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Revision 6 as of 2023-11-04 22:31:45
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 * Ministry of Justice (法務省, ''Houmu shou'')  * [[Japan/MinistryOfJustice|Ministry of Justice]] (法務省, ''Houmu shou'')
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 * Ministry of Finance (財務省, ''Zaimu shou'')
 * Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (文部科学省, ''Monbu kagaku shou'')
 * Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (厚生労働省, ''Kousei roudou shou'')
 * Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (農林水産省, ''Nourin suisan shou'')
 * Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (経済産業省, ''Keizai sangyou shou'')
 * Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (国土交通省, ''Kokudo koutsuu shou'')
 * Ministry of the Environment (環境省, ''Kankyou shou'')
 * Ministry of Defense (防衛省, ''Bouei shou''))
 * [[Japan/MinistryOfFinance|Ministry of Finance]] (財務省, ''Zaimu shou'')
 * [[Japan/MinistryOfEducationCultureSportsScienceAndTechnology|Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology]] (文部科学省, ''Monbu kagaku shou'')
 * [[Japan/MinistryOfHealthLabourAndWelfare|Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare]] (厚生労働省, ''Kousei roudou shou'')
 * [[Japan/MinistryOfAgricultureForestryAndFisheries|Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries]] (農林水産省, ''Nourin suisan shou'')
 * [[Japan/MinistryOfEconomyTradeAndIndustry|Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry]] (経済産業省, ''Keizai sangyou shou'')
 * [[Japan/MinistryOfLandInfrastructureTransportAndTourism|Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism]] (国土交通省, ''Kokudo koutsuu shou'')
 * [[Japan/MinistryOfTheEnvironment|Ministry of the Environment]] (環境省, ''Kankyou shou'')
 * [[Japan/MinistryOfDefense|Ministry of Defense]] (防衛省, ''Bouei shou''))
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Aside from the [[Japan/GHQ#Bureaucracy|Home Ministry]], much of Imperial Japan's government was left as-is by GHQ. This left the bureaucracy in a powerful position. Aside from the [[Japan/GHQ#Bureaucracy|Home Ministry]], much of Imperial Japan's government was left as-is by [[Japan/GHQ|GHQ]]. This left the bureaucracy in a powerful position.

Japanese Ministries

The Japanese government's executive branch is primarily composed of ministries.


Current Ministries


Notable Historic Ministries


History

Pre-War

Civil service exams were instituted in the Meiji era to promote a professional and prestigious bureaucracy.

Todai Law earned and maintained a reputation for producing students capable of passing the exams. Similar to Harvard and Yale in the United States, it is now entrenched in national policymaking.

Post-War

Aside from the Home Ministry, much of Imperial Japan's government was left as-is by GHQ. This left the bureaucracy in a powerful position.

While ministers were elected members of the Diet, all other members of a ministry (up to and including vice ministers) were career bureaucrats. This led to a functional structure similar to the IMF; the minister as a figurehead, the vice minister as the de facto head.

This status was maintained by the amakudari system, whereby retiring bureaucrats were gifted a job by the vice minister exercising their high-level connections to corporate boards.


CategoryRicottone

Japan/Ministries (last edited 2024-03-27 20:51:34 by DominicRicottone)