Britain, Germany and the USA industrialized with strong private businesses leading the way. Japan shows a different model: a government that decided, almost overnight, to build an industrial economy from the top down.
In 1868, a group of reformist samurai overthrew the old military government and restored the emperor as a figurehead. This is called the Meiji Restoration. The new leaders had one urgent goal: catch up with the industrial West fast enough to avoid being colonised like China.
Why Japan felt it had to industrialize: Japanese leaders had watched Western gunboats force trade on China in the Opium Wars and on Japan itself in 1853. Their slogan became fukoku kyōhei — 'rich country, strong army.' Industrial power and military power were seen as the same problem.
- State-funded model factories — the government built and ran the first railways, shipyards, mines and textile mills itself, since private Japanese capital was still too small to do it alone.
- Foreign experts, then Japanese engineers — thousands of Western advisers were hired short-term to teach modern methods, while young Japanese were sent abroad to study and replace them.
- Railways and telegraph — the first railway line (Tokyo to Yokohama) opened in 1872; by 1900 a national rail and telegraph network tied the country's markets together.
- Selling factories to insiders — once industries were running, the state sold many of them cheaply to politically connected merchant families, who grew them into giant conglomerates.
Those merchant families became the zaibatsu — firms like Mitsubishi and Mitsui, which by 1900 controlled shipping, banking, mining and manufacturing across the whole economy.
Mitsubishi — from shipping line to empire: Mitsubishi began as a shipping company bought from the government in the 1870s. Within decades it had expanded into coal mining, shipbuilding and banking, all owned and directed by one family group.
The other pillar of Meiji industrialization was textiles. Silk and cotton were labour-intensive, needed little imported machinery at first, and could be sold abroad immediately to earn the foreign currency Japan needed to buy heavy machinery.
| Industry | Role in Meiji strategy |
|---|---|
| Silk (raw and reeled) | Japan's top export by 1900; earned foreign currency to fund heavy industry |
| Cotton spinning and weaving | Grew fast from the 1880s using imported machinery; undercut British textile exports in Asia by 1900s |
| Railways and shipping | Linked domestic markets and carried exports; built national unity |
| Coal and shipbuilding | State-started, then handed to zaibatsu; fed the military build-up |
The exam angle on Japan: Examiners want you to show that Japan's industrialization was deliberately state-led from above, not driven by private entrepreneurs as in Britain. Always name the zaibatsu and at least one industry (silk or cotton) as evidence.
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Fast, state-directed industrialization changed Japanese society just as sharply as it had changed Britain's a century earlier, but the government stayed firmly in control of the process.
- Rural workers pulled into factories — young women from farming families made up most of the early textile workforce, often living in supervised dormitories attached to the mills.
- Harsh conditions, little protest space — hours were long and pay low, but unions and strikes were tightly restricted; the state prioritised growth and order over workers' rights.
- A new urban middle class — engineers, managers and officials trained in Western methods formed a growing professional class in cities like Tokyo and Osaka.
- Military strength followed economic strength — by 1895 and again in 1905, Japan defeated China and then Russia in war, proof that 'rich country, strong army' had worked.
Politics stayed authoritarian: Unlike Britain, industrial growth in Japan did not bring a rapid expansion of democracy. The 1889 constitution gave Japan a parliament, but real power stayed with the emperor, the military and the industrial elite around the zaibatsu.
Russia offers a second, closely related case. Like Japan, Tsarist Russia industrialized late and from the top down — but under an autocracy that gave even less room for reform.
From 1892, Finance Minister Sergei Witte pushed a state-run programme: heavy foreign borrowing (mostly from France), protective tariffs on imports, and government-backed railway building, above all the Trans-Siberian Railway begun in 1891.
Foreign capital
Witte attracted French and Belgian loans and investment, since Russia's own banks and savings were too small to fund heavy industry alone.
Tariffs and railways
High tariffs protected new Russian factories from foreign competition, while state-funded railways like the Trans-Siberian opened Siberia and linked distant industrial regions.
Coal, iron and oil
Output of coal, iron and Baku oil surged in the 1890s, concentrated in a few cities such as St Petersburg and the Ukrainian Donbas region.
Witte used foreign money, tariffs and state railways to force industrial growth from above, just as Japan's government had.
Japan
- State builds, then sells to zaibatsu
- Growth funded by silk/cotton exports
- Some constitutional cover (1889)
- Military victories affirm the model
Russia (Witte)
- State keeps tight direct control
- Growth funded by foreign loans/tariffs
- No real constitution before 1905
- Discontent builds toward revolution
Russia's cost: Fast factory growth in Russian cities crammed peasants-turned-workers into poor conditions with no legal unions or vote, feeding the unrest that exploded in the 1905 Revolution.
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Japan and Russia show state-led industrialization outside Europe. Brazil shows a third pattern altogether: industrialization that grew slowly out of an export economy, without a strong directing state until the 20th century.
Through the later 19th century, Brazil's economy depended overwhelmingly on exporting one crop: coffee, grown on huge estates in the south-east, especially the state of São Paulo. Profits from coffee, not government planning, financed Brazil's first factories.
- Coffee wealth funds infrastructure — coffee planters and merchants invested profits in railways to move coffee to port and in the first textile mills.
- Immigrant labour — after slavery was abolished in Brazil in 1888, millions of immigrants, mostly Italian, arrived to work the coffee estates and, later, the growing factories of São Paulo.
- Slow, private-led start — unlike Japan, the Brazilian state did not build or own the early factories; growth came from private planters diversifying their coffee profits.
- Import-substitution shift — from the 1930s, under President Getúlio Vargas, the state finally stepped in, using tariffs and state companies to build steel and other industries that replaced imported goods.
Import-substitution industrialization: Import-substitution industrialization (ISI) meant Brazil taxed foreign manufactured goods heavily so its own new factories could grow behind that protective wall, echoing Russia's tariff strategy decades later.
Vargas and state steel: In 1941, Vargas's government founded the state-owned Companhia Siderúrgica Nacional, Brazil's first large steel plant — a direct, government-led push much closer to the Japanese or Russian model, but arriving half a century later.
Japan & Russia
- State leads industrialization from the start
- Heavy industry and railways built by government
- Rapid, deliberate catch-up strategy
Brazil
- Private coffee wealth leads at first
- State steps in only from the 1930s (ISI)
- Slower, export-crop-led path to industry
Using Brazil well in an essay: Brazil is most useful as a contrast case: it shows that not every non-European industrializer used Japan's state-led model immediately. Naming coffee, 1888 abolition, immigrant labour and Vargas's 1930s ISI turn is enough detail for top marks.