Taking all things into consideration as to the materials of occupation, tax, income and holdings of the tenant land, it is possible to perceive
several strata of society in Sakata. Namely, the most upper stratum consists of a few who earn very large income from the tenant land and
interests. The second stratum consists of many commercial and industrial traders and others who earn income from the tenant land is often larger
than trade. The third stratum consists of a large number of traders and others who their mean derives more or less from income of the tenant
land. The next stratum consists of a great number oftraders in very small business and others. The lowest stratum consists of a great many residents with no sure means ofliving, and forms the base ofthe stratified and pyramidal organization. In the later Meiji Era, Sakata was already not a city which was simply composed ofthe income of trades, but the city that depends chiefly
on enormous wealth from the tenant land and interests. Sakata turned from a commercial city to a so-called parastic city. This was the
important point that could recover from the destructive earthquake of 1894, and could fend off severe blows on the transit business of Sakata
owing to the construction of railroad from 1899. The nature of parastic moneymaking, the higher of strata he is, the more he depends, took simultaneously upon itself the responsibility to check the development of Sakata. The nature of Sakata as a city is focused on the fact that the
accumulated vast capital doesn't apply toward the industrial capital and the social capital.