Japanese National Railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcy

Japan’s prewar railroad business (Ministry of Transport) was transferred to a public corporation, Japanese National Railways (JNR), after World War II and eventually went bankrupt. This was due to a number of factors, including the decline in the position of railroads, ballooning personnel costs, an...

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Main Author: Nobuo Takahashi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Global Business Research Center 2019-12-01
Series:Annals of Business Administrative Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/abas/18/6/18_0191117a/_pdf/-char/en
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spelling doaj-5fccc9417c004e8ebe1d7ef750da770a2021-03-21T09:23:24ZengGlobal Business Research CenterAnnals of Business Administrative Science1347-44641347-44562019-12-0118626327610.7880/abas.0191117aabasJapanese National Railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcyNobuo Takahashi0Graduate School of Economics, University of TokyoJapan’s prewar railroad business (Ministry of Transport) was transferred to a public corporation, Japanese National Railways (JNR), after World War II and eventually went bankrupt. This was due to a number of factors, including the decline in the position of railroads, ballooning personnel costs, and the existence of unprofitable local lines. However, the issue that directly caused the crash was the failure of the financing scheme that formed part of the company’s third long-term plan, which commenced in FY 1965. The company had not taken government subsidies or increased its borrowings from the Fiscal Investment and Loan Program (FILP), but instead went outside the FILP and issued large volumes of high-interest rate tokubetsu (special) bonds without a government guarantee, so that by FY 1967, interest and debt-related expenses totaled 101.2 billion yen, or about the same as the 104 billion yen raised by tokubetsu bonds. In other words, tokubetsu bonds were being issued to finance the payment of interest on railway bonds. As a result, the company went bankrupt in the first few years of its seven-year plan, which changed into a financial rehabilitation plan starting in FY 1969.https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/abas/18/6/18_0191117a/_pdf/-char/enjapanese national railways (jnr)bankruptcyfinancing schemethe third long-term plan
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nobuo Takahashi
spellingShingle Nobuo Takahashi
Japanese National Railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcy
Annals of Business Administrative Science
japanese national railways (jnr)
bankruptcy
financing scheme
the third long-term plan
author_facet Nobuo Takahashi
author_sort Nobuo Takahashi
title Japanese National Railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcy
title_short Japanese National Railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcy
title_full Japanese National Railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcy
title_fullStr Japanese National Railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcy
title_full_unstemmed Japanese National Railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcy
title_sort japanese national railways’ financing schemes and bankruptcy
publisher Global Business Research Center
series Annals of Business Administrative Science
issn 1347-4464
1347-4456
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Japan’s prewar railroad business (Ministry of Transport) was transferred to a public corporation, Japanese National Railways (JNR), after World War II and eventually went bankrupt. This was due to a number of factors, including the decline in the position of railroads, ballooning personnel costs, and the existence of unprofitable local lines. However, the issue that directly caused the crash was the failure of the financing scheme that formed part of the company’s third long-term plan, which commenced in FY 1965. The company had not taken government subsidies or increased its borrowings from the Fiscal Investment and Loan Program (FILP), but instead went outside the FILP and issued large volumes of high-interest rate tokubetsu (special) bonds without a government guarantee, so that by FY 1967, interest and debt-related expenses totaled 101.2 billion yen, or about the same as the 104 billion yen raised by tokubetsu bonds. In other words, tokubetsu bonds were being issued to finance the payment of interest on railway bonds. As a result, the company went bankrupt in the first few years of its seven-year plan, which changed into a financial rehabilitation plan starting in FY 1969.
topic japanese national railways (jnr)
bankruptcy
financing scheme
the third long-term plan
url https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/abas/18/6/18_0191117a/_pdf/-char/en
work_keys_str_mv AT nobuotakahashi japanesenationalrailwaysfinancingschemesandbankruptcy
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