1895 to 1937 historical-empirical inquiry into Japan's financial imperialism and 'yen diplomacy'. The monograph analyzes monetary reforms and lending schemes in Taiwan, Korea, China, and Manchuria, focusing on capital shortage paradoxes and policy-making polarities. Authored by Michael Schiltz, the project was funded by the European Research Council under grant agreement 240854.
Use Cases
- Analyzing historical monetary reforms based on descriptions of authoritarian reforms in Taiwan, Korea, China, and Manchuria
- Studying capital export paradoxes based on the described simultaneity of domestic shortage and aggressive exports
- Mapping policy-making alliances based on described polarities between pro-autarky and pragmatic imperialist factions
Strengths
- Focuses on a specific 42-year historical period from 1895 to 1937
- Analyzes monetary activities in four distinct regions: Taiwan, Korea, China, and Manchuria
- Examines a specific paradox: capital shortage within Japan versus aggressive capital exports
Limitations
- Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment
- Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download
- Data may reflect temporal bias inherent to paperswithcode
Provenance
- Source
- Michael Schiltz
- Collection Method
- Historical-empirical inquiry, likely based on archival research.
- Time Range
- 1895 to 1937
- Geography
- Taiwan, Korea, China, Manchuria, Japan