This book charts the changes in Japanese agricultural policy in the post-war period and looks at the level at which such policy is designed by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries to protect its own interventionist powers
Aurelia George Mulgan is Associate Professor of Politics at the University of New South Wales, Australian Defence Force Academy, Australia. She has published widely in the area of Japanese politics and is the author of The Politics of Agriculture in Japan (Routledge, 2000), Japan's Failed Revolution: Koizumi and the politics of economic reform (2002) and Japan's Interventionist State (Routledge, 2005).
1 Introduction Bureaucratic Dependencies and Strategies of Intervention-Maximising Maximising MAFF Intervention in the Process of Agricultural Policy Reform 2 The Agricultural Policy Regime in Historical Perspective Maximising Ministry Intervention within Constraints Maximising Ministry Intervention in Historical Perspective The Agricultural Basic Law Incremental Liberalisation of Food Control Agricultural and Rural Public Works Conclusion 3 Agricultural Policies From the Late 1970s to the Late 1980s Antipathetic Trends in the Agricultural Policy Environment Fiscal Pressures on the Food Control System Appreciation of the Yen The Maekawa and Other Reports Pressures for Agricultural Trade Liberalisation The MAFF's Policy Response Deregulating the Food Control System and Cutting Costs De-Emphasising Price Supports and Fostering Core Farmers Embracing Internationalisation Further Reductions in Price Support Agricultural Trade Liberalisation Conclusion 4 Agricultural Policies from the late 1980s to the late 1990s The MAFF's Policy Response Reforming the Food Control System The New Policies Rejecting Rice Tariffication at the GATT The Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture The URAA Countermeasures Package Agricultural Support and Stabilisation Price Trends The New Food Law The New Rice Policy Agricultural trade liberalisation and APEC Conclusion 5 Agricultural Policies from the Late 1990s The MAFF's Policy Response Early Rice Tariffication New Rice Production Control Measures Preparing for the New Basic Law The New Basic Law Evaluating the New Basic Law Applying the New Basic Law i) Securing Stable Supplies of Food ii) Market Determination of Agricultural Prices iii) Direct Payments to Disadvantaged Areas v) Agricultural Trade Policy The Basic Plan The Drive for Efficiency and Accountability in Subsidised Works Expenditure Direct Income Supplementation The 'Takebe Private Plan' Invoking Import Safeguards The BSE Scandal Structural Reform Special Zones The Rice Policy Reform Outline WTO Agricultural Trade Policy Bilateral Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) The Entry of Ordinary Jointstock Companies into Farming The New Basic Plan Conclusion