Matsukata Masayoshi
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Matsukata Masayoshi (松方 正義; February 25,1835–July 2,1924) was a Japanese politician and the 4th (May 6,1891 - August 8,1892) and 6th (September 18,1896 - January 12,1898) Prime Minister of Japan.
He was born in a samurai family in Kagoshima, Satsuma province (today Kagoshima Prefecture). He started his samurai career as a bureaucrat of the Satsuma-han. In his early career, Matsukata was highly regarded by Okubo Toshimichi. He was appointed to supervise the purchaser of warships for Satsuma-han and frequently visited Nagasaki, Nagasaki for to purchase from British merchants.
At the start of the Meiji Restoration, Matsukata was in Nagasaki and appointed to the staff of the Court of Nagasaki as an officer of the new government. Later he was appointed to a vice-chief of the Bureau of Tax and also worked for the staff of the Minister of Finance. Under Okubo Toshimichi he succeeded in introducing the new taxiation system that was created in 1873. The new tax system was radically different from the traditional tax gathering system that preceded it. Before the reformation, taxes had generally been paid with rice tributes and varied according to the amount of rice produced.
Under the new system:
- a tax payer paid taxes with money instead of rice
- taxes were calculated based on the price of estates, not the amount of the agricultural product produced, and
- tax rates were fixed at 3% of the value of estates and an estate holder was obliged to pay those taxes.
The Black Ocean Society was operating with the support of the government and in return was powerful enough to demand concessions from the government. They demanded and received promises of a strong foreign policy from the 1892 Matsukata Cabinet.
When Ito Hirobumi was appointed the first Prime Minister of Japan in 1885, Ito appointed Matsukata to be the first Financial Minister. Matsukata was later appointed to the position of Prime Minister twice. Later, he was given the title of prince and genrō (elder statesman).
Matsukata was a family man and had many children. Once the Emperor Meiji asked him how many children he had, and Matsukata was unable to give an exact answer. His granddaughter, journalist Haru Matsukata Reischauer, married the American scholar of Japanese history and U.S. statesman Edwin Oldfather Reischauer.
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