Acre4 tan and 24 ho.
Arable Land in Japan[199]
The “Nichi Nichi Shimbun” argues that the real question for the Japanese to consider is development of agriculture, not a paltry lightening of the fiscal burden now imposed on agriculturists. When the area of cultivated land in the various countries of the world is compared with the total areas of those countries, startling figures result.
Ratio of Area of Cultivated Land to Total Area of Country
| Belgium | 53.9 |
| Prussia | 50.3 |
| France | 50.2 |
| Germany | 43.4 |
| Denmark | 42.5 |
| Italy | 39.9 |
| Hungary | 37.7 |
| Austria | 36.7 |
| Spain | 35.7 |
| Holland | 27.3 |
| England | 27.9 |
| Portugal | 24.9 |
| European Russia | 16.4 |
| Japan | 13.8 |
Japanese habitually plead that their extraordinarily low place on this list is the result, not of want of industry, but of natural obstacles, much of the surface of their islands consisting of mountains and hills which cannot be made arable. The “Nichi Nichi” alleges that such an excuse is merely partial, and that a little energy and resolution would soon change the situation. At any rate, the opposition offered by politicians to the present land tax is not in the genuine interests of agriculture, but in the interests of political popularity.
Mr. Megata, an official of the Finance Department and an expert statistician, has figured out that in 1901 more than 15,000,000 acres were in cultivation.
The actual yield of rice for ten years (1900-1909) is indicated in the following table:—