This article examines the structure and dynamics of the ginseng market in Taiwan during the 1920s under the Japanese colonial monopoly system, with particular attention to the interaction between imperial capital, local merchants, and Korean traders. Existing studies have largely described the Taiwanese ginseng market as a unilateral structure dominated by the Japanese Government-General and Mitsui & Co. However, contemporary newspapers, advertisements, and commercial directories reveal a more complex configuration involving multiple actors and distribution channels.
By analyzing Mitsui’s internal branch managers’ meeting records and the travel accounts of Kaes?ng ginseng merchants, this study demonstrates that red ginseng functioned as a strategic monopoly commodity through which the colonial state and Mitsui sought to control price, supply, and quality while expanding their economic sphere across East Asia, particularly into South China and Southeast Asia. Within this system, Taiwan emerged as a distinctive market in which monopoly retail rights were delegated to selected local merchants.
Focusing on the activities of Taiwanese merchants such as Chang Ching-kang and Li Chin-tsan, the article shows how the monopoly structure was locally implemented and adapted. Chang consolidated dominance over the red ginseng market through state backing, media support, and discourses of authenticity and legal compliance, while Li pursued an alternative strategy by modernizing traditional Chinese medicine and integrating retail with medical services. In contrast, the Korean merchant Han Jae-ryong operated outside the red ginseng monopoly, developing an independent market centered on white ginseng and processed ginseng products while also serving as a key figure within the Korean community in Taiwan.
By reconstructing the largely overlooked activities of Han Jae-ryong, this study argues that the Taiwanese ginseng market was not a monolithic monopoly but a plural commercial space where multiple actors and practices coexisted. Through a cross-analysis of heterogeneous sources?including newspapers, advertisements, official documents, and merchants’ travel records?this article contributes to a more nuanced understanding of colonial-era commodity markets and highlights the significance of Korean overseas merchants within East Asian commercial networks.
동북아시아문화학회 [The Association of North-east Asian Cultures]
설립연도
2000
분야
복합학>학제간연구
소개
동북아시아 문화의 다양성과 정체성을 연구 토론하고, 지역내 문화 교류의 다양한 모습을 연구하고 문화변동의 큰 틀을 집적함으로써 우리 민족 문화 및 상대 민족의 문화적 터전을 이해하여 문화공동체적 특성을 계발하고 상호 관련성의 강화를 유도하는 학술활동을 통해 동북아시아의 문화발전에 이바지함.