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Viewing cable 07TOKYO1202, The Japan Economic Scope - March 16, 2007

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07TOKYO1202 2007-03-19 06:49 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO8646
RR RUEHFK RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #1202/01 0780649
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 190649Z MAR 07
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 1794
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
INFO RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS 5360
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 0277
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 9648
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 2746
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 3791
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 08 TOKYO 001202 
 
SIPDIS 
 
 
PARIS PLEASE PASS TO USOEDC 
STATE PLEASE PASS TO USTR 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ETRD ECON JA ZO EAGR
SUBJECT: The Japan Economic Scope - March 16, 2007 
 
Sensitive but unclassified.  Please protect accordingly. 
 
1. (SBU) Table of Contents 
 
 
2. (U) This cable contains the Japan Economic Scope from March 16, 
2007. 
 
3.  EAP/MLS Director Meets MOFA Counterparts in Tokyo 
Beef and Agriculture 
4.  OIE Panel Judges U.S. Beef Safe, Japan Replies, Not So Fast 
6.  Japanese Must Confront "Egoistic" Agriculture Bureaucrats 
7.  Biotech Potatoes -- Ending Testing 
8.  Hyogo Governor Solicits FDI Advice from Foreign Firms and 
ACCJ 
Trade 
9.  Record Level of Trade in Western Japan; Trade with U.S. Up 
10. ACCJ Person of the Year; Politics Not Involved in Toyota's 
Mississippi Choice Says Toyota ex-President and Chairman 
11. JAIA -- U.S. Automakers Need to Show Commitment to Japan 
12. More Foreign Auto Parts Firms Coming to Nagoya 
13. Bolivia President Pleased with Tokyo Visit 
14. MOFA DG for Latin America to Visit Washington 
Industry Oversight 
15. FSA Sanctions 10 Non-Life Insurers 
16. Former Livedoor Chairman Horie Sentenced to 2 1/2 Years in 
Prison 
Labor 
17. Cabinet Endorses 3 Labor Bills for Diet Submission 
18. KIX Misses Target for Public Fund Use in Second Runway 
Construction (REVISED) 
19. 2005 Abolishment of MFA had No Affect on Japanese Market 
20. Osaka: Asia's First CO2 Emission Trading Market? 
21. Northern Japan: Iwate Governor Says Decentralization is 
Important for Area's Development 
22. Nagoya:  Dango Didn't End in Nagoya Despite General 
Contractors' Public Pledges 
23. A Young New President at Sharp 
Documentation 
 
3.  (SBU) EAP/MLS Director Meets MOFA Counterparts in Tokyo 
------------------------------ 
 
EAP Office of Maritime Southeast Asia Director Scott Marciel 
covered a range of issues at the Foreign Ministry during his 
February 27 visit to Tokyo, including collaboration on assistance 
projects, East Timor, Indonesia, the Philippines, ASEAN and 
regional architecture, and combating piracy.  For more on 
Marciel's meetings, see Tokyo 978.  (ECON: Nicholas Hill) 
 
4.  (SBU) Misrepresentation Scandal Snares DPJ's Nakai 
------------------------------ 
 
Former Justice Minister and Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) Diet 
member Hiroshi Nakai  has come under fire because his political 
fund management organization allegedly misrepresented 2.86 
million yen ($ 24,000) worth of phone bills and flower 
condolences as utility costs -- electricity, gas, water, etc. -- in 
 
its 2005 accounts.  The Political Funds Control Law bans false 
statements in political fund reports, suggesting Nakai's 
organization may have broken the law. 
 
The scandal came to light only days after Minister of Agriculture 
Toshikatsu Matsuoka was questioned in the Diet over a similar 
incident in which his office declared 5.07 million yen ($43,000) 
as utilities in 2005 and 28.8 million yen ($246,000) over a five 
year period.  Matsuoka allegedly concealed shady expenditures as 
utilities expenses because lawmakers are not required to offer 
detailed explanations for those expenditures. 
 
The DPJ has argued that Diet member utility expenses are covered 
by public funds and therefore need not be itemized.  Matsuoka 
also has declined to give any further explanation.  The 
secretaries general of three opposition parties had agreed on 
 
SIPDIS 
March 13th to continue summoning Matsuoka to the Diet as a sworn 
witness but with the DPJ's Nakai now under scrutiny as well, 
allegations likely will quiet down. 
 
Nevertheless, with the July Upper House election looming, Liberal 
 
TOKYO 00001202  002 OF 008 
 
 
Democratic Party (LDP) lawmakers, such as Upper House Caucus 
Secretary General Toranosuke Katayama and New Komeito legislator 
 
SIPDIS 
Takao Watanabe, reportedly have asked for more satisfactory 
explanations. Nippon Keidanren head Fujio Mitarai also called for 
further clarification.  Meanwhile, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is 
standing by Matsuoka, just as he did Health Minister Hakuo 
Yanagisawa after Yanagisawa made controversial remarks about 
women.  (ECON: Ryoko Nakano) 
 
5.  (SBU) OIE Panel Judges U.S. Beef Safe, Japan Replies, Not So 
Fast 
---- 
 
The member states of the Paris-based International Animal Health 
Organization (OIE) have not officially approved it, but an OIE 
panel's report has judged U.S. beef to be safe, or in the second 
"controlled risk" category. 
 
Responding to the news, Japan's Vice Agriculture Minister Yoshio 
Kobayashi told a press conference on March 12 that this would not 
immediately change the import terms for U.S. beef.  "We are not 
at the stage of participating in negotiations to review the terms 
of trade," said Kobayashi according to Kyodo news. 
His message was consistent with what Agriculture and Health 
Ministry officials have told us privately.  We heard the same 
message on March 16 during a meeting with MOFA officials from the 
2nd North Americas Division. 
 
Getting Japan to take a more science-based approach to the BSE 
problem and ease its onerous trade restrictions on U.S. beef 
figures to be a difficult process in coming months. 
The Embassy has taken a low key approach since the OIE panel made 
public its findings about the U.S. market.  The OIE member states 
are expected to endorse the panel decision when they convene in 
May.  (ECON: Nicholas Hill) 
 
 
6.  (SBU) Japanese Must Confront "Egoistic" Agriculture 
Bureaucrats 
----------- 
 
Japan's Agriculture Ministry and Japan Agriculture (JA), the 
country's major farmers' organization, do not represent the 
country's interests -- or even fundamentally the interests of 
Japan's farm sector -- in their fierce opposition to a Japan - 
Australia FTA, according to Yoshihisa Godo, an economics 
professor at Meiji Gakuin University, in the forthcoming May 
edition of "Agriculture and the Economy."  (See abridged 
unofficial Embassy translation attached.) 
 
Meeting in his office March 13, Godo expressed pessimism about 
the future of Japan's agriculture sector.  He said change was 
inevitable, but that MAFF officials, working in cahoots with 
Japan Agriculture, will devote their energy to protecting the 
country's least efficient farmers.   If they succeed in 
maintaining high import barriers, Japan's more efficient and 
innovative farmers would get short shrift -- and ultimately the 
whole sector will wither, he said. 
 
In his article, Godo described MAFF and JA as "egoistic groups 
without a cause" except, as he explained to us separately, self 
preservation. 
 
Godo told us there is some hope, however, for the country's 
agricultural sector.  The Japanese public, he explained, had been 
subjected to many hardships in recent years as the economy was 
squeezed by recession and deflation.  People are now less 
inclined to allow farmers to be pampered. 
 
Godo drew a parallel between Japan Post privatization and Japan 
agricultural liberalization.  Before Japan Post was privatized, 
it was an unstoppable political juggernaut, but once 
privatization went through, it lost its political constituency 
over night.  The same could happen, he said, to Japan's coddled 
small farm sector.  A strategy of "passing" over MAFF and JA 
needs to be adopted, with an appeal made directly to consumers 
and also to efficient farmers who do not benefit from MAFF's 
largesse. 
 
Australian food, he noted, is very popular in Japan, and the 
 
TOKYO 00001202  003 OF 008 
 
 
appeal of an FTA with Australia that includes agriculture should 
be part of a strategy to break the grip of Japan's backward 
looking protectionists.  (ECON: Nicholas Hill) 
 
7.  (SBU) Biotech Potatoes -- Ending Testing 
------------------------------ 
 
Japan currently requires that all potatoes from the United States 
undergo costly testing for biotech varieties, even though U.S. 
farmers have not grown biotech potatoes for over five years. 
The United States is the largest foreign supplier of potato 
products to Japan, shipping over 250,000 MT in 2006. 
 
The biotech testing and special handling requirements are 
believed to cost the industry several million dollars a year. 
The issue was taken up in this year's Regulatory Reform 
Initiative in January and progress is now being made. 
This week, for the first time, MAFF provided a description of the 
process for ending the testing requirements and a proposed 
timeline. 
 
The Embassy will work with GOJ and the U.S. potato industry with 
a view to ending the requirements this fall.  (FAS: Paul Spencer) 
 
8.  (U) Hyogo Governor Solicits FDI Advice from Foreign Firms and 
ACCJ 
---- 
 
At the Hyogo Global Business Summit sponsored by Governor Toshizo 
Ido, American firms such as Eli Lilly and P&G, ACCJ Kansai and 
firms from other countries spoke about Hyogo/Kobe's success in 
attracting FDI, and challenges for the future. 
 
Speaking on behalf of ACCJ Kansai, Econoff praised the governor 
for his assiduous efforts at attracting U.S. firms, and asked Ido 
to recognize U.S. firms' contribution not only to the prefecture, 
but to the regional and global markets as well.  Econoff also 
asked Ido to understand the needs of foreign firms better when 
designing incentive packages for them. 
 
Hyogo Prefecture also outlined its investment promotion 
strategies, a public-private partnership (largely with P&G) which 
gave Hyogo Japan's highest number of new factory locations in the 
first half of 2006. 
 
One of Hyogo's successes has been in capitalizing on the large 
number of "alumni," or people with personal connections to the 
prefecture, for business promotion.  Governor Ido said foreign 
firms were key to his prefecture's economic strategy, and that 
Hyogo was ranked fourth in the number of foreign firms 
headquartered in Japan, behind Tokyo, Kanagawa and Osaka. 
(Osaka-Kobe:  Phil Cummings/Naomi Shibui) 
 
9.  (SBU) Record Level of Trade in Western Japan; Trade with U.S. 
Up 
-- 
 
According to an Osaka Customs' study, last year the volume of 
trade, both exports and imports, in the six prefectures of the 
Kansai surged to its highest level ever. 
 
Exports reached $131 billion, a 12.7 percent increase from the 
previous year, and imports were approximately $104 billion, a 
growth of 13.8 percent. 
 
Exports of audiovisual products including flat TV panels 
increased 45 percent from the previous year. 
 
By country, China was the Kansai region's leading export 
destination, with exports totaling $25 billion, up 19 percent in 
the eighth consecutive year of growth.  The United States ranked 
second, with exports to the United States valued at $21 billion, 
up 7.8 percent from the previous year. 
 
Imports from the United States to the Kansai also went up from 
2005 levels due to a large increase in pharmaceutical product 
imports. 
 
Strong exports to China and the United States have buoyed the 
Kansai economy, and audiovisuals are expected to continue to be 
 
TOKYO 00001202  004 OF 008 
 
 
strong sellers. 
 
Many of economists here, however, are warning local businesses to 
be careful about an over-dependence on the U.S. market, where 
retail prices are falling and competition is tough.  They predict 
a plateau in flat TV and other A/V sales in five years.  (Osaka- 
Kobe:  Phil Cummings/Naomi Shibui) 
 
10.  (SBU) ACCJ Person of the Year; Politics Not Involved in 
Toyota's Mississippi Choice Says Toyota ex-President and Chairman 
------------------------------ 
 
In a sign of the times, the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan 
presented Hiroshi Okuda with its person of the year for 2006 
award at a large luncheon ceremony in the Okura Hotel. 
 
Okuda was President of Toyota (1995-1999) and then Chairman 
(1999-2006), and was a member of the GOJ's Council on Economic 
and Fiscal Policy under PM Koizumi.  Several U.S. ambassadors 
have also received the prize. 
 
In his introduction, ACCJ President Charles Lake cited the 
critical role Okuda played in U.S.-Japan economic relations from 
when he was a Toyota director in the 1980s and oversaw the 
preparations for the construction of major plants in North 
America to the 1990s when under his leadership Toyota expanded 
its investment in the United States to over $15.6 billion and now 
directly employs 35,000 people.  The good news has continued with 
Toyota's recent announcement about opening a fourth U.S. auto 
assembly plant in Mississippi. 
 
In his remarks, Okuda overviewed the early history of Toyota, 
emphasizing that from the company's beginning there has been an 
emphasis on innovation, learning, quality and commitment to the 
community. 
 
He covered the five major trends of the 21st century he saw 
affecting the business environment -- globalization, demographic 
shifts, intensifying technical competition, resources and 
environmental issues, and personal enrichment -- and Toyota's 
efforts to meet the challenges in each area. 
 
Toyota's commitment to hybrid technology for several types of 
engines and its goal of more than tripling the sales of hybrid 
vehicles in three years to one million a year in 2010 was 
noteworthy. 
 
In a response to questions about a possible backlash in the 
United States over Toyota's string of successes and the plight of 
the Big Three, Okuda expounded upon Toyota's commitment to 
internationalization and globalization, which could be measured 
by Toyota increasing its foreign capital ownership -- it is 
slightly over 20% now -- and having non-Japanese among its 30 or 
so board members and directors. Also, he noted, Toyota has a high 
percentage of local staffing even at the managerial level of its 
operations. 
 
Internationalization, globalization, assimilation and good public 
outreach to local communities, he suggested, are the ways to 
blunt criticism and make the case that Toyota benefits the 
localities in which it operates. 
 
When asked if political concerns played a role locating Toyota's 
new auto production plant in Mississippi, he replied that they 
had not since if they had Toyota would have sited it elsewhere 
taking into consideration the Democrats.  He claimed Mississippi 
was optimal from the production and workforce point of view. 
After the talk, in response to a follow-up question from us, he 
said Toyota had never considered putting a plant in Michigan. 
(ECON: Josh Handler) 
 
11.  (SBU) JAIA -- U.S. Automakers Need to Show Commitment to 
Japan 
----- 
 
We met with the Japanese Automobile Importers Association on 
March 12 to learn about their work and get their thoughts on the 
ups and downs of the U.S. automakers in Japan. 
 
JAIA has a staff of about 20 and is very active in producing 
 
TOKYO 00001202  005 OF 008 
 
 
statistics on the auto business and following Japanese laws and 
regulations to help its members sell their cars in Japan.  It 
tries to serve as an institutional counterbalance for auto 
importers to the Japan Automobile Manufactures Association. 
JAIA officials noted several factors that have and are 
contributing to the loss of market share of U.S. autos in Japan 
among imports as well as a declining number of U.S. imports in 
general. 
 
First and foremost is that the Big Three themselves do not seem 
to have a strong interest in importing cars to Japan from the 
United States.  In the early 1990s the Big Three were interested, 
but as the Japanese market stagnated and opportunities in China 
and India arose, they lost interest in the Japanese market and 
set their sights elsewhere.  Moreover, the Big Three design cars 
for the U.S. market and not for export to Japan. Finally, Europe 
and Japan are moving in the same direction in terms of 
regulations, standards, and design.  China also seems to be going 
the way of Europe and Japan.  The United States is becoming the 
odd-man out, e.g. U.S.-style large SUVs and sedans are unique to 
the U.S. market, further complicating exporting U.S.-produced 
vehicles. 
 
In contrast, the European car makers retained an interest in 
Japan and are having some success. The luxury car market is 
dominated by European makes and Volkswagen does a good business 
in the mid-priced market. Mercedes and BMW sold almost 50,000 
units each in 2006 while Volkswagen sold some 54,000, almost one- 
fifth of total import sales of 260,000. 
 
The Big Three managed to sell just about 10,000 units, although 
U.S.-owned production was higher as Ford-owned Volvo had some 
10,000 vehicles sold. (ECON: Josh Handler) 
 
12.  (SBU) More Foreign Auto Parts Firms Coming to Nagoya 
------------------------------ 
 
As Japanese auto production surges in North America, more and 
more U.S. firms are increasing their Japanese presence, hoping to 
gain a larger piece of that growing pie. 
 
Aiming to increase its share of designed-in content with Toyota 
and other Japanese makers, leading automotive fluid systems and 
seals maker Cooper-Standard, of Novi, Michigan, announced it will 
open a Nagoya office. 
 
According to media reports, Cooper-Standard's 2006 Asia region 
sales were $300 million, accounting for about 7% of its total 
revenue.  Cooper-Standard hopes to double that ratio over the 
next five to seven years. 
 
Separately, the press reported recently that Canadian parts 
behemoth Magna International and the United States' massive but 
troubled Delphi plan to expand their Nagoya-area operations, with 
similar goals in mind.  (Nagoya: Tamiki Mizuno) 
 
 
13.  (SBU) Bolivia President Pleased with Tokyo Visit 
------------------------------ 
 
Bolivian President Evo Morales Ayma had meetings with PM Abe, 
Foreign Minister Aso, and others during a March 6-7 visit to 
Japan, and had an audience with the Emperor.  A MOFA source told 
us the visit went very well.  Aso underscored the importance of 
maintaining democratic values and free market policies. 
PM Abe promised $200,000 in emergency grant aid in response to 
recent flooding in Bolivia and another $100,000 in emergency 
relief.   According to MOFA, the GOJ will offer more long term 
assistance worth about $6.8 million in "non-project free aid," 
although our contact did not have details of how that would be 
distributed.  (ECON: David DiGiovanna/ Nicholas Hill) 
 
14.  (SBU) MOFA DG for Latin America to Visit Washington 
------------------------------ 
 
MOFA's Director General for Latin America and Caribbean Affairs, 
Akira Miwa, will be visiting Washington next week for meetings at 
the State Department before heading for meetings in Madrid. 
According to a MOFA source, the primary purpose of Miwa's visit 
will be to meet A/S Shannon to discuss President Bush's recent 
 
TOKYO 00001202  006 OF 008 
 
 
tour of Latin America.  He will also share the results of 
Bolivian President Morales' March 6-7 visit to Japan.  (ECON: 
David DiGiovanna) 
 
 
15.  (SBU) FSA Sanctions 10 Non-Life Insurers 
------------------------------ 
 
The Financial Services Agency ordered business suspensions for 
six Japanese non-life insurers on March 14 for failure to pay 
legitimate "third sector" insurance claims, mostly on medical 
policies.  Another four were prohibited from developing new 
"third sector" products for three months. 
 
Four firms, including American Home and AIU, received business 
improvement orders, which are less serious. 
 
An industry contact called this the latest round in a series of 
inspections the FSA has been doing over the past two years, as 
well as an example of the kind of increased FSA activity the ACCJ 
noted in its 2006 White Paper.   (ECON: Marc Dillard) 
 
16.  (SBU) Former Livedoor Chairman Horie Sentenced to 2 1/2 
Years in Prison 
--------------- 
 
The Tokyo District Court on March 16 sentenced Livedoor Group 
Founder Takefumi Horie to two and half years in prison for 
securities law violations. 
 
A member of a new breed of "American-style" Japanese financiers 
who flouted convention in both his business and personal life and 
sought to empower Japanese shareholders vis-a-vis corporate 
management, Horie has become the symbol of change in Japan's 
traditionally sedate and opaque financial circles, and some say 
this was the reason for his prosecution. 
 
Japanese media have portrayed Horie's conviction as sign of a new 
willingness by Japan's prosecutors and courts to crack down on 
suspected fraud and manipulation in the country's financial 
markets.  (ECON: Chris Wurzel) 
 
17.  (SBU) Cabinet Endorses 3 Labor Bills for Diet Submission 
------------------------------ 
 
The cabinet adopted three labor bills on March 13 for submission 
to the Diet.  The three bills would raise the minimum wage, 
increase the pay rate for overtime work, and require employers to 
obtain consent from employees when amending work rules.  Although 
the bills were endorsed, it is not clear the Diet will have time 
during its regular session to consider them. 
 
Media reports have generally focused on the bill to increase the 
overtime rate from 125 percent to 150 percent.  The 150 percent 
provision, however, would only apply to overtime in excess of 80 
hours per month, thus limiting its impact.   (ECON: Marc Dillard) 
 
18.  (U) KIX Misses Target for Public Fund Use in Second Runway 
Construction (Revised from newsletter edition) 
--------------------------------------------- - 
 
Kansai International Airport (KIX) is admitting it is behind in 
meeting the GOJ preconditions set for using public funds to 
construct its second runway, due to open this summer.  Kansai 
International Airport Company (KIAC) President Atsushi Murayama 
commented to Kyoto Shimbun that the airport still has not been 
able to increase flights to the target level of 130,000/year set 
by MLIT in 2006, missing by about 15,000 flights.  Although cargo 
flights are on the rise, last yearQs high oil prices and the loss 
of several U.S. routes are blamed for the shortfall.  The 
shortfall will not affect GOJ funding for the runway but airport 
officials are eager to meet the deadline for FY 2007 with KIXQs 
increased capacity, so that central government funding in 2007 is 
not jeopardized. 
 
Murayama said the launch of Kobe Airport (UKB) in February 2006 
did not adversely affect business at KIX.  He called on cities 
in western Japan to come together as Qone KansaiQ to promote use 
of KIX within the region.   (Osaka-Kobe:  Phil Cummings/Naomi 
Shibui) 
 
TOKYO 00001202  007 OF 008 
 
 
 
 
19.  (U) 2005 Abolishment of MFA had No Affect on Japanese Market 
------------------------------ 
 
We attended a seminar entitled "Asia's Clothing Industry at a 
Crossroads Amid Intensified Global Competition" hosted by the 
Institute of Developing Economies (IDE) and the Japan External 
Trade organization (JETRO) in Tokyo on March 13. 
 
Tatsufumi Yamagata, Director of Development Strategies Studies 
Group, Development Studies Center, IDE-JETRO spoke about the "The 
Prospects of Development of the Garment Industry in Developing 
Countries: What Has Happened Since the MFA Phase Out?" and 
concluded that: 
 
--The Japanese market has been kept almost intact from the impact 
of the regime shift; 
 
--After the renewal of quantitative restrictions on Chinese 
garment exports was agreed to with the United States and the EU, 
a post-MFA surge in Chinese garment exports was significantly 
attenuated; 
 
--Instead, the growth in garment exports from other Asian low 
income countries to the two markets revived in 2006; 
 
--Some developing countries, such as Bangladesh and Cambodia, not 
only survived the liberalization but also have steadily expanded 
their garment exports throughout the transition; and 
 
--The profitability of the garment industry in Bangladesh and 
Cambodia was high on average according to the surveys conducted 
by IDE in 2003, which might have bolstered the steady growth of 
the garment exports in the past, and possibly will help future 
growth, too. (ECON: Junko Nagahama) 
 
20.  (SBU) Osaka: Asia's First CO2 Emission Trading Market? 
------------------------------ 
 
Kansai Economic Federation (Kankeiren) is rushing to launch CO2 
emissions trading in Osaka, which would be the first such market 
in Asia. 
 
The Osaka Securities Exchange and MOF Kinki Bureau have been 
working with Kankeiren to get the CO2 Emission Trading Market off 
the ground. 
 
The Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) and Chuo 
Mitsui Trust Banking and Company will be testing a similar market 
mechanism in Tokyo in June, prompting the Osaka group to try to 
push forward the launch of their exchange. 
 
A federation manager said that Chairman Akiyama wants the Kansai, 
where the Kyoto Protocol was negotiated, to be the home of Asia's 
first emissions market. 
 
In order to push up the start date, a "floor-broker" style market 
will be attempted before the group can set up a large-scale 
trading system at the OSE.  (Osaka-Kobe:  Phil Cummings/Naomi 
Shibui) 
 
21.  (U) Northern Japan: Iwate Governor Says Decentralization is 
Important for Area's Development 
------------------------------ 
 
On March 10, Sapporo's economic assistant attended a symposium 
hosted by the Hokkaido Prefectural Government on doshusei 
decentralization measures proposed by the Abe Administration. 
The necessity of doshusei is a popular campaign topic in Hokkaido 
as the gubernatorial elections in April approach.  Iwate 
Prefecture's Governor Hiroya Masuda (DPJ), who is well known 
supporter of decentralization, delivered the keynote address on 
the topic to a packed room of 400 people. 
 
Masuda argued strongly in favor of doshusei, emphasizing that the 
decentralization measures are an important tool for encouraging 
economic development across northern Japan. He explained that 
more autonomy is necessary because the disparities between local 
situations in each prefecture are too large to continue to be 
 
TOKYO 00001202  008 OF 008 
 
 
governed by one set of general rules imposed by the central 
government.  At the same time, Masuda called for neighboring 
prefectures, even as they develop individual rules, to make 
better use of limited resources by collaborating on projects of 
joint interest such as regional tourism campaigns. 
 
Hokkaido Governor Harumi Takahashi (LDP), reiterated her own 
support for doshusei in her closing remarks. She stated that 
decentralization alone will not magically turn around Hokkaido's 
economy, but agreed it could be a helpful tool if used properly. 
(Sapporo: Ian Hillman/Yumi Baba) 
 
22.  (SBU) Nagoya:  Dango Didn't End in Nagoya Despite General 
Contractors' Public Pledges 
--------------------------- 
 
Five senior staff members of general contractors alleged to be 
involved in dango (bid-rigging) for Nagoya City's subway line 
construction projects were arrested on February 28, marking the 
first time such contractors' employees have been arrested on 
suspicion of violating the January 2006-version Antimonopoly Law. 
In December 2005, those construction companies, including the so- 
called "super general contractors" -- Obayashi, Shimizu and Kajima 
-- allegedly engaged in bid-rigging to divvy up main contractor 
responsibilities for sections of Nagoya City's subway extension 
projects.  Immediately thereafter, four major general contractors 
officially renounced bid-rigging practices. 
 
Prosecutors say they continued bid-rigging schemes"quietly" on 
the business portions they had agreed to prior to their public 
pledge to give up dango. A former advisor of Obayashi's Nagoya 
Branch, referred to as the "Don", reportedly acted as the 
coordinator of the schemes. 
 
Japan's Fair Trade Commission filed a criminal complaint against 
the contractors under the antitrust law, which is the first case 
in Japan. 
 
Hazama, another general contractor that was involved in the case, 
escaped prosecution after it confessed its involvement.  (Nagoya: 
Tamiki Mizuno) 
 
23.  (U) A Young New President at Sharp 
------------------------------ 
 
Sharp Corporation, Japan's top LCD flat TV maker, announced that 
its new president would be the youngish 49-year old Mikio 
Katayama. 
 
The current president, Katsuhiko Machida, has served for nine 
years.  Machida will move to the chairmanship, a position that 
has gone unfilled for 21 years. 
 
President Machida oversaw Sharp race to the top of the flat TV 
market in Japan, with more than 50 percent of the domestic market. 
 
Sharp is still weak internationally, however, with only 20 
percent global market share. 
 
Katayama is said to be an expert in the LCD business and is 
expected to target international growth. 
 
One Sharp manager in the Business Strategy Group for North 
America, commented to Pol/Econ staff that it is now important for 
Sharp's new president to get a return on its large scale capital 
investment in liquid crystal panel plants and to create a new 
business strategy not totally dependent on the flat screen TV 
business.  (Osaka-Kobe:  Phil Cummings/Naomi Shibui)