Japan's Postwar Defense Policy, 19471968
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1971). See also Honda, 2: 12155.

105. Shibano, pp. 13139.

106. Watanabe Yasuo, in Tsuji, 4: 186.

107. Hollerman, 1967, pp. 16061.

108. Sakakibara, Nov. 1977, p. 71.

109. For a study of these institutions, see Johnson, 1978.

110. MITI Journalists' Club, 1956, pp. 27374.

111. Nawa, 1974, pp. 12628. The ranks from step seven and below may vary from time to time. See also Nawa, Apr. 1976.

112. See
Kankai
Editorial Board, Oct. 1976; and Fukui Haruhiro, "The GATT Tokyo Round: The Bureaucratic Politics of Multilateral Diplomacy," in Blaker, pp. 1012.

113. Akaboshi, pp. 16472; Policy Review Company, 1970, s.v. "Tsusan-sho*," pp. 6869.

114. Kakuma, 1979a, pp. 103, 107.

115. Japan Civil Administration Research Association, 1970, p. 153.

116. Kusayanagi, May 1969, p. 163.

117. "MITI and Japan's Economic DiplomacyWith Special Reference to the Concept of National Interest," unpublished paper for the Social Science Research Council Conference on Japanese Foreign Policy, Jan. 1974, p. 46.

118. Sahashi, 1971a, pp. 26668.

119. Ozaki, 1970, p. 887.

120. Kakuma, 1979b, pp. 220, 223.
Page 349
Three

1. See James Q. Wilson, "The Rise of the Bureaucratic State,"
The Public Interest
, 41 (Fall 1975): 77103.

2. Kobayashi, 1977, p. 102
et seq.

3. Tiedemann, p. 139.

4. Horie Yasuzo *, "The Transformation of the National Economy," in Tobata*, pp. 6789.

5. See Roberts, p. 131.

6. See MITI, 1962, pp. 3163.

7. In Tobata, p. 87.

8. Kusayanagi, May 1969, p. 173.

9. Arisawa, 1976, p. 4; Odahashi, p. 139.

10. Yoshino Shinji, 1962, pp. 99100; History of Industrial Policy Research Institute, 1975, 2: 35; Maeda, 1975, p. 9.

11. Yoshino Shinji, 1962, pp. 1821, 3435.

12. History of Industrial Policy Research Institute, 1975, 1: 10; 2: 12427.

13. Honda, 2: 911; and Inaba, 1977, pp. 17684. Incidentally, another illustrious figure who got a start on his life work in the old MAC was Yanagita Kunio (18751962).

14. Masumi, p. 172.

15. Japan Industrial Club, 1: 109.

16. Arisawa, 1976, p. 5.

17. Havens, p. 74.

18. See MITI, 1951, p. 6163; MITI, 1962, pp. 17080; MITI, 1964, pp. 3840; MITI, 1965, pp. 79; Kakuma, 1979a, pp. 16465; and Shiroyama Saburo*,
Nezumi
(The rat) (Tokyo: Bungei Shunju* Sha, 1966). On kaishime, see Frank Baldwin, "The Idioms of Contemporary Japan,"
The Japan Interpreter
, 8 (Autumn 1973): 396409.

19. Shirasawa, pp. 2833; Ann Waswo,
Japanese Landlords: the Decline of a Rural Elite
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977), pp. 11718.

20. Takane, pp. 7478; and Goto*.

21. Yoshino Shinji Memorial Society, pp. 20710; Kakuma, 1979a, pp. 17678; Nawa, 1974, pp. 1819; and Kishi, in MITI, 1960, p. 95.

22. On Kobiki-cho*, see Yoshino Shinji, 1965, p. 147
et seq.

23. Kakuma, 1979a, p. 163; Japan Industrial Club, 1: 111.

24. Japan Industrial Club, 1: 4751.

25.
Fifty Years
, p. 18; and Roberts, pp. 24042.

26. Yoshino Shinji Memorial Society, pp. 17577, 188, 194204; and Yoshino Shinji, 1962, pp. 4344. On Kawai Eijiro's* arrest, see Richard H. Mitchell,
Thought Control in Prewar Japan
(Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1976), p. 158.

27. Arisawa, 1937, pp. 6, 4247; Yoshino Shinji,
Waga kuni
kogyo
*
no
gorika
* (The rationalization of our country's industries) (Tokyo, 1930).

28. Arisawa, 1976, pp. 6668; and Arisawa, 1937, pp. 6780.
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