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Kantō region

The Kantō region (関東地方, Kantō-chihō, IPA: [ka(ꜜ)ntoː tɕiꜜhoː]) is a geographical region of Honshu, the largest island of Japan.[2] In a common definition, the region includes the Greater Tokyo Area and encompasses seven prefectures: Gunma, Tochigi, Ibaraki, Saitama, Tokyo, Chiba, and Kanagawa. Slightly more than 45 percent of the land area within its boundaries is the Kantō Plain. The rest consists of the hills and mountains that form land borders with other regions of Japan.

Kantō region
関東地方
The Kantō region in comparison to the rest of Japan
CountryJapan
Area
 • Total32,423.90 km2 (12,518.94 sq mi)
Population
 (October 1, 2010)
 • Total42,607,376
 • Density1,300/km2 (3,400/sq mi)
Gross Regional Product
 • TotalJP¥218.563 trillion
US$2.044 trillion
Time zoneUTC+09:00 (JST)
Geofeatures map of Kantō

As the Kantō region contains Tokyo, the capital and largest city of Japan, the region is considered the center of Japan's politics and economy. According to the official census on October 1, 2010, by the Statistics Bureau of Japan, the population was 42,607,376,[3] amounting to approximately one third of the total population of Japan.

Other definitions edit

The Kantō regional governors' association (関東地方知事会, Kantō chihō chijikai) assembles the prefectural governors of Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama, Chiba, Tokyo, Kanagawa, Yamanashi, Nagano, and Shizuoka.[4][5]

The Kantō Regional Development Bureau (関東地方整備局, Kantō chihō seibi-kyoku) of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism in the national government is responsible for eight prefectures generally (Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama, Chiba, Tokyo, Kanagawa, Yamanashi) and parts of the waterways in two others (Nagano and Shizuoka).[6]

The Kantō Bureau of Economy, Trade and Industry (関東経済産業局, Kantō keizai-sangyō-kyoku) is responsible for eleven prefectures: Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama, Chiba, Tokyo, Kanagawa, Niigata, Yamanashi, Nagano and Shizuoka.[7]

In the police organization of Japan, the National Police Agency's supervisory office for Kantō (関東管区警察局, Kantō kanku keisatsu-kyoku) is responsible for the Prefectural police departments of Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama, Chiba, Kanagawa, Niigata, Yamanashi, Nagano and Shizuoka.[8] Tokyo is not part of Kantō or any NPA region, its police has a dedicated liaison office with the national agency of its own.[citation needed]

Geography edit

 
Kantō region satellite photo

The surface geology of the Kantō Plain is the Quaternary alluvium and diluvium. The low mountain vegetation at an altitude of about 500 to 900 m in and around the plain is an evergreen broad-leaved forest zone. The distribution height range of laurel forests is 900 m in Hakone, about 800 m in Tanzawa and Takao, about 700 m in Okutama, Oku Musashi and Oku Chichibu, about 600 m in Nishijoshu, Akagiyama, Ashio Mountains and Tsukuba Mountains and about 500 m in Kitage and Nasu Mountains.

Over the evergreen broad-leaved forest are deciduous broad-leaved forests such as beech, birch, and Quercus crispula. In addition, coniferous forests such as Abies veitchii and Betula ermanii spread above the deciduous broad-leaved forest from an altitude of about 1100 m higher than the lower limit of the deciduous broad-leaved forest.

Mountains are spread out such as the Taishaku Mountains, Mt. Takahara, Mt. Nasu, Mt. Yamizo, and Mt. The Kantō Plain, which is the largest plain in Japan. Just north of the Enna Hills is Japan's largest alluvial fan Nasuno at the foot of Mt. The Kujukuri Plain. The southern part of Chiba Prefecture is the Boso hills. The area around Kasumigaura in Ibaraki Prefecture is the Joso plateau and Hitachi plateau. Gunma Prefecture and the Chichibu region of Saitama Prefecture are basins. Rivers such as the Arakawa and Edo rivers pour into Tokyo Bay, and the Kinugawa and Tone rivers flow into the Pacific Ocean in Inubōsaki.

Tokyo Bay is surrounded by the Boso Peninsula and the Miura Peninsula, facing the west side of Chiba Prefecture, a part of Tokyo and the east side of Kanagawa Prefecture, and borders the Pacific Ocean from Uraga Suido. The coastal area is an industrial area. The south side of Kanagawa Prefecture faces Sagami Bay and Sagami Nada. The southern coast of Ibaraki Prefecture faces Kashima Nada. The Sagami Trough, which was the epicenter of the two Kanto earthquakes, passes through Sagami Bay. Efforts are being made to take safety measures against earthquakes in various places.

The highest point is the summit of Mt. Nikko-Shirane (Mt. Oku-Shirane) on the border between Nikko City, Tochigi Prefecture and Katashina Village, Gunma Prefecture. It is the eighth highest point in Japan's prefectures. It is also the highest point north of Kanto (Kanto, Tohoku, Hokkaido). The highest points of the prefectures are Mt. Sanpo (2,483 m) in Saitama, Mt. Kumotori (2,017 m) in Tokyo, Mt. Hiru (1,673 m) in Kanagawa, Mt. Yamizo (1,022 m) in Ibaraki, and Mt. Atago (408 m) in Chiba. Atagoyama in Chiba Prefecture is the lowest among the highest peaks in each prefecture.

The region experiences a humid subtropical climate with a summer to fall precipitation maximum (Cfa/Cwa).

History edit

 
Mount Nikkō-Shirane in the Kantō region

The heartland of feudal power during the Kamakura period and again in the Edo period, Kanto became the center of modern development. Within the Greater Tokyo Area and especially the Tokyo-Yokohama metropolitan area, Kanto houses not only Japan's seat of government but also the nation's largest group of universities and cultural institutions, the greatest population and a large industrial zone. Although most of the Kanto plain is used for residential, commercial or industrial construction, it is still farmed. Rice is the principal crop, although the zone around Tokyo and Yokohama has been landscaped to grow garden produce for the metropolitan market.[citation needed]

In between January 1918 and April 1920, Japan was afflicted by Spanish flu pandemic, which claimed more than 400,000 Japanese lives.[citation needed]

A watershed moment of Japan's modern history took place in the late Taishō period: the Great Kantō earthquake of 1923. The quake, which claimed more than 100,000 lives and ravaged Greater Tokyo area, occurred at a time when Japan was still reeling from the economic recession in reaction to the high-flying years during World War I.[citation needed]

Operation Coronet, part of Operation Downfall, the proposed Allied invasion of Japan during World War II, was scheduled to land on the Kantō Plain.

The name Kanto literally means "East of the Barrier". The name Kanto is nowadays generally considered to mean the region east (東) of the Hakone Barrier (箱根関). An antonym of Kanto, "West of the Barrier" means the Kansai region, which lies western Honshu and was the center of feudal Japan.[citation needed]

After the Great Kanto earthquake (1923), many people in Kanto started creating art with different varieties of colors. They made art of earthquake and small towns to symbolize the small towns destroyed in the quake.[citation needed]

Subdivisions edit

North and South edit

The most often used subdivision of the region is dividing it to "North Kantō" (北関東, Kita-Kantō), consisting of Ibaraki, Tochigi, and Gunma prefectures, and "South Kantō" (南関東, Minami-Kantō), consisting of Saitama (sometimes classified North),[citation needed][by whom?] Chiba, Tokyo Metropolis (sometimes singulated),[citation needed] and Kanagawa prefectures.[citation needed] South Kantō is often regarded as synonymous with the Greater Tokyo Area. As part of Japan's attempts to predict earthquakes, an area roughly corresponding to South Kantō has been designated an 'Area of Intensified Observation' by the Coordinating Committee for Earthquake Prediction.[9]

The Japanese House of Representatives' divides it into the North Kantō (北関東, Kita-Kantō) electorate which consists of Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, and Saitama prefectures, Tokyo electorate, and the South Kantō (南関東, Minami-Kantō) electorate which consists of Chiba, Kanagawa, and Yamanashi prefectures (note that Yamanashi is out of the Kantō region in the orthodox definition).

Keirin's South Kantō (南関東, Minami-Kantō) consists of Chiba, Kanagawa, and Shizuoka prefectures.

East and West edit

This division is not often but sometimes used.

  • East Kantō (東関東, Higashi-Kantō): Ibaraki, Tochigi, and Chiba prefectures.
  • West Kantō (西関東, Nishi-Kantō): Gunma, Saitama, Tokyo, Kanagawa (and sometimes Yamanashi) prefectures.

Inland and Coastal edit

This division is sometimes used in economics and geography. The border can be modified if the topography is taken for prefectural boundaries.

  • Inland Kantō (関東内陸部, Kantō nairiku-bu): Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama (and sometimes Yamanashi) prefectures.
  • Coastal Kantō (関東沿岸部, Kantō engan-bu): Ibaraki, Chiba, Tokyo, and Kanagawa prefectures.

Greater Kantō edit

The Japanese national government defines the National Capital Region (首都圏, Shuto-ken) as the Kantō region plus Yamanashi Prefecture. Japan's national public broadcaster NHK uses Kantō-kō-shin-etsu (関東甲信越) involving Yamanashi, Nagano, and Niigata prefectures for regional programming and administration.

Cities edit

The Kantō region is the most highly developed, urbanized, and industrialized part of Japan. Tokyo and Yokohama form a single industrial complex with a concentration of light and heavy industry along Tokyo Bay. Other major cities in the area include Kawasaki (in Kanagawa Prefecture); Saitama (in Saitama Prefecture); and Chiba (in Chiba Prefecture). Smaller cities, farther away from the coast, house substantial light and automotive industries. The average population density reached 1,192 persons per square kilometer in 1991.

Economy edit

The Kantō region largely corresponds to the Tokyo Metropolitan Area with the exception that it does not contain Yamanashi prefecture.

The Tokyo Metropolitan Area has the largest city economy in the world and is one of the major global center of trade and commerce along with New York City, Los Angeles, Shanghai, Paris, Seoul, and London.

Greater Tokyo Area 2005 edit

 
Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building
  • 2005 average exchange rate (1 U.S. Dollar = 110.22 Yen)[10]
Prefecture Gross Prefecture Product
(in billion Yen)
Gross Prefecture Product
(in billion US$)
Tokyo 92,269 837
Kanagawa 31,184 282
Saitama 20,650 187
Chiba 19,917 180
Ibaraki 10,955 99
Tochigi 8,195 74
Gunma 7,550 68

Source[11]

GDP (purchasing power parity) edit

 
Tokyo Tower

The agglomeration of Tokyo is the world's largest economy, with the largest gross metropolitan product at purchasing power parity (PPP) in the world according to a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers.[12]

Kanto Region Metropolitan Employment Area edit

Year 2010 1995 1980
Employed Persons 000's 16,234 16,381 12,760
Production (billion USD) 1,797 1,491 358
Production Manufacturing (billion USD) 216 476 159
Private Capital Stock (billion USD) 3,618 2,631 368
Social Overhead Capital (billion USD) 1,607 1,417 310
1 U.S. Dollar (Japanese yen) 87.780 94.060 226.741

Sources:,[13] Conversion rates - Exchange rates - OECD Data

Population edit

The population of Kantō region is very similar to that of the Greater Tokyo Area[14][better source needed] except that it does not contain Yamanashi Prefecture and contains the rural populations throughout the region.

Per Japanese census data,[15] and the Kantō region's data,[16] population has continuously grown but the population growth rate has slowed since early 1992.

The Kantō region at 2019 had a population at around 43.23 million people.[17]

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1920 11,127,000—    
1930 13,773,000+23.8%
1940 16,866,000+22.5%
1950 18,241,000+8.2%
1960 23,003,000+26.1%
1970 29,496,000+28.2%
1980 34,896,000+18.3%
1990 38,542,000+10.4%
2000 40,433,711+4.9%
2010 42,607,376+5.4%
2018 43,300,000+1.6%

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "県民経済計算(平成23年度 - 令和2年度)(2008SNA、平成27年基準計数)<47都道府県、4政令指定都市分>".
  2. ^ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Kanto" in Japan Encyclopedia, pp. 478–479, p. 478, at Google Books
  3. ^ . E-stat.go.jp. Archived from the original on October 4, 2011. Retrieved December 31, 2012.
  4. ^ Saitama prefectural government: Kantō regional governors' association (in Japanese)
  5. ^ Chiba prefectural government: Kantō regional governors' association (in Japanese)
  6. ^ MLIT: Kanto Regional Development Bureau (in Japanese)
  7. ^ METI: Kanto Bureau of Economy, Trade and Industry, Organizational overview June 6, 2020, at the Wayback Machine (in Japanese)
  8. ^ National Police Agency: Kantō regional police supervision office, Jurisdiction (in Japanese)
  9. ^ Avances en prevención de desastres sísmicos en Japón. Outline of countermeasures for the Tōkai earthquake (Section B) 2011-07-20 at the Wayback Machine N Honda, published March 1994, accessed 2011-03-25
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on April 1, 2009. Retrieved December 28, 2018.
  11. ^ 平成19年度県民経済計算 2010-12-20 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "City Mayors reviews the richest cities in the world in 2005". www.citymayors.com. from the original on September 18, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2009.
  13. ^ Yoshitsugu Kanemoto. "Metropolitan Employment Area (MEA) Data". Center for Spatial Information Science, The University of Tokyo. from the original on May 2, 2019. Retrieved June 21, 2016.
  14. ^ Tokyo MEA
  15. ^ "Tōkyō (Japan): Prefecture, Major Cities & Towns - Population Statistics, Maps, Charts, Weather and Web Information". www.citypopulation.de.
  16. ^ "Japan Prefectures Population from 1920 and Area". www.demographia.com.
  17. ^ "Kanto 2020".

Sources edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Kantō region at Wikimedia Commons

kantō, region, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, japanese, october, 201. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Japanese October 2013 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Japanese article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 3 700 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article at ja 関東地方 see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated ja 関東地方 to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kantō region news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message The Kantō region 関東地方 Kantō chihō IPA ka ꜜ ntoː tɕiꜜhoː is a geographical region of Honshu the largest island of Japan 2 In a common definition the region includes the Greater Tokyo Area and encompasses seven prefectures Gunma Tochigi Ibaraki Saitama Tokyo Chiba and Kanagawa Slightly more than 45 percent of the land area within its boundaries is the Kantō Plain The rest consists of the hills and mountains that form land borders with other regions of Japan Kantō region 関東地方RegionThe Kantō region in comparison to the rest of JapanCountryJapanArea Total32 423 90 km2 12 518 94 sq mi Population October 1 2010 Total42 607 376 Density1 300 km2 3 400 sq mi Gross Regional Product 1 TotalJP 218 563 trillionUS 2 044 trillionTime zoneUTC 09 00 JST Geofeatures map of Kantō As the Kantō region contains Tokyo the capital and largest city of Japan the region is considered the center of Japan s politics and economy According to the official census on October 1 2010 by the Statistics Bureau of Japan the population was 42 607 376 3 amounting to approximately one third of the total population of Japan Contents 1 Other definitions 2 Geography 3 History 4 Subdivisions 4 1 North and South 4 2 East and West 4 3 Inland and Coastal 4 4 Greater Kantō 5 Cities 6 Economy 6 1 Greater Tokyo Area 2005 6 2 GDP purchasing power parity 6 3 Kanto Region Metropolitan Employment Area 7 Population 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksOther definitions editThe Kantō regional governors association 関東地方知事会 Kantō chihō chijikai assembles the prefectural governors of Ibaraki Tochigi Gunma Saitama Chiba Tokyo Kanagawa Yamanashi Nagano and Shizuoka 4 5 The Kantō Regional Development Bureau 関東地方整備局 Kantō chihō seibi kyoku of the Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism in the national government is responsible for eight prefectures generally Ibaraki Tochigi Gunma Saitama Chiba Tokyo Kanagawa Yamanashi and parts of the waterways in two others Nagano and Shizuoka 6 The Kantō Bureau of Economy Trade and Industry 関東経済産業局 Kantō keizai sangyō kyoku is responsible for eleven prefectures Ibaraki Tochigi Gunma Saitama Chiba Tokyo Kanagawa Niigata Yamanashi Nagano and Shizuoka 7 In the police organization of Japan the National Police Agency s supervisory office for Kantō 関東管区警察局 Kantō kanku keisatsu kyoku is responsible for the Prefectural police departments of Ibaraki Tochigi Gunma Saitama Chiba Kanagawa Niigata Yamanashi Nagano and Shizuoka 8 Tokyo is not part of Kantō or any NPA region its police has a dedicated liaison office with the national agency of its own citation needed Geography edit nbsp Kantō region satellite photo The surface geology of the Kantō Plain is the Quaternary alluvium and diluvium The low mountain vegetation at an altitude of about 500 to 900 m in and around the plain is an evergreen broad leaved forest zone The distribution height range of laurel forests is 900 m in Hakone about 800 m in Tanzawa and Takao about 700 m in Okutama Oku Musashi and Oku Chichibu about 600 m in Nishijoshu Akagiyama Ashio Mountains and Tsukuba Mountains and about 500 m in Kitage and Nasu Mountains Over the evergreen broad leaved forest are deciduous broad leaved forests such as beech birch and Quercus crispula In addition coniferous forests such as Abies veitchii and Betula ermanii spread above the deciduous broad leaved forest from an altitude of about 1100 m higher than the lower limit of the deciduous broad leaved forest Mountains are spread out such as the Taishaku Mountains Mt Takahara Mt Nasu Mt Yamizo and Mt The Kantō Plain which is the largest plain in Japan Just north of the Enna Hills is Japan s largest alluvial fan Nasuno at the foot of Mt The Kujukuri Plain The southern part of Chiba Prefecture is the Boso hills The area around Kasumigaura in Ibaraki Prefecture is the Joso plateau and Hitachi plateau Gunma Prefecture and the Chichibu region of Saitama Prefecture are basins Rivers such as the Arakawa and Edo rivers pour into Tokyo Bay and the Kinugawa and Tone rivers flow into the Pacific Ocean in Inubōsaki Tokyo Bay is surrounded by the Boso Peninsula and the Miura Peninsula facing the west side of Chiba Prefecture a part of Tokyo and the east side of Kanagawa Prefecture and borders the Pacific Ocean from Uraga Suido The coastal area is an industrial area The south side of Kanagawa Prefecture faces Sagami Bay and Sagami Nada The southern coast of Ibaraki Prefecture faces Kashima Nada The Sagami Trough which was the epicenter of the two Kanto earthquakes passes through Sagami Bay Efforts are being made to take safety measures against earthquakes in various places The highest point is the summit of Mt Nikko Shirane Mt Oku Shirane on the border between Nikko City Tochigi Prefecture and Katashina Village Gunma Prefecture It is the eighth highest point in Japan s prefectures It is also the highest point north of Kanto Kanto Tohoku Hokkaido The highest points of the prefectures are Mt Sanpo 2 483 m in Saitama Mt Kumotori 2 017 m in Tokyo Mt Hiru 1 673 m in Kanagawa Mt Yamizo 1 022 m in Ibaraki and Mt Atago 408 m in Chiba Atagoyama in Chiba Prefecture is the lowest among the highest peaks in each prefecture The region experiences a humid subtropical climate with a summer to fall precipitation maximum Cfa Cwa History edit nbsp Mount Nikkō Shirane in the Kantō region The heartland of feudal power during the Kamakura period and again in the Edo period Kanto became the center of modern development Within the Greater Tokyo Area and especially the Tokyo Yokohama metropolitan area Kanto houses not only Japan s seat of government but also the nation s largest group of universities and cultural institutions the greatest population and a large industrial zone Although most of the Kanto plain is used for residential commercial or industrial construction it is still farmed Rice is the principal crop although the zone around Tokyo and Yokohama has been landscaped to grow garden produce for the metropolitan market citation needed In between January 1918 and April 1920 Japan was afflicted by Spanish flu pandemic which claimed more than 400 000 Japanese lives citation needed A watershed moment of Japan s modern history took place in the late Taishō period the Great Kantō earthquake of 1923 The quake which claimed more than 100 000 lives and ravaged Greater Tokyo area occurred at a time when Japan was still reeling from the economic recession in reaction to the high flying years during World War I citation needed Operation Coronet part of Operation Downfall the proposed Allied invasion of Japan during World War II was scheduled to land on the Kantō Plain The name Kanto literally means East of the Barrier The name Kanto is nowadays generally considered to mean the region east 東 of the Hakone Barrier 箱根関 An antonym of Kanto West of the Barrier means the Kansai region which lies western Honshu and was the center of feudal Japan citation needed After the Great Kanto earthquake 1923 many people in Kanto started creating art with different varieties of colors They made art of earthquake and small towns to symbolize the small towns destroyed in the quake citation needed Subdivisions editNorth and South edit The most often used subdivision of the region is dividing it to North Kantō 北関東 Kita Kantō consisting of Ibaraki Tochigi and Gunma prefectures and South Kantō 南関東 Minami Kantō consisting of Saitama sometimes classified North citation needed by whom Chiba Tokyo Metropolis sometimes singulated citation needed and Kanagawa prefectures citation needed South Kantō is often regarded as synonymous with the Greater Tokyo Area As part of Japan s attempts to predict earthquakes an area roughly corresponding to South Kantō has been designated an Area of Intensified Observation by the Coordinating Committee for Earthquake Prediction 9 The Japanese House of Representatives divides it into the North Kantō 北関東 Kita Kantō electorate which consists of Ibaraki Tochigi Gunma and Saitama prefectures Tokyo electorate and the South Kantō 南関東 Minami Kantō electorate which consists of Chiba Kanagawa and Yamanashi prefectures note that Yamanashi is out of the Kantō region in the orthodox definition Keirin s South Kantō 南関東 Minami Kantō consists of Chiba Kanagawa and Shizuoka prefectures East and West edit This division is not often but sometimes used East Kantō 東関東 Higashi Kantō Ibaraki Tochigi and Chiba prefectures West Kantō 西関東 Nishi Kantō Gunma Saitama Tokyo Kanagawa and sometimes Yamanashi prefectures Inland and Coastal edit This division is sometimes used in economics and geography The border can be modified if the topography is taken for prefectural boundaries Inland Kantō 関東内陸部 Kantō nairiku bu Tochigi Gunma Saitama and sometimes Yamanashi prefectures Coastal Kantō 関東沿岸部 Kantō engan bu Ibaraki Chiba Tokyo and Kanagawa prefectures Greater Kantō edit The Japanese national government defines the National Capital Region 首都圏 Shuto ken as the Kantō region plus Yamanashi Prefecture Japan s national public broadcaster NHK uses Kantō kō shin etsu 関東甲信越 involving Yamanashi Nagano and Niigata prefectures for regional programming and administration Cities editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message The Kantō region is the most highly developed urbanized and industrialized part of Japan Tokyo and Yokohama form a single industrial complex with a concentration of light and heavy industry along Tokyo Bay Other major cities in the area include Kawasaki in Kanagawa Prefecture Saitama in Saitama Prefecture and Chiba in Chiba Prefecture Smaller cities farther away from the coast house substantial light and automotive industries The average population density reached 1 192 persons per square kilometer in 1991 Economy editThe Kantō region largely corresponds to the Tokyo Metropolitan Area with the exception that it does not contain Yamanashi prefecture The Tokyo Metropolitan Area has the largest city economy in the world and is one of the major global center of trade and commerce along with New York City Los Angeles Shanghai Paris Seoul and London Greater Tokyo Area 2005 edit nbsp Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building 2005 average exchange rate 1 U S Dollar 110 22 Yen 10 Prefecture Gross Prefecture Product in billion Yen Gross Prefecture Product in billion US Tokyo 92 269 837 Kanagawa 31 184 282 Saitama 20 650 187 Chiba 19 917 180 Ibaraki 10 955 99 Tochigi 8 195 74 Gunma 7 550 68 Source 11 GDP purchasing power parity edit nbsp Tokyo Tower The agglomeration of Tokyo is the world s largest economy with the largest gross metropolitan product at purchasing power parity PPP in the world according to a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers 12 Kanto Region Metropolitan Employment Area edit Year 2010 1995 1980 Employed Persons 000 s 16 234 16 381 12 760 Production billion USD 1 797 1 491 358 Production Manufacturing billion USD 216 476 159 Private Capital Stock billion USD 3 618 2 631 368 Social Overhead Capital billion USD 1 607 1 417 310 1 U S Dollar Japanese yen 87 780 94 060 226 741 Sources 13 Conversion rates Exchange rates OECD DataPopulation editThe population of Kantō region is very similar to that of the Greater Tokyo Area 14 better source needed except that it does not contain Yamanashi Prefecture and contains the rural populations throughout the region Per Japanese census data 15 and the Kantō region s data 16 population has continuously grown but the population growth rate has slowed since early 1992 The Kantō region at 2019 had a population at around 43 23 million people 17 Historical populationYearPop 192011 127 000 193013 773 000 23 8 194016 866 000 22 5 195018 241 000 8 2 196023 003 000 26 1 197029 496 000 28 2 198034 896 000 18 3 199038 542 000 10 4 200040 433 711 4 9 201042 607 376 5 4 201843 300 000 1 6 See also edit nbsp Japan portal nbsp Tokyo portal Geography of Japan Kanto a fictional region in the Pokemon franchise which is based on Kantō Kantō dialect Kantō Fureai Trail aka Capital Region Nature Trail a collection of hiking trails circumnavigating the entire Kantō region Kantō PlainReferences edit 県民経済計算 平成23年度 令和2年度 2008SNA 平成27年基準計数 47都道府県 4政令指定都市分 Nussbaum Louis Frederic 2005 Kanto in Japan Encyclopedia pp 478 479 p 478 at Google Books 政府統計の総合窓口 E stat go jp Archived from the original on October 4 2011 Retrieved December 31 2012 Saitama prefectural government Kantō regional governors association in Japanese Chiba prefectural government Kantō regional governors association in Japanese MLIT Kanto Regional Development Bureau in Japanese METI Kanto Bureau of Economy Trade and Industry Organizational overview Archived June 6 2020 at the Wayback Machine in Japanese National Police Agency Kantō regional police supervision office Jurisdiction in Japanese Avances en prevencion de desastres sismicos en Japon Outline of countermeasures for the Tōkai earthquake Section B Archived 2011 07 20 at the Wayback Machine N Honda published March 1994 accessed 2011 03 25 Annual Average Exchange Rate Archived from the original on April 1 2009 Retrieved December 28 2018 平成19年度県民経済計算 Archived 2010 12 20 at the Wayback Machine City Mayors reviews the richest cities in the world in 2005 www citymayors com Archived from the original on September 18 2012 Retrieved February 12 2009 Yoshitsugu Kanemoto Metropolitan Employment Area MEA Data Center for Spatial Information Science The University of Tokyo Archived from the original on May 2 2019 Retrieved June 21 2016 Tokyo MEA Tōkyō Japan Prefecture Major Cities amp Towns Population Statistics Maps Charts Weather and Web Information www citypopulation de Japan Prefectures Population from 1920 and Area www demographia com Kanto 2020 Sources editNussbaum Louis Frederic and Kathe Roth 2005 Japan encyclopedia Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01753 5 OCLC 58053128 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Kanto Country Studies Federal Research Division External links edit nbsp Media related to Kantō region at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kantō region amp oldid 1220925580, 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