63.6
60.0
54.0
Mining and Manufacturing Production
Japan
94.8
91.6
97.8
113.2
128.7
141.8
United States
80.7
68.1
53.8
63.9
66.4
75.6
England
92.3
83.8
83.5
88.2
98.8
105.6
Germany
85.9
67.6
53.3
60.7
79.8
94.0
France
99.1
86.2
71.6
80.7
75.2
72.5
SOURCE
: Arisawa Hiromi, ed.,
*
(Economic history of the Showa* era), Tokyo, 1976, p. 52.
day as the direct ancestor and model for the Petroleum Industry Law of 1962. The 1934 law gave the government authority to license the business of importing and refining petroleum, and it required importers to stockpile at least a six months' supply of petroleum in Japan at all times. It also empowered the government to set quotas, fix prices, and make compulsory purchases of petroleum products.
An Imperial ordinance put MCI in charge of administering the law, and Yoshino, as vice-minister, set out to negotiate with Japan's foreign suppliers (chiefly the Standard Vacuum and Rising Sun oil companies). One of Stan-Vac's representatives in Japan recalls that in late 1934 Yoshino himself was not difficult to deal with or antiforeign, but that both of them had agreed it would be better to postpone their negotiations until after the current Diet session had ended in order to lessen possible military charges that MCI was bending to foreign coercion.
