Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Business and Management 2018
DOI: 10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.95
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Japanese Department Stores

Abstract: Dry goods stores, the predecessors of Japanese department stores, were forced to modernize and change their business format after the Meiji Restoration in 1868, which led to the demise of their main customers. The largest dry goods store, Mitsukoshi, was the first to learn about modern retailing in the West, and it broke out of the mold of the traditional Japanese retailer in around 1900 in an effort to catch up with Western department stores. Other large dry goods stores were quick to follow its lead: they tr… Show more

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“…The increase in its workforce in continental Asia contrasted sharply with its declining workforce in Japan; 1,006 employees out of a total 4,131 employees were conscripted into the army in 1944. Sales in overseas branches amounted to 5 million yen in 1938 and increased to 15.8 million yen in 1941; sales remained at this level for three years” (Fujioka 2011, p. 3).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The increase in its workforce in continental Asia contrasted sharply with its declining workforce in Japan; 1,006 employees out of a total 4,131 employees were conscripted into the army in 1944. Sales in overseas branches amounted to 5 million yen in 1938 and increased to 15.8 million yen in 1941; sales remained at this level for three years” (Fujioka 2011, p. 3).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%