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ZaibatsuZaibatsu (Japanese: 財閥) is a Japanese term meaning "money clique" or conglomerate. It was used in the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century to refer to large family-controlled banking and industrial combines, especially the Big Four of Mitsubishi, Mitsui, Sumitomo and Yasuda, and the second-tier zaibatsu Asano, Furukawa, Nakajima, Nissan, Nomura, and Okura—the ten targeted by SCAP for dissolution. (Matsushita, while not a zaibatsu, was originally targeted for breakup, but was saved by a petition organized by the union, which was signed by 15,000 of its workers and their families (Morck & Nakamura, p. 33).) Other second-tier zaibatsu included Fujita, Fuyo, Kawasaki, Mori, Nichitsu, Nisso, Riken, and Shibusawa. Regional zaibatsu also existed. The term gained popularity in the United States in the 1980s to refer to any large corporation, in large part from its usage in a few cyberpunk stories, but it is not used in Japan for anything other than historical discussions. The zaibatsu were technically dissolved by reformers during the Allied occupation of Japan. Their controlling families' assets were seized; holding companies, the previous "heads" of the zaibatsu conglomorates, eliminated; and interlocking directorships, essential to the old system of inter-company coordination, were outlawed. Even so, complete dissolution of the zaibatsu was never achieved by Allied reformers or SCAP, in part because the zeitgeist supported such conglomerates. They were widely considered beneficial, and the opinions of the Japanese public, of zaibatsu workers and management and of the entrenched bureaucracy regarding plans for zaibatsu breakup ranged from unenthusiastic to disapproving. Additionally, the changing politics of the Occupation during the reverse course served as a crippling, if not terminal, roadblock to zaibatsu elimination. Keiretsu, the subsequent inheritors of the corporate legacy of zaibatsu, remained fundamentally correlative, but the old "mechanisms of financial and administrative control" were destroyed (Allinson p. 75). Despite the absence of an actualized sweeping change to the existence of large industrial conglomerates in Japan, the zaibatsu's previous vertical chain of command, ending with a single family, was displaced by the horizontal relationships of association and coordination now characteristic of keiretsu—an important difference. The Japanese term keiretsu (系列), meaning "series" or "subsidiary", could be interpreted as being suggestive of this difference. List of zaibatsu The Big Four Second-tier zaibatsu References - Alletzhauser, Albert J. The House of Nomura. New York: HarperPerennial, 1991. ISBN 0060973978.
- Allinson, Gary D. Japan's Postwar History. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1997. ISBN 0801433126.
- Aoki, Masahiko & Hyung-Ki Kim. Corporate Governance in Transitional Economies: Insider Control and the Role of Banks. Retrieved June 28, 2004 from http://www1.worldbank.org/finance/CDRom/library/docs/aoki/aoki000.htm . Print edition: Washington, D.C.: World Bank Office of the Publisher, 1995. ISBN 0821329901.
- Morck, Randall and Masao Nakamura. "A Frog in a Well Knows Nothing of the Ocean: A History of Corporate Ownership in Japan". Retrieved 12 August 2004 from http://www.nber.org/books/corp-owner03/morck-nakamura7-1-04.pdf . National Bureau of Economic Research, June 2004.
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