Japan in the Post–3/11 Era: The Road to Rebirth

Earthquakes and the Economy

Politics Society

Takemori Shunpei [Profile]

The question on many minds today is what economic ramifications the March 11 earthquake and tsunami will have. This article explores this issue by looking back on the major earthquake the country experienced in 1923 and again in 1995, and considering the impact of those earlier disasters on Japan’s economy.

The Terrible Toll of the Tokyo Earthquake

“The catastrophe occurred a few seconds after noon. It was impossible to mistake the time because, during those first few horrific seconds of shaking, while we were still unsure when the ever-growing convulsion would cease, the shot of the midday cannon added its official burst of sound to the tumult, no more deterred by the unruly elements than it would have been by the trumpet of the Last Judgment.” (*1)


Scene of the Ginza shopping district after the Great Kantō Earthquake. The damage from the magnitude 7.9 quake was centered on Kanagawa Prefecture and spanned from Ibaraki to Shizuoka Prefectures, resulting the worst natural disaster in Japanese history, with a total of 105,000 dead or missing. (Photo: Jiji Press)

Thus wrote Paul Claudel, the great French dramatist and diplomat, about the earthquake that struck Tokyo on September 1, 1923, while he was serving as France’s ambassador to Japan. Over 100,000 people died in this Great Kantō Earthquake, some 90% of them from the fires that it caused. This is five times the death toll of around 20,000 from this year’s Great East Japan Earthquake; the large number of deaths is attributable to the fact that the quake struck the heavily populated Tokyo-Yokohama area and that the residential neighborhoods of the time were made up of densely packed wooden houses, magnifying the toll from fires. The foreign quarter that was located in Yokohama at the time suffered especially severe fire damage. Claudel headed there to provide assistance, and he wrote this account of what he saw that night:

“We spent that night on a railroad embankment among some refugees, with this doomsday panorama [of Yokohama] on one side and the huge red cloud of smoke from the fire in Tokyo on the other. Between the two, a moon of indescribable purity and serenity rose from the sea. The earth below us would not stop trembling, and almost every hour we would hear the nearby racket of train cars shaking and trying to jump their rails.” (*2)

In addition to the terrible human toll that it took, the Great Kantō Earthquake caused another major problem. The major banks had branches and head offices in Tokyo, and Yokohama was the location of the bank that at the time was in charge of all foreign exchange transactions, the Yokohama Specie Bank. These banks suffered serious damage, with cash, stock certificates, and loan records going up in smoke. Promissory notes that were almost due became unredeemable, and it became impossible to settle debts.


Taishō and early Showa era financier and politician Inoue Junnosuke (1869–1932). Became the governor of the Bank of Japan in 1919 and the minister of finance under Prime Minister Yamamoto Gonnohyōe in 1923. The following year he was nominated to the House of Peers. In 1927 he once again headed the Bank of Japan, this time under Finance Minister Takahashi Korekiyo. He became finance minister himself in 1929 under the cabinet of Prime Minister Hamaguchi Osachi, and during his tenure put Japan back on the gold standard. Retired from politics in 1931 and was assassinated in the so-called League of Blood Incident the following year. (Photo: National Diet Library)

Inoue Junnosuke, who was minister of finance at the time, was an expert at crisis management. He immediately declared a moratorium on debt payments, and he subsequently had the Bank of Japan discount promissory notes, even if they were of dubious creditworthiness, thereby averting a financial crisis with a lavish supply of liquidity. Inoue’s “liquidity management policy,” as it was called, has been blamed by some for setting the stage for the financial crisis of 1927 by having the Bank of Japan lend imprudently and allowing enterprises that should have gone under to remain in existence.

Another point concerning finance after the earthquake bears noting. In the wake of the disaster, donations poured in from around the world, just as they have this time. These funds helped, but when the time came to undertake full-scale reconstruction, the donations alone were insufficient, and it became necessary to raise additional funds by borrowing on international markets like New York and London. Japan’s external debt grew, and foreign capitalists like the House of Morgan indicated their reluctance to lend any more unless the country returned to the gold standard. This was how it came to pass that in 1930, when serving as finance minister in the cabinet of Hamaguchi Osachi, Inoue pushed through the reckless step of putting Japan back on the gold standard in the middle of the Great Depression.

Claudel made an interesting observation about the foreign assistance immediately after the 1923 quake: “According to the papers, the amount of money collected in the United States [for earthquake relief] has already topped $40 million. In addition, American warships were the first to arrive on the scene and to unload relief supplies—in some cases even before anything from the Japanese government. American destroyers and launches dotted the waters of Tokyo, and ambulances and trucks marked ‘U.S.A.’ crowded the streets of the capital. The Imperial Hotel was full of cheerful rescue workers in shirtsleeves. I felt as if I had been transported back to the postwar Paris of 1918–19.” (*3)


The Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake that struck the Kobe area in 1995 resulted in 6,434 fatalities, nearly 80% of which were instant deaths from collapsing houses or falling furniture. Japan’s disaster prevention measures were significantly beefed up after the disaster, including the introduction of stricter quake-resistance requirements for buildings. (Photo: Studio right/PIXTA)

It is truly ironic that the same scene was to repeat itself in Tokyo in the summer of 1945, just 22 years later. This time the Americans came not as rescuers but as occupiers. (And after this year’s earthquake, the Americans again made a major contribution to the relief effort through the US military forces’ Operation Tomodachi [Friends].)

The Quick Recovery from the 1995 Kobe Quake

In 1995 Japan experienced another major earthquake, the Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake that struck the Kobe area. It came at a time when the country’s financial system was again under serious strain, following the collapse of the real estate bubble in 1992. George Horwich of Purdue University has written an overview of the impact in a paper titled “Economic Lessons of the Kobe Earthquake.” (*4)

Horwich starts by noting that immediately after the quake, observers in other countries expected it to take a very long time for Kobe to recover from the damage. For example, the World Disasters Report 1996 published by Oxford University Press included a forecast that reconstruction would take 10 years, given the tremendous damage that Kobe suffered. Collapsed residences accounted for half of the total amount of damage in monetary terms, but industry was also dealt a heavy blow. The damage was especially severe in the case of the port-related operations accounting for about 40% of the city’s gross industrial output, because the port facilities were “a shambles.” This and other damage to the capital stock came to a tremendous amount: Horwich uses an estimate of $114 billion based on the commercial exchange rate at the time, equivalent to about ¥9 trillion.


Highway overpasses collapsed in several places in Kobe. The heavily damaged Hanshin Expressway was up and running again 21 months later. (Photo: Kawaguchi Tsutomu/PIXTA)

The actual reconstruction was surprisingly quick, however, taking much less than 10 years to complete. As of a year after the quake, even though the restoration of the port facilities was only half done, the amount of imports recorded by the Kobe customs office was back to the pre-quake level, and exports had recovered to 85% of their previous trend. By March 1996 (15 months after the quake), manufacturing had recovered to 98% of its pre-quake level. By July that year (18 months after the quake), 100% of the city’s department stores and 79% of its retail shops were back in operation. In October (21 months after the quake), the Hanshin Expressway was reopened for traffic. And as of January 1997 (two years after the quake), the clearing away of debris from the quake was completed.

Horwich explains the speed of the recovery with reference to economic principles. The earthquake destroyed considerable amounts of capital stock (plant and equipment), but this is not something so essential that production activity is impossible without it. Other factors of production also exist, notably human capital. In other words, production is possible as long as there are people who have both a strong will to work and a high level of skill.


The area around the port of Kobe was significantly remodeled after the 1995 earthquake, including the construction of this promenade.

Regardless of the damage to capital stock from a disaster, if an area still has human capital, production activity will eventually resume. Workers will repair the damaged plant and equipment. While the machinery is being repaired, they will work more hours in an effort to catch up with the lag in production. As noted above, a year after the Kobe earthquake the port facilities were only half restored, but even so the amounts of imports and exports being handled at the port were almost back to prequake levels. This was possible because the caps on the maximum number of hours port laborers could work were relaxed; by working longer hours, they made up for the handicap of damaged facilities.

Horwich notes the role of substitution as a key point in this connection, writing, “The first principle of economics is that output can be produced by variable combinations of resources.” (*5) In the case of production activity, if one method becomes impossible to use, it often can be replaced with another. If capital stock has been destroyed, for example, capital-intensive production can be replaced with labor-intensive production. He cites this as the reason for Kobe’s ability to recover to 98% of its prequake industrial production level in value terms in a mere 15 months.

Let me note one additional point. The destruction resulting from a major disaster like this earthquake involves a country’s capital stock and other physical assets; it is not a direct measure of the impact on the flows of production and income that make up the country’s gross domestic product. Consider this example: Say a farmer has 100 hectares of land under cultivation, but 5 hectares become unusable because of pollution or other causes. Let us assume the farmer derives his income from growing grain. Will his income necessarily decline as a result of the pollution that has made part of his farmland unusable? The answer is no. The farmer can still increase his income by increasing the productivity of his remaining 95 hectares, such as by using more fertilizer, for example, or by spending more hours working in his fields.

In other words, even if one factor of production, namely, land, is decreased, it is still possible to achieve an increase in income (production) by substituting increased inputs of other factors of production, such as fertilizer and labor. Of course, if the farmer were to sell his land, the proceeds would decrease in proportion to the 5% of it that had become unusable. In other words, the farmer would have become poorer in terms of his stock of assets. But in terms of his annual income flow, he could become even better off than before.

In the case of Kobe’s recovery, this sort of substitution came into play in various respects. For example, when companies replaced equipment lost in the earthquake, they did not simply install the same machines as before but put in the newest available equipment. In that sense the earthquake had the positive effect of promoting an advance in production technology. Also, manufacturers whose supply chains were interrupted by the damage to Kobe were able to repair them quickly by switching to production in other areas. Some production activities left Kobe as a result of the quake. For example, even though the amounts of exports and imports were restored virtually to the prequake levels, the significance of port operations for Kobe itself and the position of Kobe among the ports of Asia both subsequently declined.

(*1) ^ Paul Claudel, Correspondance diplomatique: Tokyo, 1921–1927 (Paris: Gallimard, 1995), p. 195.

(*2) ^ Ibid., p. 197.

(*3) ^ Ibid., p. 218.

(*4) ^ Economic Development and Cultural Change, vol. 48, no. 3 (April 2000), pp. 521–42.

(*5) ^ Ibid., p. 522.

next: Contribution to the Economic Recovery

Related Tags

Great East Japan Earthquake Great Kantō Earthquake Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake Bank of Japan

Takemori ShunpeiView article list

Senior researcher at the Research Institute of Economy, Trade, and Industry, chair of Mitsubishi UFJ Research and Consulting, member of a committee set up to advise the Japanese government on Basic Policies for Novel Coronavirus Disease Control, and private-sector delegate to the Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy. Born in Tokyo in 1956. Graduated from Keiō University in 1981, where he majored in economics. After completing his doctoral studies at Keiō in 1986, received his PhD in economics from the University of Rochester in 1989. Has been an associate professor at Keiō. Author of Keizai kiki wa kokonotsu no kao o motsu (Economic Crisis Has Nine Faces), Sekai o kaeta kin’yū kiki (The Financial Crisis That Has Changed the World), Keizai ronsen wa yomigaeru (The Revival of Economic Debate; winner of the Yomiuri–Yoshino Sakuzō Prize), and other works.

Other articles in this report