keiretsu

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Japanese 系列(けいれつ) (keiretsu, literally system, series), from Middle Chinese (ɣèj, attached) +‎ (ljet, set, row) (compare Mandarin 系列 (xìliè, series, set)).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /keɪˈɹɛtsu/

Noun

keiretsu (plural keiretsus or keiretsu)

  1. A set of Japanese companies with interlocking business relationships and shareholdings.
    Coordinate terms: chaebol, zaibatsu, conglomerate, conglomeration, combine, megacorporation, supercorporation
    • 2011 August 1, Steve Clemons, “China's Internal Pluralism Is Nothing to Cheer About”, in The Atlantic[1]:
      Japan's keiretsu—or families of firms in large scratch-each-other's back networks—supported this or that faction in the LDP, producing a highly successful, structurally corrupt model of economic development that showed remarkable resilience through Japan's high growth economic period.

Japanese

Romanization

keiretsu

  1. Rōmaji transcription of けいれつ