WP Global Economy 2025.03.10
This is a working paper.
During World War II, the Japanese government implemented financial controls to reduce funds for “nonessential and nonurgent” industries, and thereby secured funds for the strategic industries. For this purpose, the government classified industries into classes, and regulated fund flows to Class C industries, regarded as “nonessential and nonurgent.” This paper identifies the impact of this regulation on capital allocation using firm-level panel data. The regulation lowered capital growth by around 6.5 percentage points, and that the total capital of the Class C industries in 1942 was around 30% lower than its counterfactual value assuming there had been no regulation.
Key words: Economic control, financial control, war economy, fund allocation, Japan
JEL classification numbers: G18, G21, G38, N25, P21