Wacoal

Series

Vol. 12 | How Much Profit Were the Ohmi Shonin Really Making?

The Ohmi Shonin were not merely virtuous merchants — they were profitable ones. This installment examines the evidence: from the survival of Ohmi Shonin-founded companies such as Itochu, Marubeni, Nishikawa, Takashimaya, Nippon Life, and Wacoal, to the remarkable personal fortune of Genzaemon Nakai, who grew his assets from 2 ryo at age nineteen to 115,000 ryo by his late eighties. Drawing on a 2021 academic paper by Shiga University's Yukari Matsuda, the piece also shows that the Nakai family maintained a bookkeeping system closely resembling double-entry accounting — more than seventy years before Western double-entry bookkeeping reached Japan in 1873.
The Jodo Ethic and the Spirit of the Ohmi Shonin

Vol. 4 | Why So Many Shonin Were Born in One Place

Why did Ohmi produce so many merchant dynasties? This installment of The Jodo Ethic and the Spirit of the Ohmi Shonin examines the competing theories — from naturalized immigrants and free markets to fragmented fiefdoms — and argues that geography, more than any single cause, was the common thread that sustained them all.
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