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Viewing cable 06TOKYO430, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 01/26/06

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06TOKYO430 2006-01-26 09:04 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO2642
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #0430/01 0260904
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 260904Z JAN 06
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 7839
INFO RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/USDOJ WASHDC PRIORITY
RULSDMK/USDOT WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC//J5//
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMHBA/COMPACFLT PEARL HARBOR HI
RHMFIUU/HQ PACAF HICKAM AFB HI//CC/PA//
RHMFIUU/COMUSJAPAN YOKOTA AB JA//J5/JO21//
RUYNAAC/COMNAVFORJAPAN YOKOSUKA JA
RUAYJAA/COMPATWING ONE KAMI SEYA JA
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 6867
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 4212
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 7265
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 4322
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 5426
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 0201
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 6385
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 8529
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 TOKYO 000430 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR E, P, EB, EAP/J, EAP/P, EAP/PD, PA 
WHITE HOUSE/NSC/NEC; JUSTICE FOR STU CHEMTOB IN ANTI-TRUST 
DIVISION; TREASURY/OASIA/IMI/JAPAN; DEPT PASS USTR/PUBLIC AFFAIRS 
OFFICE; SECDEF FOR JCS-J-5/JAPAN, 
DASD/ISA/EAPR/JAPAN; DEPT PASS ELECTRONICALLY TO USDA 
FAS/ITP FOR SCHROETER; PACOM HONOLULU FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY 
ADVISOR; CINCPAC FLT/PA/ COMNAVFORJAPAN/PA. 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OIIP KMDR KPAO PGOV PINR ECON ELAB JA
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 01/26/06 
 
 
INDEX: 
 
(1)  Second ban on US beef imports (Part 1): How effective is 
Japan's quarantine inspection system at the border? Impossible to 
open all cartons for inspection; Only 10 officers on "around-the- 
clock" duty at Narita Airport; Another concern is avian flu; 
Standard inspection rate is 0.5 PERCENT ; 31 PERCENT  inspection 
finds spinal columns 
 
(2)  Second ban on US beef imports (Part 2): Inclusion of high- 
risk materials in shipment reflects tendency of US to make light 
of Japan; There could not have been a blunder like this if the 
shipment were EU-bound; US making humble apology, but may really 
think that Japan is over-reacting 
 
(3)  Zoellick's "stakeholder" advocacy kicks off pros, cons in 
China 
 
(4)  JDA intends to consolidate DFAA and include the 
consolidation cost in fiscal 2006 budget request; aims to upgrade 
itself to ministry 
 
(5)  LDP presidential race in 2006: Truce in the "post-Koizumi" 
successor debate 
 
(6)  Focus in ODA-reform debate on future options for 
implementing bodies, including fate of JBIC 
 
(7)  LDP fiscal reform panel switches away from tax-hike policy 
 
ARTICLES: 
 
(1)  Second ban on US beef imports (Part 1): How effective is 
Japan's quarantine inspection system at the border? Impossible to 
open all cartons for inspection; Only 10 officers on "around-the- 
clock" duty at Narita Airport; Another concern is avian flu; 
Standard inspection rate is 0.5 PERCENT ; 31 PERCENT  inspection 
finds spinal columns 
 
TOKYO SHIMBUN (Page 26) (Slightly abridged) 
January 26, 2006 
 
Thoroughgoing safety measures were supposed to have been adopted 
when the ban on US beef imports was removed last December. Tokyo 
and Washington pledged to carry out strict inspections to make 
sure high-risk mad-cow disease materials (specified risk 
materials = SRM) are removed from Japan-bound products. The 
recent finding of three pieces of meat with SRMs at Narita 
Airport has shocked related sources. The second ban was then 
placed on US beef imports. The inspection failure on the US side 
is making headlines, but what about the safety wall on the 
Japanese border? 
 
An executive of a certain well-established foreign trading house, 
an importer of the US beef products that contained the spinal 
columns found this time, yesterday said in bewilderment, "The 
incident was a bolt out of the blue." The company had never 
imported US beef before the ban was placed on imports. He said 
the company had imported US beef for the first time on a trial 
basis. He stressed: "We have never imported US beef before. This 
is the first time we have imported it. Then, meat with SRM was 
found in our shipments. We have reported the matter to the 
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF). MAFF has 
 
TOKYO 00000430  002 OF 009 
 
 
judged that there is no fault on our part." 
 
MAFF's Animal Quarantine Narita Office at Narita Airport found 
the backbones in question. An official in charge there explained: 
"There are about 70 officials here, of whom only 10 are in charge 
of carrying out quarantine inspections on imported stock farm 
products, such as meat and bones. These officials have to handle 
cargoes arriving at the airport one after another on an around- 
the-clock basis." 
 
To a question about commonly adopted quarantine procedures for 
imported meat, the same official noted: "We are not carrying out 
inspections at random. We pick one carton from a set of cartons 
containing the same products, such as, for instance, one from a 
set of ham cartons or one from a set of loin roll cartons. We 
cannot reveal details for security reasons." 
 
Regarding Japan's quarantine system, this source revealed his 
complex feelings, noting: "We found that material through a 
routine inspection. But when it comes to a question of whether 
the system we adopt here is sufficient or not, it is hard to say 
yes or no." 
 
The animal products inspection guidelines issued by the animal 
quarantine office lay down that inspection on imported goods 
should be carried out, by drawing a sample equivalent to 0.5 
PERCENT  of the entire shipment at random. The MAFF Animal Health 
Division explained that the figure 0.5 was set, based on the 
ministry's long-standing experience in inspecting animal 
products." 
 
MAFF has, however, set inspection guidelines especially for US 
beef to be imported, following the removal of the import ban. 
Under the guidelines, one from a set of cartons containing the 
same product should be inspected. Regarding the cartons this time 
from which the materials in question were found, since 13 kinds 
of parts were packed in 41 cartons, quarantine officials intended 
to open 13 cartons. In this case, the inspection rate becomes 31 
PERCENT . 
 
Eight hundred cartons at most in one container 
 
An official at the Animal Quarantine Yokohama Head Office 
(Yokohama) observed: "Few importers purchase a single part in 
bulk as was case before the import ban. Most traders import 
various parts in small quantities. They appear to be trying to 
find out which part sells best in Japan. I am sure we open 
cartons at a ratio of more than 0.5 PERCENT ." 
 
US beef that passed quarantine inspections by the animal 
quarantine office then undergoes inspections at various 
quarantine points of the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare 
(MHLW). The inspection rate at this stage is 12 out of less than 
50 and 32 out of more than 51. 
 
Even so, since the quarantine system at the airport adopts a spot- 
checking system, there is the possibility of inspections 
overlooking products including SRM. In order to make sure that 
imported beef is completely safe, all cartons containing US beef 
have to be checked. 
 
Vice MAFF Minister Mamoru Ishihara told reporters that it was 
impossible to carry out blanket inspection. However, he noted: 
 
TOKYO 00000430  003 OF 009 
 
 
"We must see whether there is any way to improve the current 
inspection system." 
 
The same official of the Animal Health Division noted: "For 
instance, one vessel carries hundreds of containers, and one 
container can hold about 800 cartons at the most. There is no 
space to open all cartons. Think calmly, a blanket inspection is 
impossible." 
 
He continued: "Inspecting US beef is not the only job we carry 
out. There are many other key duties, such as quarantine 
inspections to prevent avian flu infection. We are already 
tremendously busy." 
 
(2)  Second ban on US beef imports (Part 2): Inclusion of high- 
risk materials in shipment reflects tendency of US to make light 
of Japan; There could not have been a blunder like this if the 
shipment were EU-bound; US making humble apology, but may really 
think that Japan is over-reacting 
 
TOKYO SHIMBUN (Page 27) (Slightly abridged) 
January 26, 2006 
 
Both the US government and meat industry association have humbly 
apologized for the inclusion of specified risk material (SRM) in 
a Japan-bound US beef shipment. 
 
The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) yesterday held a meeting 
of about 40 meatpackers throughout the nation and discussed ways 
to prevent a recurrence. The meat industry then offered a 
complete apology: "This incident was a serious blunder committed 
by the entire industry. There is no excuse for it." Agriculture 
Secretary Mike Johanns pointed out that the meatpacker and 
 
SIPDIS 
inspector who overlooked the inclusion of the materials in 
question did not have much time to learn export conditions for 
Japan-bound shipment. He repeatedly urged them to comply with 
those conditions. 
 
The Tokyo office of the US Meat Export Federation consisting of 
beef producers and exporters stressed that the case this time was 
special, saying: "The industry has made efforts to resume beef 
trade with Japan for the past two years. It was an unusually 
elementary mistake that the persons involved were not aware of 
conditions for Japan-bound exports. We never imagined an incident 
like this could happen." 
 
In an effort to prevent a recurrence, Washington has released a 
set of emergency measures, including the dispatch of a team of 
inspectors to Japan and carrying out surprise inspections. It is 
frantic about reinstating imports to Japan at an early date. 
 
However, some concerned sources voiced their true feeling that 
Japan is "over-reacting to the incident." Asked to deliver a 
message to Japanese housewives, Agriculture Under Secretary J.B. 
Penn, who visited Japan for a bilateral working-level meeting to 
discuss this issue, told reporters during a press conference on 
Jan. 24: "The chance of being hit by a car when driving to a 
supermarket (to buy beef) is greater than being harmed by eating 
beef." 
 
The spinal columns discovered this time were identifiable with 
the naked eye. Akira Miyazaki, director (for livestock science) 
of the University of the Air Kyoto Study Center, an expert on 
 
TOKYO 00000430  004 OF 009 
 
 
beef production in the US, pointed out: "The inspection on the US 
side was sloppy, probably because they was the underlying 
perception among persons involved that consumers in the US all 
eat American beef, and so, there should be no problem." Miyazaki 
took a harsh view: "The hygienic level of US meatpackers is 
pretty high. If the EU had asked similar export conditions, they 
would not have made such a blunder. They may be making light of 
the Japanese and Asian markets. As long as US companies insist 
that it was a minor mistake made by a tiny company, then we 
cannot hope for improvement in the situation. It is necessary to 
have the US side fully understand the wishes of Japanese 
consumers." 
 
"Dispatch inspectors to all US meatpackers" 
 
Miyazaki then urged the Japanese government to make efforts to 
urge the US side to reform its consciousness: "MAFF and MHLW 
should dispatch inspectors to all of 40 American meatpackers that 
are authorized to export beef to Japan in order to provide a 
guidance on export conditions. Otherwise, it would be impossible 
to have people at the low end of the industry understand export 
conditions. 
 
Shinichi Fukuoka, professor of chemical biology at Aoyama Gakuin 
University, is concerned: "Unless the government again refers the 
matter to the Food Safety Commission and take a second look at 
the overall system, similar cases might occur." He underscored: 
"In reality, it is difficult to remove all SRM. Since Japan is 
actually continuing a blanket cattle inspection, it would be 
logical to seek a similar measure from the US." 
 
Commenting on Japan's quarantine system, he said: "It would be 
difficult to improve the situation with ad hoc measures, such as 
an increase in the number of inspectors. If the US refuses to 
implement drastic measures, such as a blanket inspection, Japan 
should open all cartons containing US beef and inspect them." 
 
A responsible officer at Yoshinoya D&C, a beef bowl restaurant 
chain, which is again suffering a heavy blow from the second ban 
on US beef imports only a month after the resumption, lamented: 
"We are so disappointed, as the moment we have taken a step 
forward, imports have been halted. We want the government to tell 
us what actually happened and what the problem is." 
 
(3)  Zoellick's "stakeholder" advocacy kicks off pros, cons in 
China 
 
SANKEI (Page 3) (Full) 
January 26, 2006 
 
Beijing, Tadashi Ito 
 
US Deputy Secretary of State Zoellick yesterday ended his three- 
day visit to China. Zoellick talked with Chinese leaders not only 
on trade and other bilateral issues but also on international 
issues ranging from the nuclear programs of North Korea and Iran 
to Japan-China relations. Zoellick seems to have asked for 
China's responsible action with his advocacy of "stakeholder" as 
a keyword. (TN: The Sankei Shimbun translates this word into 
"?????" or "rigai kyoyusha" or "one who shares interests.) In 
China, there is a mood for welcoming his overtures or the United 
States' strategy toward China connoted in that keyword. However, 
there is also a deep-seated wariness of his advocacy. Arguments 
 
TOKYO 00000430  005 OF 009 
 
 
will likely continue. 
 
On Sept. 21 last year, Zoellick used the word "stakeholder" for 
the first time in his speech delivered in New York. He reiterated 
this word seven times in that speech. The US Department of State 
rendered the word into "????????" ("rieki sokanteki sanyosha" in 
Japanese, which can be literally reversed into "reciprocal 
participant in benefits"). In China, however, it was translated 
in various ways, such as "????" in the meaning of "joint 
stockholder." In the end, "?????" or "reciprocal beneficiary" 
came to stay. 
 
China has been growing rapidly and is becoming more influential. 
Zoellick admitted China as a partner and called on China to 
become a "responsible stakeholder." This was noted in China 
because it was apparently different from US Defense Secretary 
Rumsfeld's earlier speech in Singapore and the Defense 
Department's recent report that regarded China as a threat. 
 
In early August last year, prior to that speech, Zoellick visited 
China and attended the first round of US-China strategic 
dialogues held in Beijing. In his press remarks there after the 
talks, he underscored the necessity of partnership with China. In 
the speech, however, he emphasized that the United States and 
China would have to work together against various challenges, 
such as terrorism, Islamic radicals, WMD proliferation, poverty, 
and diseases. 
 
In December last year, the US and Chinese governments held their 
second round of strategic dialogues in Washington. On that 
occasion, officials from the two governments held discussions 
over Zoellick's stakeholder advocacy. According to a diplomatic 
source, one of those representing China at the talks, Vice 
Foreign Minister Dai Bing Guo, developed his argument about 
China's theory of peace and development. The Chinese vice 
minister also took the position that China basically would agree 
to build a constructive relationship with the United States but 
was not coincident with the United States on everything, the 
source said. 
 
That argument is seen as reflecting a threat among some people in 
China. In other words, that is affected by the standpoint of 
conservatives asserting that Zoellick's theory is a rehash of the 
United States' engagement policy toward China in the 1990s that 
was intended to have China comply with the United States under 
their different political structures and values. 
 
There are also deep-seated hardline arguments, particularly in 
the Chinese military, against the backdrop of strategic divisive 
factors between the United States and China, such as Taiwan, 
Japanese and US security strategies, energies, and the nuclear 
programs of North Korea and Iran. Some note inconsistency between 
Zoellick's policy course and hardline arguments against China. 
According to a diplomatic source, however, the Chinese 
government's mainstream welcomes Zoellick's policy course and its 
officials concerned are now studying it. 
 
Prior to Zoellick's China trip this time, the US State Department 
clarified that his stakeholder advocacy represents the US 
government. Washington needs to talk with Beijing over a number 
of immediate challenges such as North Korea and Iran. Moreover, 
observers presume that Washington aims to establish a long-term 
bilateral cooperative structure between the United States and 
 
TOKYO 00000430  006 OF 009 
 
 
China on the occasion of Chinese President Hu Jintao's US visit 
this April. 
 
That is why, a diplomatic source notes, Zoellick urged Beijing to 
improve its soured relations with Tokyo when he met with his 
Chinese counterparts, including Premier Wen Jiabao, on Jan. 24. 
The United States' relationship with Japan is vital for its Asia 
strategy, and the present state of Japan-China relations could 
become an obstacle when the United States tries to push for close 
ties with China. 
 
In connection with Zoellick's policy course, some in China are 
insisting that China should not only fulfill its international 
responsibility but also push ahead with political reforms and 
democratization. In China, however, there are also antireformers. 
Sources deem it difficult for Hu and his government to turn China 
into a stakeholder with the United States, judging from the way 
things are going between Japan and China, for instance. 
 
(4)  JDA intends to consolidate DFAA and include the 
consolidation cost in fiscal 2006 budget request; aims to upgrade 
itself to ministry 
 
MAINICHI (Page 1) (Full) 
Evening, January 26, 2006 
 
By Yozai Furumoto 
 
The Defense Agency (JDA) today decided to consolidate the Defense 
Facilities Administration Agency (DFAA). It intends to include 
the reorganization cost in its fiscal 2007 budget request. A 
prevailing plan is to set up a defense facilities headquarters or 
a defense facilities bureau in JDA. 
 
DFAA is an external agency of JDA that is tasked with the 
construction of facilities for the Self-Defense Forces and the US 
forces in Japan, as well as facilities management. But the DFAA 
personnel are hired in principle separately from the JDA; as a 
result, they have been criticized as lacking the awareness of 
implementing defense policy, a JDA senior official said. In the 
talks on the realignment of the US forces in Japan, while the JDA 
has aimed at reviewing security policy, DFAA has given priority 
to the wishes of base-hosting local governments, exposing a 
difference of views. 
 
At the plenary session yesterday of the House of Councilors, 
Shozo Kusakawa of the New Komeito referred to the issue of 
whether to upgrade the status of JDA to a ministry and pointed 
out: "I would say one idea is that it is necessary to undergo a 
big change like JDA absorbing DFAA." Some in JDA also want to 
gain the momentum for upgrading it by emphasizing that efficiency 
would improve with consolidation. 
 
The number of personnel working at DFAA headquarters totals 600 
or so. Including personnel working at eight branch offices, the 
total number reaches some 3,100. 
 
(5)  LDP presidential race in 2006: Truce in the "post-Koizumi" 
successor debate 
 
ASAHI (Page 4) (Slightly abridged) 
January 26, 2006 
 
 
TOKYO 00000430  007 OF 009 
 
 
The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) is moving toward calling a 
truce in the fierce debate over who should succeed Junichiro 
Koizumi as president of the party. With the opposition camp 
stepping up its attack on the LDP in Diet debate on the Livedoor 
scandal, the LDP appears to have judged that elements that would 
lead to internal discord must be avoided. For the presidential 
hopefuls -- except for Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe -- and 
their factions the main aim has been to stop the trend favoring 
Abe as Koizumi's successor. 
 
Prime Minister Koizumi dined with senior ruling coalition members 
at his official residence on the evening of Jan. 24. Mikio Aoki, 
chairman of the House of Councillors LDP caucus, told him: 
 
"It's better for the prime minister not to talk about the 
presidential race. If you and (former Prime Minister Yoshiro) 
Mori make a decision, the general direction for the presidency 
will be set." 
 
Koizumi reportedly responded: "Well, I haven't said anything, but 
everyone is saying all sorts of things connecting to the 
presidential election." 
 
Aoki, who heads the LDP caucus in the Upper House, thinks that 
candidates should be chosen after the ongoing regular Diet 
session is over, after gauging the circumstances in the party. 
Aoki, therefore, seems to have urged Koizumi to take a calm 
response. Koizumi has been in keen competition with Mori over the 
requirements for his successor. 
 
In a speech last December, Mori suggested that Abe should refrain 
from running in the next presidential race. In response to those 
remarks, Koizumi stated, "(Abe) should not flee from trouble and 
stay in the race." He then stated that an LDP president who is 
capable of winning elections would be one condition for his 
successor. Mori then rebutted, "A president capable of winning 
elections is meaningless." 
 
Mori heads the LDP's largest faction, to which Koizumi used to 
belong. Koizumi has influence on the 82 new LDP Lower House 
members, who are called "Koizumi children." If a rift becomes 
obvious in the Koizumi government, the opposition might have a 
chance to hurt the LDP by attacking it on the Livedoor scandal. 
 
Mori stated in a general meeting on Jan. 19 of his faction, "I 
may ask you to leave the faction if you announce your support for 
someone on your own decision." The Mori faction has two possible 
presidential candidates: Abe and former Chief Cabinet Secretary 
Yasuo Fukuda. Such a split in the Mori faction is just what other 
factions in the LDP need. 
 
The Shimazu faction has refrained from overt action, with one 
former cabinet member saying, "We will judge a response to the 
presidential race while closing watching the trend of the Diet." 
A senior Nikai faction member commented, "The moves are too rapid 
compared with past races." 
 
Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Jiro Kawasaki, a senior 
Tanigaki faction member, said, "(Other factions) proposed an 
armistice until around April (when the Diet approves a budget for 
fiscal 2006)." As it stands, a mood for a temporary cease fire is 
growing in the party. 
 
 
TOKYO 00000430  008 OF 009 
 
 
(6)  Focus in ODA-reform debate on future options for 
implementing bodies, including fate of JBIC 
 
NIHON KEIZAI (Page 2) (Full) 
January 26, 2006 
 
The government's Study Group on Overseas Economic Cooperation 
(chaired by former Attorney General Akio Harada) decided in its 
meeting yesterday to set up a cabinet-level committee tasked with 
mapping out an official development assistance (ODA) strategy and 
then started discussing future options for implementing agencies, 
such as the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC). Many 
lawmakers from the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) are calling for 
splitting the JBIC into a section responsible for yen loans and 
another for international financing, but the Finance Ministry and 
business leaders insist that the bank should be kept in place. 
The panel is scheduled to finalize a report of recommendations in 
late February. Prior to this, haggling between both sides is 
likely to heat up. 
 
In a meeting held by the LDP taskforce on overseas economic 
cooperation at party headquarters the same day, JBIC Governor 
Kyosuke Shinozawa, who was invited for a hearing of views, 
reiterated the need of preserving the JBIC, saying: "Should a 
solo body offer both yen loans and international financial 
services, their operational efficiency will be improved." 
Taskforce Chairman Tatsuya Ito, assistant to the Policy Research 
Council chairman, promptly refuted it: "We will conduct 
discussion on the premise of splitting off the JBIC." 
 
Many LDP officials are calling for disbanding the JBIC, based on 
the judgment that "the yen loan program, which is aimed at 
providing development aid for developing countries, and 
international financing, which is intended to help Japanese 
businesses promote economic activities overseas, are different in 
nature." Many believe that if the yen-loan section separated from 
the JBIC and the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) 
are integrated, Japan will be able to carry out a more effective 
ODA program. 
 
Besides the JBIC, the Finance Ministry and business circles have 
insisted on preserving the JBIC. Japan Foreign Trade Council 
Chairman Mikio Sasaki said in a meeting of the government's study 
group: "It will be convenient for our trade partners to have a 
sole provider of ODA loans. We also want its internationally high 
profile to be preserved." Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki and 
Nippon Keidanren (Japan Business Federation) Chairman Hiroshi 
Okuda shared a negative view about the plan to dissolve the JBCI 
when they held a meeting in Tokyo. 
 
The study group, set up under Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe, 
will soon engage in last-minute talks on Feb. 13 on future 
options for ODA implementation organizations. In an effort to 
remove the adverse effect of the current system in which 13 
government ministries and agencies have been involved in ODA 
policy planning, the government panel is now in accord on setting 
up a cabinet ministers' council. When it comes to ODA 
implementing organs, however, there are others who are even more 
interested. Abe's ability to coordinate views will be put to the 
test. 
 
(7)  LDP fiscal reform panel switches away from tax-hike policy 
 
 
TOKYO 00000430  009 OF 009 
 
 
MAINICHI (Page 2) (Full) 
January 26, 2006 
 
The "Project Team to Overcome Deflation and Attain Economic 
Growth" set up by the Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) Financial 
Reform Study Group held its first meeting at party headquarters 
yesterday. In its interim report released last October, the study 
group came up with the policy of hiking the consumption tax rate. 
At that time, its chairman was Kaoru Yosano, who advocates 
reconstructing the nation's financial system. Following the 
reshuffle of the Cabinet and party executive officers, however, 
State Minister in charge of Economic and Fiscal Policy Yosano was 
replaced with Policy Research Council Chairman Hidenao Nakagawa, 
who has cautioned against giving priority to tax hikes over other 
measures. In its final report due out in May, the study group is 
expected to turn around and to propose minimizing the margin of 
tax increase by achieving higher economic growth rates. 
 
In yesterday's meeting, Nakagawa stressed the need to break away 
from deflation at an early date in order to minimize the margin 
of consumption tax hike. He said: "Overcoming deflation has been 
a challenge since the Koizumi administration was inaugurated, but 
no settlement has been reached yet. The purpose (of the project 
team) is to minimize the scale of tax hike." 
 
The project team was set up at the proposal of Nakagawa. Nakagawa 
calls for giving priority to reforms, like spending cuts and 
putting an end to deflation, over tax increases. Based on this 
policy, he aims to curb the margin of tax hike by streamlining 
central government agencies and achieving higher economic growth 
rates. Under the lead of Nakagawa, the project team's policy 
direction has completely shifted from the Yosano line of 
designating the consumption tax as a welfare tax and raising the 
tax rate to a 10 PERCENT  level. 
 
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has clearly said: "I will not 
raise the tax rate while I am in office." But whether to hike the 
rate will undoubtedly be one of the most controversial issues in 
the upcoming LDP presidential election. Chief Cabinet Secretary, 
who is regarded as the most likely potential candidate to succeed 
Koizumi, insists that priority should be given to administrative 
and fiscal reform plans in echoing Nakagawa and Internal Affairs 
and Communications Minister Heizo Takenaka. Meanwhile, Finance 
Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki, who has also expressed a desire to 
run in the election, aims to submit a bill in 2007 to raise the 
consumption tax. 
 
Financial reconstruction will reach a crucial point in June, when 
the government presents a report containing policy options and a 
timetable for reforming expenditures and revenues in a package. 
The proposed package reforms have been discussed mainly at the 
Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy led by Yosano. This panel, 
in contrast to the Financial Reform Study Group, has become an 
arena for Yosano and Tanigaki to try to set the timing for tax 
hikes. In the spring and later, the issue of whether to hike the 
consumption tax is likely to take center stage in discussions in 
the government and the LDP, with an eye on the LDP presidential 
election. 
 
SCHIEFFER