citeneeded
In the Heian
period, from 794 to 1185, a distinctly indigenous culture
emerged, noted for its art, especially poetry and literature.
Medieval era
Japan's medieval era
was characterized by the emergence of a ruling class of warriors,
the samurai. In 1185,
following the defeat of the rival Taira clan, Minamoto no Yoritomo was appointed Sh?gun and established a base of
power in Kamakura. The Kamakura shogunate managed to repel Mongol
invasions in 1274 and 1281, with assistance from a storm that
the Japanese interpreted as a kamikaze, or
Divine Wind. The ?nin
War (1467 to 1477) is generally regarded as the onset of the
"Warring States" or Sengoku period.
During the 16th century, traders and missionaries from Portugal reached Japan for the first time,
initiating the Nanban ("southern barbarian") period of active
commercial and cultural exchange between Japan and the West.
Oda Nobunaga
conquered numerous other daimyo by using European technology
and firearms, and had
almost unified the nation when he was assassinated in the "Incident at
Honn?ji" in 1582. Hideyoshi twice
invaded Korea, but was thwarted by Korean and Ming Chinese forces.
Edo era
After Hideyoshi's death, Tokugawa Ieyasu utilized his position as the
regent of Hideyoshi's son Toyotomi Hideyori as well as the conflicts among
loyalists of the Toyotomi clan, to gain the support of warlords from
across Japan. Ieyasu was appointed sh?gun in 1603 and established the Tokugawa shogunate at
Edo (modern Tokyo).
After defeating Toyotomi clan, at the Siege of Osaka in 1614
and 1615, the Tokugawas became rulers of Japan, setting up a
centralized feudal system with the Tokugawa shogunate at the head
of the feudal
domains. The study of Western sciences, known as rangaku, continued during
this period through contacts with the Dutch enclave at Dejima in Nagasaki.
Modern Japan
On March 31,
1854, Commodore Matthew
Perry and the "Black
Ships" of the United States Navy forced the opening of Japan to the
West with the Convention of Kanagawa. One of the main figures that
helped bring change was Fukuzawa Yukichi who wrote the article "Leaving Asia", encouraging
Japanese people to be open to change and modernize through Westernization.
Japan adopted numerous Western institutions, including a modern
government, legal system and military. Japan introduced a parliamentary
system modeled after the British
parliament, with It? Hirobumi as first Prime Minister in 1882.
The Meiji era reforms helped transform the Empire of Japan into a
world power and
embarked on number of military conflicts to increase access to
natural resources with victories in the First Sino-Japanese
War (1894-1895) and the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905). By 1910, Japan
controlled Korea, Taiwan and the southern half of
Sakhalin. Next year,
the unequal
treaties Japan had signed with western powers were
canceled.
The early 20th century saw a brief period of "Taish? In 1936, Japan
signed the Anti-Comintern Pact with Germany, later joining the Axis Powers alliance in
1941.
Japan subsequently attacked the rest of China, starting the Second
Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) and many countries and islands in
southeast Asia
and the Pacific. In
1941, after suffering from oil embargoes and diplomatic pressure from the United States, United Kingdom and the
Netherlands, Japan
attacked the
United States naval base in Pearl Harbor in response and
declared war on those three powers. Germany subsequently declared war on the United
States four days later, bringing the U.S. into World War II.
After a long campaign in the Pacific War, Japan gradually lost its initial
territorial gains. American forces advanced far enough to begin the
strategic
bombing of cities like Tokyo and Osaka, resulting in the 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which together killed about 214,000 people
(mostly civilians).
Possibly the most extensive review and analysis of the various
death toll estimates is in:
After the atomic bombings, Imperial Japan agreed to an unconditional
surrender library.educationworld.net/txt15/surrend1.html. The
formal surrender documents were signed September 2, 1945 (V-J Day). The International Military Tribunal for the Far East (on
May 31946) was convened to prosecute
Japanese leaders for crimes against peace and humanity as well as war crimes
including the Nanking Massacre. In 1947, Japan adopted a new pacifist constitution,
seeking international cooperation and emphasizing human rights and
democratic practices. Official American occupation lasted until 1952 and Japan
was granted membership of the United Nations in 1956. This ended in the 1990s,
when Japan suffered a major recession from which it has since been
slowly recovering.news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/5178822.stm
Government and politics
In academic studies, Japan is generally considered a constitutional
monarchy, based largely upon the British system with strong
influences from European continental civil law
countries such as Germany and France.
The Diet
The Constitution of Japan states that the nation's "highest
organ of state power" is its bicameral parliament, the National Diet (Kokkai). There is universal
adult (over 20 years old) suffrage, with a secret ballot for all elective offices.
The liberal
conservative Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP) has been in power since 1955, except for
a short-lived coalition government formed from its opposition parties
in 1993;
The Prime Minister
The Prime
Minister is the head of government of Japan, although the literal
translation of the title is "Prime Minister of the Cabinet". The
Prime Minister is appointed by the Emperor of Japan after
being designated by the Diet from among its members, and must enjoy the
confidence of the House of Representatives to remain in office.
The Judiciary
Japanese law was historically heavily influenced by Chinese law and developed
independently during the Edo period through texts such as Kujikata
Osadamegaki, but has been largely based on the civil law of Germany since the late 19th
century. Japan is a member state of the United Nations and
currently serving as a non-permanent Security
Council member. It is also one of the "G4 nations" seeking permanent
membership in the Security Council.
Japan is a member of the G8,
the APEC, the "ASEAN plus three", and a participant in the East Asia Summit.
PDFlink As member of the
G8 Japan maintains cordial relations with most countries as a key
trading partner.
Japan has several territorial disputes with its neighbors
concerning the control of certain outlying islands. Japan also has
an ongoing dispute with North Korea over its abduction of Japanese citizens and its nuclear weapons and missile programs.
Military
Japan's military is restricted by Article 9 of the Constitution of Japan of 1946, which states that
"Aspiring sincerely to an international peace based on justice and
order, the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign
right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of
settling international disputes." Thus, Japan's current
constitution prohibits the use of military force to wage war
against other countries.
Japan's military is governed by the Japan Defense
Agency (JDA) and primarily consists of the Japan Ground
Self-Defense Force, the Japan
Maritime Self-Defense Force, and the Japan Air
Self-Defense Force. The forces have been recently used in
peacekeeping
operations and the deployment of Japanese troops to Iraq marked the first
overseas use of its military since World War II. The former city of Tokyo is further divided into
23 special
wards, which have the same powers as cities.
Japan is currently undergoing administrative reorganization by merging many of the cities, towns, and
villages with each other. This process will reduce the number of
sub-prefecture administrative regions, and is expected to cut
administrative costs.siteresources.worldbank.org/WBI/Resources/wbi37175.pdf
Mabuchi, Masaru, "Municipal Amalgamation in Japan," World Bank,
2001.
Geography
Japan, a country of islands, extends along the eastern or Pacific coast of Asia. The main islands, running
from north to south, are Hokkaid??????,
Honsh????,?or the
mainland), Shikoku????,
and Ky?sh?????. In
addition, about 3,000 smaller islands may be counted in the full
extent of the archipelago.
In some maps published in Japan, the Kuril Islands also are
marked as territory of Japan. About 70 to 80% of the country is
forested, mountainous
encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761566679/Japan.html
"Japan," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2006
Its location on the Pacific Ring of Fire, at the juncture of three tectonic
plates, gives Japan frequent low-intensity earth tremors and
occasional volcanic activity. Precipitation is light.
- Seto Inland
Sea: The mountains of the Ch?goku and Shikoku regions shelter the region from the seasonal
winds, bringing mild weather throughout the year.
- Pacific Ocean: The east coast experiences cold winters with
little snowfall and hot, humid summers due to the southeast
seasonal wind.
- Southwest
Islands: The Ry?ky? Typhoons are common.
The main rainy season
begins in early May in Okinawa, and the stationary rain front
responsible for this gradually works its way north until it
dissipates in northern Japan before reaching Hokkaid? and Bonin
islands, to temperate broadleaf and mixed forests in the mild
climate regions of the main islands, to temperate
coniferous forests in the cold, winter portions of the northern
islands.
Economy
Japan is an economic world power, with free-market economy ranking second by market exchange rates (with GDP at over $4.5 trillion in 2005) and third after United States and China by purchasing power
parity. As a result it is dependent on other nations for most
of its raw materials.
Government-industry cooperation, a strong
work ethic, mastery
of high technology,
and a comparatively small defense allocation have helped Japan advance with
extraordinary speed to become the second largest economy in the
world. Hence, the Japanese government predicts that recovery will
continue in 2006.
Distinguishing characteristics of the Japanese economy include the
cooperation of manufacturers, suppliers, distributors, and banks in
closely-knit groups called keiretsu(these being Mitsubishi, Sumitomo, Fuyo,
Mitsui, Dai-Ichi Kangyo and
Sanwa); cosy relations
with government bureaucrats, and the guarantee of lifetime employment
(shushin koyo) in big corporations and highly unionized blue-collar factories.
Please add new information there.-->
Japan is among the world's largest and most technologically
advanced producers of motor vehicles, electronic equipment, machine tools, steel and nonferrous metals, ships,
chemical, textiles, and processed foods, and is
home to some of the largest and most well-known multinational
corporations and commercial brands (see list of Japanese companies). Banking, insurance, real estate, retailing, transportation,
and telecommunications are all major industries.
Japan holds very large market shares in high technology
industries such as electronics, industrial chemicals, machine tools,
electronic
media and (in recent years) aerospace.
Science and technology
Japan is a leading nation in scientific research
and the production of innovative technological products. Some of the most
important industrial contributions include chemicals, metals, semiconductors, robotics, entertainment, machinery, industrial robotics
and optics. It is also
one of the leading nations in health care and medical research and robotics having produced QRIO, ASIMO,
and Aibo, and possesses
more than half (402,200 of 742,500) of the world's industrial
robots used for manufacturing.www.unece.org/press/pr2000/00stat10e.htm
Japan is making headway into aerospace research and space exploration. It
founded its aerospace
exploration agency, Japan
Aerospace Exploration Agency in October 1, 2003 and is involved in many missions and projects, as
well as a possible independent manned mission to the moon, having, from 2005, shifted some of its focus
away from international efforts. Japan must import about 50%
""
target=_blank rel=nofollow
class=elnk>www.skillclear.co.uk/japan/default.asp" of its
requirements of grain and
fodder crops other than rice, and relies on imports for most of its
supply of meat.
In fishing, Japan is ranked second in the world behind China in tonnage of fish caught.
target=_blank rel=nofollow
class=elnk>www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ja.html#Econ".
Infrastructure and transportation
Japan is unique in that its electric power
transmission runs at different frequencies in different parts of the country —
The household power line voltage is constant 100 V throughout the nation.
Japan has 1,177,278 km
of paved roadways, 173 airports, and 23,577 km of railways as of 2004. Its main export partners are the
US 22.7%, China 13.1%, South Korea 7.8%, Taiwan 7.4% and Hong Kong 6.3%.
Japan's main exports are transport equipment, motor vehicles, electronics, electrical
machinery and chemicals.
As a nation that relies heavily on international trade,
Japan also imports a wide variety of goods. Its main import
partners are China 20.7%,
US 14%, South Korea 4.9%, Australia 4.3%, Indonesia 4.1%, Saudi Arabia 4.1%, UAE 4% (as of 2004). Japan's main
imports are machinery and equipment, fossil fuels, foodstuffs (in particular beef), chemicals, textiles and raw materials for its industries.
Demographics
Population
.
Japan has the highest life expectancy in the world: 85.2 years for women and
78.3 years for men (in 2002).Vital statistics
summary and expectation of life at birth: 1999-2003, United
Nations Statistics Division. Immigration, however, is not popular
as recent increased crime
rates are often attributed to foreigners living in Japan.
Largest cities
Japan has dozens of major
cities, which play an important role in Japan culture,
heritage, and economy.
No. |
Prefecture |
City |
Population |
Rank
|
01 |
Tokyo |
Tokyo(23
special wards) |
8,390,967 |
23 special
wards/The capital of Japan/Prefecture
capital |
02 |
Kanagawa |
Yokohama |
3,579,133 |
[[City designated by government ordinance (Japan)|
Government Ordinance City]] / Prefecture capital
|
03 |
Osaka |
Osaka |
2,640,097 |
Government Ordinance City / Prefecture capital
|
04 |
Aichi |
Nagoya |
2,214,958 |
Government Ordinance City / Prefecture capital
|
05 |
Hokkaid? |
Sapporo |
1,882,424 |
Government Ordinance City / Prefecture capital
|
06 |
Hy?go |
Kobe |
1,525,389 |
Government Ordinance City / Prefecture capital
|
07 |
Kyoto |
Kyoto |
1,474,764 |
Government Ordinance City / Prefecture capital
|
08 |
Fukuoka |
Fukuoka |
1,400,621 |
Government Ordinance City / Prefecture capital
|
09 |
Kanagawa |
Kawasaki |
1,317,862 |
Government Ordinance City
|
10 |
Saitama |
Saitama |
1,185,030 |
Government Ordinance City / Prefecture capital
|
Language
Japan's official language is Japanese (Nihongo), and about 99% of the population speaks
Japanese as their first language. The Ryukyuan languages,
also part of the Japonic language family to which Japanese belongs, are
spoken in Okinawa, but
few children are learning these languages now. Ainu, the language of the
indigenous minority, is moribund, with only a few elderly native speakers remaining
in Hokkaid?. Most
public and private schools require students to take courses in both
Japanese and English.
The Japanese
language is an agglutinative language distinguished by a system of
honorifics
reflecting the hierarchical nature of Japanese society, with verb forms
and particular vocabulary which indicate the relative status of
speaker and listener. The writing system uses kanji (Chinese characters) and two sets of kana (syllabaries based on simplified forms of Chinese
characters), as well as the Roman alphabet and Hindu-Arabic
numerals.
Religion
84% of Japanese people profess to believe both Shinto (the indigenous religion
of Japan) and Buddhismwww.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ja.html#People.
Religion in Japan tends to be syncretic in nature, and this results in a variety of
practices such as parents and children celebrating Shinto rituals, students praying
before exams, couples holding a wedding at a Christian church and funerals being held at
Buddhist temples. A
minority (0.7%) profess to Christianity and other religions (4.7%) like shamanism, Islam, and Hinduism. Almost all
children continue their education at a three-year senior high school, and, according
to basic statics of MEXT, 67.5% of high school graduates attend a
university, junior college, trade
school, or other post-secondary institution in 2006. Japan's education is very
competitive especially at the college level and it has prestigious
and large universities such as University of Tokyo,
University of
Tohoku, Keio
University, Waseda University,Kyoto University,and Hitotsubashi
University.
Culture
Japanese culture has
evolved greatly over the years, from the country's original
Jomon culture to its
contemporary hybrid culture, which combines influences from
Asia, Europe, and North America.
Traditional Japanese
arts include crafts (ikebana, origami, ukiyo-e, dolls, lacquerware, pottery), performances (bunraku, dance, kabuki, noh,
rakugo), traditions
(games,
tea
ceremony, bud?,
architecture, gardens, swords), and cuisine.
Post-war Japan has been heavily influenced by American and European
culture which has led to the evolution of popular band music
(called J-Pop). The fusion
of traditional woodprinting and Western art led to the creation of
manga, a typically
Japanese comic book
format that is now popular in and even outside Japan.
Cuisine
A basic, traditional Japanese meal consists of white Japanese rice with
accompanying tsukemono
(pickles), a bowl of soup, and dishes known as okazu -
fish, meat and vegetable dishes. Foods from
Japan, such as sushi and
ramen, and beverages
including green tea
and sake are recognized
worldwide. The accompanied recitative of the Noh drama dates from the 14th century and the popular
folk music, with the guitarlike shamisen, from the 16th.The Concise Columbia
Encyclopedia 1983 edition ISBN:0-380-63396-5 © Columbia University Press
Western music,
introduced in the late 19th century, now forms an integral part of
the culture, as evident from the profusion of J-Pop artists.
Literature
The earliest works include two history books the Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki, and a
poetry book Man'y?sh? in the eighth century, all written in
Chinese characters.
In the early days of the Heian period, the system of transcription known as
kana (Hiragana
and Katakana) was
invented. The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter is considered the
oldest Japanese narrative. Windows on asia
(Michigan State University) An account of Heian court life is given
by The Pillow
Book, written by Sei Sh?nagon while The Tale of Genji
by Lady
Murasaki is sometimes called the world's first novel.
During the Edo
Period, literature became not so much the field of the samurai
aristocracy as that of the ch?nin, the ordinary people. Natsume S?seki and
Mori ?gai were the
first "modern" novelists of Japan, followed by Akutagawa Ry?nosuke,
Tanizaki
Jun'ichir?, Kawabata Yasunari, Mishima Yukio, and more recently, Murakami Haruki.
Sports and recreation
Beginning in the 12th century Japan developed traditional martial arts known as
bud?, which were popular
among the warrior class. These include judo, karate and kend?. Sumo is
sometimes considered Japan's national sport and is one of its most
popular.
Baseball is
the most popular ball
game in Japan - the professional baseball league in Japan was
established in 1937. One of Japan's most famous baseball players in
major league
baseball is Suzuki
Ichiro, who won a Gold Glove. Japan was a venue of the Intercontinental Cup from 1981 to 2004, and Japan
co-hosted the 2002 FIFA World Cup with South Korea. Rugby, golf,
table tennis,
various martial arts, and fishing are also popular in Japan, as is auto racing, Super GT sports car series and
Formula Nippon
formula racing.
Each year, Japan observes the second Monday in October as Health and Sports
Day. Other major sporting events that Japan has hosted include
the 1972 Winter
Olympics in Sapporo and the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano.
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