Kokudaka
Kokudaka (石高) refers to a system for determining land value for taxation purposes in Edo period Japan and expressing this value in koku of rice. One 'koku' was generally viewed as the equivalent of enough rice to feed one person for a year. The amount taxation was not based on the actual quantity of rice harvestedTemplate:Called, but was assessed based on the quality and size of the land. The system was used to value the incomes of daimyo, or feudal rulers, as well as to value the homes and fields of landowners.[citation needed]
This meant that a survey had to be made[when?] of all land-ownership and titles drawn up, creating a new class of landownersTemplate:Called. Land was no longer held in the control of the daimyo. Above, the nation was a public domain under the emperor[which?], and now the legal owners of the land were the villagers. Moreover, the samurai no longer had a right to a portion of the crop. Now[when?] tax had to be paid in cash and was not tied to the harvest but to the land valuation, so the state could plan its budget with greater certainty. While the taxes no longer went to unproductive samurai but for development[dubious – discuss], the poorer peasants often lost their land because they had to pay in cash, with no allowance for poor harvests or for the effects of deflation and falling prices for their produce. Thus in the Meiji period, tenancy increased from 30% to 45% of cultivated land.[citation needed] Tax was levied on the individual landowner, not on the village as in the Tokugawa period. The kokudaka system allowed wealthy peasants with ambition to expand and invest in other enterprises.[citation needed]
The system lasted until land taxes were reformed during the Meiji period.[citation needed]