Kyoho Reforms
The
Kyoho reforms were a set of reforms instigated by the eighth
shogun of
Japan,
Tokugawa Yoshimune, that lasted from the beginning of his reign in
1716 until
1736. The reforms were aimed at making the
shogunate financially solvent. Because of the tensions between
Confucian ideology and the economic reality of
Tokugawa Japan (Confucian principles that money was defiling vs. the necessity for a cash economy), Yoshimune found it necessary to shelve those Confucian principles that were hampering his reform process.
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