TY - JOUR
T1 - The futures premium and rice market efficiency in prewar Japan
AU - Ito, Mikio
AU - Maeda, Kiyotaka
AU - Noda, Akihiko
N1 - Funding Information:
†We would like to thank the editor Jaime Reis, three anonymous referees, Shigehiko Ioku, Makoto Kasuya, Yo Kikkawa, Kozo Kiyota, Junsoo Lee, Kris Mitchener, Tamaki Miyauchi, Chiaki Moriguchi, Toshihiro Nagahiro, Tetsuji Okazaki, Minoru Omameuda, Mototsugu Shintani, Masato Shizume, Yasuo Takatsuki, Masahiro Uemura, Tatsuma Wada, Asobu Yanagisawa, seminar participants at Doshisha University, Keio University, and Wakayama University, and conference participants at the Japanese Economics Association 2014 Autumn Meeting, and the 90th Annual Conference of the Western Economic Association International for their helpful comments and suggestions. We also acknowledge the financial assistance provided by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research no. 17K03809 (Mikio Ito), no. 17K03863 (Kiyotaka Maeda), and no. 15K03542 (Akihiko Noda). All data and programs used for this article are available on request. 1 Kaufmann, Handbook, p. 11.
Publisher Copyright:
© Economic History Society 2017
PY - 2018/8
Y1 - 2018/8
N2 - This article studies the interrelation between spot and futures prices in the two major rice markets in prewar Japan from the perspective of market efficiency. Applying a non-Bayesian time-varying model approach to the fundamental equation for spot returns and the futures premium, we detect when efficiency reductions in the two major rice markets occurred. We also examine how government interventions affected the rice markets in Japan, which colonized Taiwan and Korea before the Second World War, and argue that the function of rice futures markets crucially depended on the differences in the structure of rice spot markets. Initially the increased volume of imported rice of a different variety from domestic rice disrupted the rice futures markets. Then, government intervention in the rice futures markets failed to improve the disruption. Changes in colonial rice cropping successfully mitigated the disruption, and colonial rice was promoted in order to unify the different varieties of inland and colonial rice.
AB - This article studies the interrelation between spot and futures prices in the two major rice markets in prewar Japan from the perspective of market efficiency. Applying a non-Bayesian time-varying model approach to the fundamental equation for spot returns and the futures premium, we detect when efficiency reductions in the two major rice markets occurred. We also examine how government interventions affected the rice markets in Japan, which colonized Taiwan and Korea before the Second World War, and argue that the function of rice futures markets crucially depended on the differences in the structure of rice spot markets. Initially the increased volume of imported rice of a different variety from domestic rice disrupted the rice futures markets. Then, government intervention in the rice futures markets failed to improve the disruption. Changes in colonial rice cropping successfully mitigated the disruption, and colonial rice was promoted in order to unify the different varieties of inland and colonial rice.
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U2 - 10.1111/ehr.12608
DO - 10.1111/ehr.12608
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85049777278
SN - 0013-0117
VL - 71
SP - 909
EP - 937
JO - Economic History Review
JF - Economic History Review
IS - 3
ER -