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ests by dropping Kaya and Yoshino from the cabinet and replacing them both with one manIkeda Seihin, a former Mitsui executive and an "elder" of the business world. Ikeda had retired from business following the military coup d'etat, and in 1938 he was serving as governor of the Bank of Japan. He was acceptable to the business community because of his background, and he was acceptable to the military because he was tolerant of economic controls as long as the business community dominated them. Konoe and his military advisers also hoped that a single leader serving concurrently as minister of both finance and MCI might mitigate the increasingly serious bureaucratic jurisdictional disputes between the two ministries.


Yoshino was infuriated by Ikeda's appointment. He realized why Ikeda might be politically preferable to an ex-bureaucrat, but he also believed that Ikeda would not carry out industrial policy faithfully, and that it was an insult to MCI to be put under a zaibatsu minister. Concerning his own future, Yoshino sought the advice of his sempai and long-time friend from MAC days, Ito * Bunkichi, the illegitimate son of the genro* Ito Hirobumi and the son-in-law of former Prime Minister Katsura Taro*. Ito had left MAC in the early 1920's and taken a position in Ayukawa's Nissan zaibatsu. He now urged Yoshino to join his colleague Kishi in Manchuria and invited him to become an executive of the Ayukawa group. The Konoe cabinet recommended Yoshino as president of the new North China Development Company (while still minister Yoshino had drafted the law establishing the company, although the army sponsored it in the Diet), but the army vetoed him as insufficiently nationalistic to head an organization governing territory won by army blood.

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Yoshino was probably lucky he did not get this job, as it very likely would have led to his arrest after the war as a war criminalassuming, of course, that he would have survived the war. Forced to act on his own, Yoshino visited Hsinking, where Ayukawa instead appointed him as one of two vice-presidents (the other was a Manchurian) of Mangyo*. Yoshino was frustrated in Manchuria by excessive army control and Ayukawa's lack of capital for big projects. While working there, he received an Imperial appointment to the House of Peers, and on November 10, 1940, he returned to Tokyo to take it up. He remained an adviser to Mangyo but was replaced as vice-president by Takasaki Tatsunosuke, then president of the Mangyo-affiliated Manchurian Airplane Company. Takasaki was later MITI minister in the second Kishi cabinet (195859), and he was the Japanese sponsor of the famous Liao-Takasaki agreement for unofficial Sino-Japanese trade during the 1960's.


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