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Human Capital Accumulation in Premodern Rural Japan

J. I. Nakamura

The Journal of Economic History, 1981, vol. 41, issue 2, 263-281

Abstract: Premodern human capital accumulation helps to explain the exceptional growth performance of the Japanese economy in the last hundred years. Prior to this century informal institutions were more important for human capital formation than were the more formal ones familiar today. This paper examines a few seminal changes—national market formation, population control, and the involvement of farmers in rural administration—that were primarily responsible for the emergence of economically responsive, more productive individuals in rural Japan.

Date: 1981
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