Japanese Department Stores

R. Fujioka
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Abstract

Dry goods stores, the predecessors of Japanese department stores, were forced to modernize and change their business format after the Meiji Restoration in 1868, which led to the demise of their main customers. The largest dry goods store, Mitsukoshi, was the first to learn about modern retailing in the West, and it broke out of the mold of the traditional Japanese retailer in around 1900 in an effort to catch up with Western department stores. Other large dry goods stores were quick to follow its lead: they transformed into department stores and created their own “cathedrals of consumption” in the 1920s, to match those in the West. This new retail format strongly contributed to Japan’s economic growth and to the Westernization of the Japanese lifestyle. Despite numerous publications on the history of department stores, there has been little research on this transfer of Western department stores into a very different world: Japan. Although there are many studies on Japanese department stores in Japanese, focusing on how they were influenced by Western department stores, they are mostly subdivided on the basis of specific topics, such as levels of consumption in the interwar period or their economic impact during Japan’s period of high economic growth. The focus here is on the whole development process of department stores, bridging the gap between Western and Japanese studies on department stores. The first stage in the development of Japanese department stores was in the early 20th century, when Japanese retailers raced to catch up with Western department stores to become modern Western-style retailers themselves; the second stage was in the late 20th century, when these new Japanese stores continued developing along their own unique path in order to target the domestic market during the growth of the Japanese economy, introducing ready-to-wear clothing, luxury brands, and gift products. In this way, Japanese department stores succeeded in increasing their efficiency and establishing a more upmarket image. However, in exchange for this prosperity, department stores also gave up control of their sales floors to the wholesalers and reduced their own merchandising skills. After the economic bubble burst in 1991, Japanese department stores began to suffer from decreased sales and lack of control over the points of sale in their stores.
日本百货公司
日本百货商店的前身干货店在1868年明治维新后被迫进行现代化改造,改变了经营模式,导致主要顾客的消失。最大的干货商店三越(Mitsukoshi)是第一个了解西方现代零售业的商店,它在1900年左右打破了传统日本零售商的模式,努力赶上西方百货公司。其他大型干货商店也迅速效仿:它们在20世纪20年代转型为百货商店,并创建了自己的“消费大教堂”,以与西方的商店相媲美。这种新的零售模式极大地促进了日本的经济增长和日本生活方式的西化。尽管有许多关于百货商店历史的出版物,但很少有关于西方百货商店向一个非常不同的世界转移的研究:日本。虽然在日本有很多关于日本百货商店的研究,主要集中在它们如何受到西方百货商店的影响,但它们大多是根据具体的主题进行细分,例如两次世界大战期间的消费水平或它们在日本经济高增长时期的经济影响。本文的研究重点是百货公司的整个发展过程,弥补了西方和日本在百货公司研究上的差距。日本百货商店发展的第一阶段是在20世纪初,当时日本零售商竞相追赶西方百货商店,成为现代西式零售商;第二阶段是在20世纪后期,随着日本经济的增长,这些新的日本商店继续沿着自己独特的道路发展,以瞄准国内市场,推出成衣、奢侈品牌和礼品。通过这种方式,日本百货公司成功地提高了效率,树立了更高档的形象。然而,为了换取这种繁荣,百货公司也将其销售楼层的控制权交给了批发商,并降低了自己的销售技能。1991年经济泡沫破灭后,日本百货商店开始遭受销售额下降和对店内销售点缺乏控制的困扰。
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