Abstract

Should We Rebuild Japan?

Granada, Yole | August 14, 1948 issue

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With industry and commerce at low ebb, Japan has at present primarily an agrarian economy, and any measures to be taken must be viewed against the backdrop of agrarian problems. A brief comparison with the U.S. offers a graphic illustration of the nature and magnitude of these problems. Eighty million Japanese, a number more than half as large as the population of the U.S., are compressed within the narrow confines of four small islands roughly equivalent in area to the state of Montana.

See Also:

JAPAN -- Economic conditions; UNITED States -- Economic conditions; DEMOCRATIZATION; POLITICAL systems; JAPAN; UNITED States
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