In 1873, Japan was in the midst of the profound economic and social transformation of the Meiji Restoration. The new government, having abolished the feudal
han system, sought to modernize the nation and centralize financial authority. A critical step was the establishment of a unified, modern currency system to replace the complex patchwork of clan notes and heterogeneous metallic coins from the Edo period. The foundational
New Currency Act of 1871 introduced the
Yen (¥), based on a decimal system and aligned with the global gold standard, aiming to facilitate international trade and signal Japan's entry into the modern world economy.
However, the currency situation in 1873 was one of tense transition and unintended consequences. While the new yen-denominated notes and coins (including
sen and
rin) were being issued by the newly created
National Bank System, they circulated alongside older forms of money, causing public confusion. More critically, the government's decision to set the official exchange rate for the former gold
ryō coins was significantly below their market value, leading to a massive outflow of gold from Japan as foreigners exploited the arbitrage. This drained the nation's gold reserves and undermined the very gold standard the system was meant to uphold.
Consequently, by 1873, the government faced a fiscal crisis. The costs of modernization, samurai stipends, and suppressing domestic rebellions like the Saga Rebellion (1874) forced it to print large amounts of inconvertible paper currency, leading to inflation. This period set the stage for the eventual
de facto abandonment of the gold standard in 1873 (though not formally until 1897) and a prolonged struggle with paper currency depreciation. Thus, 1873 represents a pivotal year where the ambitious design of Japan's modern monetary system collided with economic realities, revealing the profound challenges of financial modernization.