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Viewing cable 06TOKYO1744, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 03/31/06

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06TOKYO1744 2006-04-01 11:57 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO9499
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #1744/01 0911157
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 011157Z APR 06
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0412
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 8081
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 5446
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 8605
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 5453
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 6632
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 1456
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 7635
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 9576
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 TOKYO 001744 
 
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 03/31/06 
Part-1 
INDEX: 
 
 
(1) Minshuto executives resign; Nagata quits his Diet seat 
 
(2)  Moriya unhappy with Nago City 
 
(3)  Nature Conservation Society asks for revision of coastal 
plan for Futenma relocation: "Could have an impact on the 
ecosystem" 
 
(4)  Nukaga refuses Nago proposal on Futenma relocation 
 
(5)  2006 LDP presidential race (Part 1): Shinzo Abe attaches 
importance to Constitution and education for rebuilding 
conservative visions 
 
(6)  Editorial: Muraoka acquitted: Hashimoto's turn to testify 
before Diet 
 
(7)  Policy debates start in divided Japan (Part 2): LDP fears 
fallout from society of disparity 
 
ARTICLES: 
 
(1) Minshuto executives resign; Nagata quits his Diet seat 
 
ASAHI (Internet edition) (Abridged) 
March 31, 2006 
 
Minshuto (Democratic Party of Japan) President Seiji Maehara 
informed the party leadership today of his intention to resign 
his post to take responsibility for the turmoil created by a fake 
e-mail message produced by Lower House lawmaker Hisayasu Nagata 
(who is now suspended from the party). He hoped to draw a close 
to the issue by resigning himself, since the e-mail issue has 
become prolonged, and the party cannot stop the losses of public 
support in the polls.  Other party executives, including 
Secretary General Yukio Hatoyama, will also resign their posts. 
 
SIPDIS 
The party this afternoon will announce the results of its 
investigation into the e-mail issue. 
 
In addition, since a chorus of voices in the party has been 
calling for Nagata to quit his Diet seat, Secretary General 
Hatoyama reported in a party officials' meeting this afternoon 
that "Nagata will resign from the Diet." 
 
At the party officials' meeting, it was decided that an election 
to choose a successor to Maehara would not be carried out by 
party members but instead, the new party head would be chosen by 
election at a joint meeting of Minshuto lawmakers from both 
houses of the Diet. Regarding the term in office of the successor 
head, the views coming from Diet Affairs Committee Chairman Kozo 
Watanabe and others is to make it an interim appointment until 
September (when Maehara's term in office would have expired). 
 
On the other hand, in the result of the investigation to be 
released by the party later this afternoon, it will be written 
that he had told the party leadership and others that he had 
exaggerated during questioning in the Lower House Budget 
Committee when he acted as if he knew the bank account number 
that had been used to send the money (from Livedoor's Horiemon to 
the son of Liberal Democratic Party Secretary General Takebe). On 
hearing this, Minshuto Secretary General Hatoyama this morning 
 
TOKYO 00001744  002 OF 009 
 
 
met Nagata in Tokyo and asked Nagata to quit the Diet seat on his 
own, but Nagata refused. 
 
Maehara explained to Diet Affairs Chairman Watanabe, "Since we 
cannot get Nagata to resign on his own, I myself will take 
responsibility." 
 
As for a successor, the names of Ichiro Ozawa and Naoto Kan have 
been mentioned as contenders to replace Maehara. 
 
(2)  Moriya unhappy with Nago City 
 
RYUKYU SHIMPO (Page 2) (Full) 
March 31, 2006 
 
(Tokyo)  Administrative Deputy Director for Defense Takemasa 
Moriya at his regular press conference on March 30 openly 
indicated that he was unhappy with Nago City's response that has 
led to a delay in restarting talks between the city and the 
Defense Agency on the relocation of Futenma Air Station to the 
coastal portion of Camp Schwab (coastal plan) as part of the 
realignment of US forces in Japan. He said, "The director general 
would like to be directly contacted by the mayor." It is 
extremely rare for the central government to openly express 
dissatisfaction with a local government. 
 
Deputy Director General Moriya explained: "There was a telephone 
call from a division chief (in the city hall) to one of our 
office workers saying that the mayor wanted to talk with me after 
the official funeral of the late mayor Tateo Kishimoto."  He 
added, "Since the director general (Fukushiro Nukaga) and the 
mayor (Yoshikazu Shimabukuro) are engaging in talks, I think the 
director general would like to receive a call directly from the 
mayor." 
 
In addition, he said, "The last time the two talked, the 
conversation ended with him telling the mayor that he wanted to 
speak to him again as quickly as possible." He stressed that the 
mayor of Nago was supposed to have come on the 29th as promised 
at the meeting on the 26th. 
 
(3)  Nature Conservation Society asks for revision of coastal 
plan for Futenma relocation: "Could have an impact on the 
ecosystem" 
 
RYUKYU SHIMPO 
March 31, 2006 
 
(Tokyo) In connection with the plan to relocate the US Marines' 
Futenma Air Station to the coastal portion of Camp Schwab, Nature 
Conservation Society of Japan (Director Sadahisa Tabata) on March 
30 sent an opinion paper to Foreign Minister Taro Aso and Defense 
Agency Director General Fukushiro Nukaga pointing out the problem 
areas with the coastal plan that "would have a major effect on 
the living creatures in Oura Bay and on the lives of the 
dugongs." The society asked for a revision of the construction of 
an alternate facility toward the waters off Henoko. It also asked 
in its paper that Governor Keiichi Inamina and Nago Mayor 
Yoshikazu Shimabukuro not accept the construction of the current 
plan. 
 
 
TOKYO 00001744  003 OF 009 
 
 
The paper stated: "The shallow waters in front of Camp Schwab is 
a good area for sea weed to grow. If the sea is reclaimed and a 
man-made runway built, we predict the result would be devastating 
for the living creatures in the sea area and the seaweed bed. The 
food eaten by dugongs and sea turtles would be lost, and there 
would be an impact on the entire ecosystem centered on coral." 
 
In addition, the paper urged that neither the SACO plan nor the 
reduced scale plan off of Henoko be built. 
 
(4)  Nukaga refuses Nago proposal on Futenma relocation 
 
RYUKYU SHIMPO (Page 1) (Full) 
March 31, 2006 
 
TOKYO-Defense Agency Director General Fukushiro Nukaga met with 
Kin Town Mayor Tsuyoshi Gibu, Onnason Village Mayor Fumiyasu 
Shikiya, Ginozason Village Mayor Hajime Azuma, and Higashison 
Village Mayor Shigeru Miyagi at the Defense Agency yesterday 
evening. In the meeting, Nukaga asked for their understanding on 
the planned relocation of the US Marine Corps' Futenma Air 
Station to a coastal area of Camp Schwab in the Okinawa 
prefectural city of Nago. Nukaga also told the local chiefs that 
the Defense Agency couldn't accept Nago Mayor Yoshikazu 
Shimabukuro's counterproposal on the Futenma relocation. The 
mayor has called for the agency to avoid setting the flight 
course of US warplanes over his city's shore areas and move down 
the planned facility's tarmac to an offshore area. The municipal 
heads asked the defense chief to talk sincerely with the Nago 
mayor. Ginozason Mayor Higashi asked the agency to avoid setting 
the flight course over his village's communities. 
 
In the meeting, Nukaga conveyed the Defense Agency's basic stance 
to the local authorities. "We can't get a perfect score, so I 
will talk with them sincerely," Nukaga said. 
 
"My village also will be greatly affected," Ginozason Mayor 
Higashi said. "All of my village's communities are opposed to the 
new base, and we don't want US warplanes to fly over our 
communities," Higashi added. "If we settle this problem over 
here, then we will have another problem over there," Nukaga 
answered, adding: "We'd like to have an opportunity for us all to 
talk, and then I'd like to consider." 
 
After the meeting, Nukaga said Nago City would hold a funeral 
service for the late former Nago Mayor Tateo Kishimoto on April 
ΒΆ2. "After that, I hope we can hold talks at an early date with 
Nago Mayor Shimabukuro," Nukaga said. At the same time, Nukaga 
also said he had held talks with the Nago mayor over the 
telephone. The Nago mayor answered he would meet with the defense 
chief at the earliest possible time, Nukaga said. 
 
After the meeting, Mayor Gibu said, "We didn't break off." Gibu 
also said he would let Nago Mayor Shimabukuro know what they 
discussed in the meeting with the defense chief. "We'd like to 
talk about what to do about this matter, and I will ask him to 
continue talks with the government," Gibu added. He hinted that 
he did not definitely oppose the coastal relocation plan in the 
meeting. 
 
(5)  2006 LDP presidential race (Part 1): Shinzo Abe attaches 
 
TOKYO 00001744  004 OF 009 
 
 
importance to Constitution and education for rebuilding 
conservative visions 
 
ASAHI (Page 4) (Abridged slightly) 
March 31, 2006 
 
Since late last year, Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe has been 
recommending the Japanese movie Always Sanchome no Yuhi (Sunset 
on the Third Street) to people around him. The film, a box office 
hit, is an ensemble of various human dramas that unfold in one 
quarter of Tokyo in 1958 when Tokyo Tower was still under 
construction. 
 
In 1958, Abe was 4 and his grandfather Nobusuke Kishi was prime 
minister. Two years later, the US-Japan Security Treaty was 
revised, dividing the country. 
 
Why is Abe drawn to that time period? A hint may lie in Abe's 
"policy speech" posted on the Internet for the virtual LDP 
presidential race conducted in December 1999 by the party's like- 
minded junior members. The speech read: 
 
"In my boyhood, Japan was still poor, and a lot of Japanese 
people craved for catching up with the high living standards of 
the United States, which we saw through television and movies. A 
half-century has passed since the end of the war, and Japan has 
generally achieved that goal. But I am afraid that Japanese 
people have become too self-centered." 
 
When the LDP was launched half a century ago, it had two 
objectives: (1) creating a prosperous Japan, and (2) establishing 
a constitution and a basic education law on its own. Abe 
maintains that the first objective has been achieved but the 
second one has been put on the backburner. He thinks that 
although Japan has grown economically, it has yet to rebuild its 
own visions, including a new constitution. Asked about the 
Livedoor scandal, which exposed the negative side of the Koizumi 
reform drive, Abe said, "We must teach children that there are 
values that are more important than winning or losing." The 
comment reflected Abe's eagerness to revise the Basic Education 
Law. Abe, who learned an "unwavering belief" from Kishi, regards 
a post- Koizumi era as a turning point of postwar conservative 
politics comparable to the Kishi period. 
 
In the book titled Watashi ga Sori ni Nattara (When I Become 
Prime Minister), authored by 29 junior lawmakers and published in 
2002, Abe wrote: "My goal is to make Japan into a country with 
pride - a country with quiet pride in its history and culture." 
 
Two securities 
 
As means to realize a "country with pride," Abe, since his first 
election to the Diet in 1993, has been focusing on two 
securities: national security and social security. Abe, a defense 
policy specialist of the postwar generation, has been calling for 
amending Article 9 of the Constitution to open the door to 
collective self-defense. 
 
His stance toward China has also been persistent. In November 
1998, he attended a meeting of Japanese and Chinese leaders as 
son of the late Shintaro Abe, who served as foreign minister. He 
 
TOKYO 00001744  005 OF 009 
 
 
directly advised President Jiang Zemin: 
 
"It is impossible for all the peoples of Japan and China to have 
the same perception. It is important to consider the friendship 
between the two countries while acknowledging each other's 
differences." 
 
Shortly after winning a Diet seat for the first time, he also 
became a member of the ruling bloc's social security project 
team, followed by deputy director and director of the LDP Social 
Affairs Division, and a director of the Lower House Health and 
Welfare Committee. Tackling such issues as pension, medical, and 
nursing care, he called for greater safety nets. 
 
Shortly after the establishment of the Koizumi administration, 
LDP members with ties to special interests called for cutting 
back on social security spending for fear of curtailment of 
public works projects. Abe, who was serving as deputy chief 
cabinet secretary at the time, vocally objected to the call, 
saying, "Social security concerns every citizen." 
 
Abe does not forget social security when he speaks of the need to 
continue the Koizumi reform drive. Abe delivered a street speech 
in Ishikawa Prefecture on March 12 in which he said, "Without a 
vigorous economy and society, we will not be able to maintain 
society security, which is vital." 
 
Abe also took the initiative in launching a council encouraging 
society to give a second chance to entrepreneurs. The council's 
inaugural meeting took place yesterday at the Prime Minister's 
Official Residence (Kantei), with bureau directors of concerned 
ministries and agencies attending. At the meeting, Abe cited a 
resident of Yamaguchi Constituency No. 4, his home turf, as 
complaining, "Once a company fails, one loses his credibility as 
well, and he cannot rise again." 
 
Abe has been eager to deal with social divide apparently in an 
apparent effort to generate his own policy imprint with the 
reform argument in mind. "I want to build a Japanese society that 
is full of energy and yet is gentle to the people," Abe said in a 
speech in Tokyo in February. Abe intends to pursue both the 
Koizumi-style market mechanism and the relief of the socially 
weak. 
 
Hates hawkish image 
 
Abe has become a national figure owing to his rock-solid, hard- 
line stance in dealing with issues, including the abduction 
issue. But Abe hates being called as a "hawk" by LDP members and 
others in the fields of diplomacy and security. "Labeling people 
is meaningless," Abe said. 
 
Asked about his diplomatic stance March 13, he said before the 
Upper House Budget Committee: "Regrettably, I'm often called a 
hard-liner. But what is important is to maintain friendly 
relations with South Korea and China." 
 
But he remains antagonistic toward "doves." Appearing on 
television in January, Abe said: 
 
"I don't regard myself a hawk in any way. But I think many of 
 
TOKYO 00001744  006 OF 009 
 
 
those who are referred to as doves are content with being called 
that way." 
 
Veteran LDP lawmakers who think Japan needs to revamp its Asia 
policy are trying to zero in on Abe's right-leaning diplomatic 
stance with an eye on the LDP presidential election in September. 
 
How will Abe combine the two security arguments and expand the 
horizon for domestic and foreign policies? The key lies in his 
efforts to present a new national image and win support from 
other LDP members. 
 
(6)  Editorial: Muraoka acquitted: Hashimoto's turn to testify 
before Diet 
 
ASAHI (Page 3) (Full) 
March 31, 2006 
 
Many people might have be disappointed at the Tokyo District 
Court's decision that former Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) 
Secretary General Kanezo Muraoka was acquitted of the charge of 
 
SIPDIS 
having accepted a secret 100 million yen political donation from 
the Japan Dental Association (JDA) in July 2001 that was passed 
to the LDP's faction head, former Prime Minister Ryutaro 
Hashimoto. Muraoka was acting chairman of the faction at the 
time. From the start, the story was full of doubtful elements. 
 
Although Ryutaro Hashimoto, Hiromu Nonaka and Mikio Aoki received 
the 100 million donation from the JDA, received when dining with 
dental association executives, the faction failed to list the 
donation in its annual report on political funds to the 
government. The prosecutors alleged that Muraoka conspired to 
hide the donation. 
 
Hashimoto, Nonaka and Aoki had their indictments suspended, but 
Muraoka, who had retired from the politics after being defeated 
in the election, and the former treasurer of the faction were 
charged with concealing the donation. The question is why only 
Muraoka and the former treasurer were indicted but those 
politicians present on the spot when the 100 million yen check 
was handed over were not. 
 
Even after the scandal's revelation, Hashimoto's explanation that 
he did not remember (whether he received the check or not) 
created growing suspicions about why the other two were alone 
charged. 
 
The thrust of the prosecution's allegation was the testimony by 
the former treasurer that Muraoka had ordered him to hide the 
donation. Muraoka, however, asserted his innocence. 
 
The court determined that the testimony of the former treasurer 
"not reliable" because the treasurer kept changing his statements 
and there were contradictions in his testimony. 
 
The presiding judge explained the reason why he had determined 
that the former treasurer had given false testimony: 
 
"There is the possibility that the 100 million yen donation had 
been handled as the political contribution to former Prime 
Minister Hashimoto. It is just conceivable that the former 
 
TOKYO 00001744  007 OF 009 
 
 
treasurer wanted to prevent the scandal from causing trouble for 
Hashimoto, and to avoid having the faction suffer a great blow." 
 
The judge hinted at Hashimoto's involvement in the scandal. 
 
The judge's explanation is very persuasive for it addresses our 
doubts. 
 
At any rate, there undeniable were problems with the 
investigation carried out by the prosecutors. The Diet should 
take the court ruling as criticism for a lax response. 
 
The opposition parties repeatedly demanded that Hashimoto be 
summoned to testify before the Diet, but such was never realized 
meeting the position by the ruling coalition. 
 
At a session of the House of Representatives Deliberative Council 
on Political Ethics in the fall of year before last, Hashimoto 
stated as if the 100 million yen donation was not his problem, "I 
probably received it, but I don't remember it." 
 
Hashimoto, who served in such an important post, should testify 
openly and squarely in a public forgone as a witness, not before 
the political ethics council, statements in which are not accused 
of perjury and are not opened to the public. 
 
The scandal is one of the reasons why Hashimoto retired last year 
from the political world. However, he is expected to meet in 
Beijing with Chinese President Hu Jintao as leader of a 
delegation of seven groups to promote Japan-China friendship. He 
has continued to have political influence centered on diplomacy. 
 
It is not too late to summon Hashimoto to testify as a witness 
before the Diet. The Diet should do its best to shed light on the 
illegal donation scandal. 
 
(7)  Policy debates start in divided Japan (Part 2): LDP fears 
fallout from society of disparity 
 
ASAHI (Page 1) (Slightly abridged) 
March 30, 2006 
 
Last October, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) held a joint 
meeting of its committees on policy-based financial reform. The 
focus of discussion was on plans to streamline Shoko Chukin Bank 
and Japan Finance Cooperation for Small Business. Koizumi's 
proteges took the lead in the discussion. In the meeting, these 
views were presented: "Reform plans must be implemented;" and 
"the presence of policy finance institutions has pressed the 
management of private firms." 
 
House of Councillors member Yoshifumi Matsumura refuted such 
views in favor of reform. He said: "Reform is necessary, but 
there are some plans that must be thoroughly discussed. The role 
of policy finance institutions is to lend money to those who 
cannot borrow from private banking institutions." 
 
Seeing executives from leading banks or foreign securities firms 
on the boards of policy finance institutions, Matsumura, who once 
chaired the Young Entrepreneurs Group of the Japan Chamber of 
Commerce and Industry, thinks: "They do not understand borrowers' 
 
TOKYO 00001744  008 OF 009 
 
 
feelings." 
 
The LDP's "Association to Foster Small Businesses," which was set 
up to review deregulation, has been dormant, with the post of 
chairman left vacant since former International Trade and 
Industry Minister Kabun Muto stepped down in 2005. Diet members 
acting on behalf of commerce and industrial groups, as well as 
executives at small businesses are dissatisfied with the current 
state, one lawmaker grumbling: "When we complain about the 
situation, we are told 'you are trying to get benefits' or 'you 
are the forces of resistance'." 
 
Matsumura and other participants who raised objections in the 
joint meeting were feeling a sense of isolation, fearing that 
once the viewpoint of the stronger side - lenders - dominated the 
LDP, the party might become less interested in rescuing the weak. 
Foreign Minister Aso, who served as LDP Policy Research Council 
chairman when the Koizumi government was launched in 2001, called 
the LDP's postwar economic policy "petition politics." 
 
Under "petition politics," industrial groups, joining hands with 
LDP policy cliques in the Diet and relevant government ministries 
and agencies, ask influential officials to protect their 
interests. Industrial groups would receive subsidies and special 
tax treatment, while the LDP would get votes and money from the 
industries. This is a cooperative system through petitions 
established between politicians, bureaucrats, and businesses. 
 
The Nakasone administration in the 1980s failed to destroy such a 
cozy system. Just after the bursting of the bubble economy in the 
1990s, the government implemented measures to buoy up the economy 
by increasing public works projects, resulting in making the 
collusive system more rigid. 
 
In his policy speech in the fall of 2001, Prime Minister Koizumi 
said that in order to put the economy on a recovery track under 
the lead of the private sector, there would be no other means but 
to destroy the collusive structure. He also revealed the policy 
of taking assistance measures for small businesses, instead of 
protective measures, saying: "I will double the number of new 
business startups over the next five years." Following the Small 
Business Challenge Support Law enacted in 2002, the government 
revised the New Business Promotion Law in 2003 to remove the 
regulation on minimum capital and enable entrepreneurs to start 
up new businesses only with one yen as capital." 
 
The prime minister visited this January the plant of a metal 
processing company with only six workers in Higashi-Mukojima, 
Tokyo, This company developed a 0.2-mm injection needle. The 
prime minister commented: "I was aware that not only leading 
firms but also small businesses have supported the Japanese 
economy." 
 
Midori Matsushita, chairman of the LDP Economy and Industry 
Division head and who was elected from this district, felt 
something different about it. She said: "There are many small 
companies that are greatly motivated but have difficulty in 
raising funds. I want the prime minister to realize that there 
are many cash-trapped small firms." 
 
Some LDP members are worried that people, in response to widening 
 
TOKYO 00001744  009 OF 009 
 
 
income disparity, might abandon the LDP. One official said: 
"Downtown shop owners who were supporting us turned their backs 
and easily supported the New Komeito or the Japanese Communist 
Party." 
 
On March 27, when the fiscal 2006 budget bill passed the Diet, 
the prime minister commented, remembering the days when his 
administration was launched in 2001, that although many called on 
the government to give priority to economic stimulus measures 
over reform, "I stressed the need for reform." 
 
But Japan now faces a crossroads. There is a document that senior 
members of the LDP's Economy and Industry Division have worked 
out. The document classifies firms into "petty, small, and medium 
companies" and proposed these policy measures: (1) Establish a 
small business basic law for companies with less than five 
employees; and (2) look into the success or failure of businesses 
capitalized at one yen. Acting division head Hiroshi Kajiyama, a 
House of Representatives member, said: "It is necessary to 
reconsider if the current measures for small businesses worked 
out without giving consideration to the size of each firm are 
really effective and helpful. Different sizes of firms have 
different desires." 
 
The prime minister said: "In any country, there is a certain 
level of social discrepancy," but it is difficult to dissolve the 
seriously widening income gap between small firms under a re- 
distribution system. 
 
Upper House member Hirohide Uozumi, who served as advisor to the 
Central Federation of Societies of Commerce and Industry in Japan 
said: 
 
"Due to a lack of successor at local firms, they pull back on 
capital investment, resulting in losing jobs. We failed to hammer 
out effective means to prevent this vicious cycle." 
 
Lower House member Junichiro Yasui, who was a member of the 
Waseda Shopping Street Association, stated: "It is undesirable to 
call for subsidies. Once companies receive money, they do not try 
their indignity to revitalize business." 
 
Attention has been focused on the need to correct the widening 
wealth gap in society at last after the "lost five years." 
 
DONOVAN