Finance & economics | Paddy problems

Japan is obsessed with rice. And prices have gone ballistic

Politicians are reaching for increasingly extreme measures

Planted rice seedlings in paddies are seen through a greenhouse, at a farm in the town of Sanjo, Niigata prefecture in northern Japan.
Photograph: Getty Images
|2 min read

A little more than a century ago, in July 1918, the wives of fishermen in Toyama began to protest against the export of rice from their prefecture. The unrest, which was triggered by the staple grain’s surging price, then spread across Japan. Ultimately, the so-called rice riots were violently extinguished by 100,000 troops; an action that would in time bring down the government.

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This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Paddy problems”

From the June 21st 2025 edition

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