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Viewing cable 06TOKYO679, ECONOMIC GOALS OF JAPAN'S 164TH DIET SESSION
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| Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 06TOKYO679 | 2006-02-07 08:32 | 2011-08-25 00:00 | UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY | Embassy Tokyo |
VZCZCXRO8046
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #0679/01 0380832
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 070832Z FEB 06
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 8351
INFO RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA PRIORITY 4461
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA PRIORITY 4552
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA PRIORITY 7105
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE PRIORITY 7523
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO PRIORITY 5664
RUEHRC/DEPT OF AGRICULTURE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RHMCSUU/DEPT OF ENERGY WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RULSDMK/DEPT OF TRANSPORTATION WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEATRS/TREASURY DEPT WASHDC PRIORITY
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 06 TOKYO 000679
SIPDIS
SENSITIVE
SIPDIS
PLEASE PASS TO USTR JOHN NEUFFER/MICHAEL BEEMAN.
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON EFIN PGOV JA
SUBJECT: ECONOMIC GOALS OF JAPAN'S 164TH DIET SESSION
REF: A. REF A: TOKYO 675
¶B. REF B: TOKYO 465
¶1. (SBU) Summary. Prime Minister Koizumi has labeled this
150 day session the &administrative reform8 Diet to
emphasize his continuing commitment toward the structural
reform of Japan's economy. Important economic bills this
session include an administrative reform bill -- to be
submitted by the Cabinet Office after the passage of the
budget -- a tax bill, health care reforms, revisions to
tender offer bid (TOB) rules, some small changes in
agricultural subsidies, amendments to the Town Planning Laws,
and others. For a discussion of the budget, administrative
reform, and the tax bills please see paragraphs 2-6. Bills
involving health care are discussed in paragraphs 7-9.
Corporate bills and amendments to agricultural subsidies can
be found in paragraphs 10-11. The revision to the Town
Planning Laws is described in paragraph 12. An examination of
pending employment laws affecting women and training begins
in paragraph 13-15. Additional bills, agreements, and
treaties are examined in paragraphs 16-22 while one important
omission -- an amendment to Company Law Article 821 -- is
discussed in paragraph 23. See Ref A for a readout on how
Diet dynamics might affect this legislative agenda. End
Summary.
Fiscal 2006 Budget
------------------
¶2. (SBU) Like most years, this Diet ordinary session began
with deliberations on a supplementary budget for the current
fiscal year. On February 3 the Diet passed a
4.52-trillion-yen (USD 38.6 billion) supplementary budget for
JFY 2005. This budget set aside 180 billion yen (USD 1.5
billion) for asbestos-related expenditures. Of this, 38
billion yen (USD 325 million) was earmarked to compensate
victims from asbestos-related diseases whose medical bills
were not covered by existing workman's compensation (such as
residents living near asbestos-dispersing facilities, and
family members of employees at asbestos factories). Yen 141
billion (USD 1.2 billion) was allotted to remove asbestos
from schools, hospitals and public buildings. The Diet will
now begin deliberations on the fiscal 2006 budget, which was
approved by the Cabinet on December 24 and stands at 79.7
trillion yen (USD 681 billion), 3 percent less than the one
in fiscal 2005. The budget demonstrates improved conditions
stemming from the recovering economy. The primary balance
deficit is projected at 2.2 percent of GDP, a 0.9-point
improvement on the year. The bond to cover the budget
deficit is 30.0 trillion yen (USD 259 billion), the lowest
level in the past four years. The fiscal crisis, however,
still lingers with expected outstanding government bonds of
541.8 trillion yen (USD 4.63 trillion) at the end of fiscal
2006, 5.3 trillion yen (USD 45 billion) more than at the end
of fiscal 2005.
Administrative reform
---------------------
¶3. (SBU) The administrative reform bill provides a general
framework for reform that should prevent the restructuring
achieved thus far from stalling or moving backwards after
Prime Minister Koizumi leaves office in September. In
addition, Koizumi has identified the consolidation of the
eight government-affiliated financial institutions, included
in the administrative reform bill, as his next goal after
postal privatization. Although the details have yet to be
determined, we expect the administrative reform bill to be an
assortment of basic policies to downsize the government
including a second round of government restructuring, after
the 2001 makeover of ministries and agencies launched by then
Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto. It also may contain plans
for a new headquarters to facilitate administrative reform
and possibly a new Cabinet member committee to coordinate
with the Council of Economic and Fiscal Policy (CEFP) to
accelerate reform. Some of the measures to achieve a slimmer,
more efficient administration are:
a) Streamlining of independent administrative institutions
and other government-affiliated corporate entities, including
the loss of public servant status for most executives and
employees.
TOKYO 00000679 002 OF 006
b) Streamlining of Special Accounts -- rumored to hold even
more superfluous projects than the General Accounts -- by
decreasing the number to half or one-third from the existing
31 accounts within five years. Other recommendations include
consolidating five accounts for road improvements, flood
control, port improvements and other public work projects
into a single category.
c) Trimming of the central and local government work force by
5 percent and 4.6 percent respectively over the next five
years (FY06-10) through attrition and retirement, outsourcing
practices to private entities and reducing the number of the
unnecessary practices.
d) Streamlining the number of independent administrative
institutions and other government affiliated corporate
entities from 56 to 42, while also changing the stature of
most of the executives and employees to non public servants.
e) Consolidation or privatization of eight government-
affiliated financial institutions. Current plans are to
merge five institutions -- the Japan Finance Corporation for
Small and Medium Enterprise, the National Life Finance Corp.,
Okinawa Development Finance Corporation, and the Agriculture,
Forestry and Fisheries Finance Corporation and the section
offering international banking services at the Japan Bank of
International Cooperation (JBIC) -- into a single entity. As
of this writing, the rumor is that the overseas AID
operations at JBIC will be transferred to the Japan
International Cooperation Agency. The Development Bank of
Japan and Shoko Chukin Bank will be fully privatized and
transferred to two separate stock companies and the Japan
Finance Corp. for Municipal Enterprises will be transferred
to municipalities.
2006 Tax Reform Legislation
---------------------------
¶4. (SBU) This year's tax reform legislation will result in an
effective tax hike of over 2 trillion yen (over USD 16
billion). It reflects a fiscal consolidation necessary to
sustain long-term economic growth. Some commentators have
warned that increasing taxes too quickly could stall the
recovery. As usual, the tax legislation will be based on the
November 2005 recommendations of the Government Tax
Committee, an advisory body to the Prime Minister, with some
refinements from the LDP tax committee led by former Minister
of State for Financial Services Hakuo Yanagisawa. The
proposals include tax hikes for both individuals and
corporations. Last year's tax legislation reduced the 1999
Obuchi special fixed rate individual income tax cuts (3.3
trillion yen, USD 28 billion, or 0.7 percent of GDP) by 50
percent. This year's plan is to eliminate the cuts entirely.
Tax incentive programs for corporate investment and research
and development will be eliminated as scheduled in March 2006
but some tax incentives will be created for corporate
investment in advanced software. The tax reform will also
transfer 3 trillion yen (USD 26 billion) in tax collection
authority to local governments by changing tax rate
structures.
¶5. (SBU) A proposal to simplify liquor taxes by reducing the
number of categories of liquor will marginally increase the
price of wine by about 10 yen per bottle but the impact of
the marginal increase this year on U.S. imports is expected
to be small. Tobacco taxes will increase by about 20 yen per
pack. The tax legislation will also change the definition of
non-permanent residents, making it clear that any person
living in Japan for a period of more than five years within
any ten-year period cannot claim non-permanent residence
status and must be considered a resident for tax purposes.
This will undoubtedly affect foreign company personnel
decisions regarding length of stay of expatriate employees in
Japan.
¶6. (SBU) Although there has been discussion in the press
about an "environment tax" on fossil fuels as a measure to
help control Japan's greenhouse gas emissions that contribute
to global warming, the Environment Ministry has decided not
to press for this tax before the end of FY 2005.
Environment Ministry contacts expect, however, that it is
likely they will propose this tax to the Diet next year.
TOKYO 00000679 003 OF 006
Health Care
-----------
¶7. (SBU) The health care reform bills seek to head off
drastic increases in health care spending but represent only
modest steps toward addressing the misallocation of health
care resources, a missed opportunity to promote competition
and investment in the medical services market and an
indication of continuing pressure to cut reimbursements for
medical devices and pharmaceuticals.
The Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare (MHLW) will
propose amendments to the Medical Law aimed at increasing
financial transparency in medical corporations and
reinforcing non-profit healthcare. Rather than opening the
medical services market to for-profit enterprises (an issue
we have raised in bilateral investment talks), the MHLW
proposals seek to address local shortages of pediatric and
other emergency care by offering tax breaks and flexibility
to develop alternative sources of revenue for private
hospitals that accept an obligation to provide such services
under a new non-profit "social-medical corporation" form.
Alternative revenue sources for social-medical corporations
are to include profit-oriented activities such as nursing
home and child care services, the proceeds of which could be
used to make up for thin margins on emergency care but not
distributed to investors. The proposal also will relax
restrictions on issuance of hospital bonds by social-medical
corporations. Left essentially untouched by these proposals
is the vast majority of small private hospitals and clinics
that account for much of the overcapacity and inefficiency in
the Japanese health care system.
¶8. (SBU) A bill to amend the Health Insurance Law will
increase co-payments for relatively wealthy seniors in order
to reduce projected increases in health care spending driven
by the aging of Japanese society. The bill will seek further
savings through adjustments to the reimbursement model
designed to reduce incentives for doctors to over-prescribe
treatments. Additional provisions would shift responsibility
for managing public insurance plans to the local level, a
move that many local officials oppose.
¶9. (SBU) MHLW also will submit an amendment to the
Pharmaceuticals Law to revise regulations on the retail sale
of over-the-counter drugs for the first time since the
current system was introduced in 1960. It is not yet clear
whether the new rules will allow for Internet retailing of
low risk drugs, a topic of hot debate among businesses and
consumers.
Securities Exchange Law (SEL)
-----------------------------
¶10. (SBU) A bill to revise tender offer bid (TOB) rules
closes loopholes exploited in several high profile corporate
takeover attempts last year while also increasing the
transparency of the TOB process and allowing withdrawal or
modification of offers when target firms deploy certain
defensive measures. The new rules, to be submitted by the
Financial Services Agency (FSA), also will require target
company boards to take a formal position on TOBs and
communicate their views to shareholders. Details have not
yet been finalized, but the new rules could contribute to
improving corporate governance if written so as to limit the
use of takeover defenses deployed to protect entrenched
management. The FSA is also expected to propose more
frequent reporting by shareholders possessing more than 5
percent of a given firm's outstanding shares, a requirement
that would interfere with the legitimate investment
strategies of institutional investors and private funds.
Agricultural Reform
-------------------
¶11. (SBU) Agricultural issues are back in the spotlight
because of the flap over beef, but we anticipate that the
Diet debate will focus on bills on agricultural reform. The
bills on the docket constitute a real, if less than sweeping,
effort to change Japan's subsidy system to raise efficiency.
They would modify domestic subsidies to improve
competitiveness in an environment of increased imports after
the conclusion of the Doha Round of World Trade Organization
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(WTO) talks. The government intends to shift away from
conventional price subsidies toward cross commodity payments
that would be limited to farms and farming institutions that
have demonstrated an ability to revitalize the industry.
Only farms and farming institutions that exceed the defined
criteria would receive the payments. The ministry hopes the
new bill will encourage farmers to consolidate farmland and
thus increase competitiveness. This modest bill should be
submitted to the Diet at the end of February. We do not
expect it to lead to any significant reform of the
agriculture sector.
Town Planning Laws (Machizukuri Sanpo)
--------------------------------------
¶12. (SBU) The government's bill to revise the Town Planning
Laws represents a step back from reform, albeit not as bad as
we had initially heard thanks to energetic lobbying by
Japanese business to roll back the worst provisions of this
draft legislation. If passed the bills would restrict the
opening of new stores over 10,000 square meters. In order to
attract retailers back into traditional urban commercial
centers, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, and Transport
(MLIT) will submit amendments to the City Planning Law that
reduce from six to three the types of zoned property on which
retailers will be able to open new stores of over 10,000
square meters. To further sweeten the pot for retailers to
move back downtown, MLIT and the Ministry of Economy, Trade
and Industry will also introduce amendments to the Urban
Center Revitalization Law that will simplify procedures and
offer extra incentives for opening new retail stores in
"hollowed-out" urban shopping districts. The Japan Chain
Store Association -- the large-scale retailing industry's
main trade group -- opposes the amendments, and the
private-sector members of the Cabinet's CEFP have also
expressed their concern that the proposed changes would do
little to address the problems facing urban shopping areas
and would reverse the Koizumi administration's regulatory
reform policies. Since the GOJ announced plans for these
revisions in summer 2005, embassy economic officers have
visited MLIT on a number of occasions to outline our concerns
that the changes will be overly restrictive toward large
retailers. In addition, AUSTR Wendy Cutler raised the issue
during the November US-Japan Trade Forum in Seattle, and we
also included concerns about the proposed revisions in this
year's Regulatory Reform Initiative recommendations and
negotiations.
Employment Practices
--------------------
¶13. (SBU) A preliminary government census indicates that
Japan,s total population, including foreign residents, may
have decreased in 2005 for the first time since the end of
WWII, heightening the importance of government measures to
increase the number of workers by expanding employment
opportunities for youth, women and senior citizens,
especially as baby boomers near retirement. The MHLW intends
to submit the following bills to address this situation:
¶14. (SBU) The Equal Employment Opportunity and Labor Standard
Amendment Bill: This bill would further reduce gender
discrimination, prohibit disadvantageous treatment of woman
workers because of pregnancy, and relax regulations that
prohibit women from working in mines. A ministerial order
would prohibit implicit gender discriminations such as
recruitment based on height and weight where there is no
explicit job requirement thereof. In addition, the number of
transfers to different posts within a company would become an
included criterion for promotion. Although it is already
illegal to fire an employee due to pregnancy, a new amendment
would also outlaw other discriminatory treatment such as a
mandatory transfer to a different department or line of work.
¶15. (SBU) Human Resource Development and Employment
Management Amendment Bill: This bill would provide practical,
effective, vocational training for youths by establishing a
new system that combines on-the-job training (OJT) with
lectures. The system would allow young workers to receive OJT
at private firms for a defined period, as well as attend
lectures at educational institutions, while still being paid.
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The goal is to help retiring baby boomers to transfer their
technical skills and know-how to young people. The number of
young unemployed people, including freeters (&intermittently
employed8) and NEET (¬ in employment, education or
training8), now stands at four million.
Market Testing
--------------
¶16. (SBU) The Cabinet Office will submit a draft law on
market testing -- the outsourcing to private-sector entities
of a limited number of government services -- in early
February for consideration in conjunction with the budget
bill. The proposed law, tentatively titled the "Bill for the
Reform of Public Services through the Introduction of
Competition," would amend laws and procedures to allow the
private sector to bid competitively with the public sector to
provide public services on the national and local levels.
The bill probably will not specify public services that the
private sector will be allowed to bid on, but will instead
contain a provision for determining appropriate areas for
applying market testing. (See Ref B)
Customs Law
-----------
¶17. (SBU) The Ministry of Finance (MOF) plans to introduce a
bill that would revise the Customs Law to require all
aircraft and ships to submit detailed information on
passengers and cargo prior to the vessel's arrival in Japan.
MOF held a public comment period on the bill during November
9-18 and is now drafting details of the law. MOF's plan
would require aircraft and vessel captains to submit the
necessary information, but the Ministry is considering
broadening reporting authority to allow prior notification by
a broader range of authorized reporters, echoing a request
that the USG made in this year's Regulatory Reform Initiative
recommendations to the GOJ.
Road Transportation Vehicle Law
-------------------------------
¶18. (SBU) MLIT plans to submit a bill to revise the Road
Transportation Vehicle Law in order to reduce the burden on
auto leasing companies and other owners of large numbers of
vehicles when they change registration information and
transfer titles. MLIT plans to remove owners' information
from the original certificates of vehicle inspection so that
new owners will not have to submit the inspection certificate
for changes in registration and title transfers, a process
that currently deprives lessees of the use of the vehicle
during the transition period. The revision would also
include measures to facilitate on-line application for these
changes. The USG has advocated this issue both in our annual
regulatory reform talks and through the Office of the Trade
Ombudsman and we are pleased that MLIT is taking these steps
to ease the burden on fleet vehicle owners. However, we
believe the revisions do not go far enough since the law will
still require owners to complete registration procedures
within an unreasonable 15-day time period.
Anti-Corruption Legislation
---------------------------
¶19. (SBU) The Diet will take up the ratification of the
United Nations Anti-Corruption Convention at the beginning of
March according to the current agenda. Interestingly,
however, proposed legislation on combating organized crime,
which includes a provision applying penalties for acts of
bribery undertaken by Japanese nationals overseas that would
bring Japan into accord with the OECD anti-corruption
guidelines, continues to remain "under consideration" as it
has been since it was originally submitted in 2004. The
agenda contains no scheduled time for that bill's
reconsideration.
Eliminating Tariffs on Multi-chip Integrated Circuits
--------------------------------------------- --------
¶20. (SBU) This multilateral treaty between the United States,
EU, Korea, Taiwan and Japan will eliminate tariffs on
multi-chip integrated circuits, with the hope of spurring
other zero-tariff sectoral agreements in WTO negotiations.
Under the agreement, the U.S. will abolish its 2.6 percent
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duty, the EU its duties ranging up to 4 percent and Korea its
8 percent duty. Japan will keep its existing rate at zero.
The treaty should be submitted to the Diet end February.
MRA on Telecommunications Equipment
-----------------------------------
¶21. (SBU) U.S. and Japanese negotiators are finalizing the
text of a Mutual Recognition Agreement (MRA), the first MRA
between the U.S. and Japan. The agreement will allow U.S.
and Japanese regulators to accept the results of testing labs
and certifications on telecommunications equipment obtained
in the other country leading to easier market access for
manufacturers on both sides. Japan is interested in
expanding the agreement or using it as a model to cover other
kinds of goods such as medical equipment. U.S. testing labs
are especially interested in the agreement. The Ministry of
Foreign Affairs (MOFA) expects the Cabinet to submit the MRA
to the Diet during this session, but the timing is unclear.
Free Trade Agreements (FTAs)
----------------------------
¶22. (SBU) Only the "economic partnership agreement" with
Malaysia, signed on the fringes of the East Asia Summit in
December, has formally made the Diet's agenda, scheduled for
the last 10 days of February. In addition, an amendment to
apply the same certificates of origin provisions to Malaysian
products that the Japan-Mexico FTA offers will also be
considered, along with changes to Japan's tariff schedule.
According to contacts at MOFA, the Government is still hoping
to submit the draft agreement with Thailand and possibly the
agreement under negotiation with the Philippines. (Both
agreements are listed on the schedule for this session as
"items under discussion outside the submitted agenda.")
What's Missing?
---------------
¶23. (SBU) In addition to the bills and treaties above, it is
important to note that the government has not submitted any
revision of Company Law Article 821 to eliminate legal risk
for foreign firms that conduct their primary business through
their branches in Japan. The LDP leadership reportedly has
rejected a request from an individual LDP Diet member to
table an amendment during this session, before the Company
Law enters into force in May, calculating that an admission
of error would only offer the DPJ more ammunition with which
to attack the government for past mistakes. While the Diet
member in question has suggested that it may be possible to
amend Article 821 in the fall 2006 session, the prospects for
this are uncertain at best; we expect a new Prime Minister to
be in place and he too may be unwilling to risk embarrassment
over Article 821.
Conclusion
----------
¶24. (SBU) Koizumi has ambitiously set out to further his
reform agenda in this Diet session with his administrative
reform bill. Some of the other bills in the docket are less
ambitious, however, such as the health care amendments,
agricultural subsidy revisions, and changes to the Town
Planning Laws, an indication that the Prime Minister,s
commitment to reform does not cross all sectors.
Nevertheless, the outlook for continued, if watered-down,
reform remains good.
SCHIEFFER