Teiichiro Fujita

Teiichiro Fujita (藤田貞一郎, Fujita Teiichiro) (February 11, 1935 – June 13, 2015)[1] was a Japanese economist and economic historian, emeritus professor at Doshisha University,[2] author of books on Japanese economic history and the history of Japanese economic thought.

He graduated from Osaka University and in 1967 received his PhD in economics from Osaka University for his research on „Early Modern Economic Thought: The Shogunate System and the Idea of National Interest”.

He published several monographs and articles on the Japanese economic history and the history of Japanese economic thought from early modern (Edo period) until modern (Meiji and Taishō) eras.

His research focused on the development of the notion of national economic interest (Kokueki in Japanese) that played a central role in creating the modern nation-state of Japan and the modern political economy of the country.

He composed classic Japanese poems with thirty-one syllables (Waka (poetry)).