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Was Japanese Colonialism Good for the Welfare of Taiwanese? Stature and the Standard of Living
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References
2007
Year
ColonialismJapanese HistoryEast Asian StudiesEconomic DevelopmentAbstract Japanese RuleEconomic HistoryCultural StudiesAverage Adult HeightJapan StudyLanguage StudiesEconomic InequalityChinese PoliticsEconomicsEast Asian LanguagesCultureEthnic ChineseChinese CultureBusinessCultural Anthropology
Abstract Japanese rule transformed Taiwan from 1895 to 1945, laying the foundations for the post-1950 “economic miracle,” but there is little consensus about the impact on the welfare of Taiwan's ethnic Chinese. A difficulty with past studies is the adequacy of economic indicators to measure the standard of living. Instead of conventional economic data, we use average adult height, an indicator of nutritional status. The rise in the average height of the Chinese indicates welfare improved under colonialism, but the static average height from 1930 highlights the negative effect of the shift in economic policy during the late colonial period.
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