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Viewing cable 07TOKYO645, The Japan Economic Scope - February 9, 2007

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07TOKYO645 2007-02-14 08:34 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO7061
RR RUEHFK RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #0645/01 0450834
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 140834Z FEB 07
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RHEHAAA/WHITE HOUSE WASHDC
RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0658
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
INFO RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS 5290
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 9856
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 9290
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 2314
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 3333
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 TOKYO 000645 
 
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 - February 9, 2007 
 
Sensitive but unclassified.  Please protect accordingly. 
 
1. (SBU) Table of Contents 
 
3.  Inbound FDI Negative for 2006, Japan Likely to Miss Five-Year 
FDI Target 
4.  Keidanren Chairman Visits Australia, Wants an FTA 
5.  Japanese Reaction to U.S. WTO Subsidy Case Against China 
6.  The New Reg Reform Council Launched 
7.  EMIN Meets Niigata and Kanagawa Prefecture Governors 
8.  Japan, Central Asian Countries Discuss Improving 
Infrastructure in the Region 
9.  M&As Continue to Expand in Kyushu 
10. METI Tasks Independent Study Group To Review Security 
Criteria for Investment 
11. Opposition Takes Another Swipe at Government Over "White 
Collar Exemption" Bill 
12. Embassy Outreach on Bilateral Economic Relationship in 
Niigata and Ibaraki 
13. Former CEFP Member Yoshikawa Talks Critically about Japan's 
Economy 
14. Japanese Customs Cracks Down on Counterfeits Imported for 
Individual Use 
15.  Agriculture: Japan's Farmers to Get Their Voice in 
Washington 
16.  Last Chance for Japanese Farmers? 
17.  Holy Cow, Beef Is Expensive! 
18.  Japan's 32nd Case of BSE May Raise Questions 
19.  Ban on U.S. Potatoes Lifted 
20.  No Economic Impact from Avian Flu in Okayama--Yet 
21.  Ports: Cost Reductions, Efficiency Boost Planned for Hanshin 
Super Core Port 
22.  Civair: Japan-Canada Aviation Talks Conclude 
23.  MLIT Hires U.S. Consulting Firm for Basic Study on Airports 
and Competitiveness 
24.  JAL's Plan with Eight Percent Layoffs and Pay Cuts 
25.  Bid-Rigging Post Mortem: Wakayama Wants More National Money 
for Road Construction 
 
2. (U) This cable contains the Japan Economic Scope from February 
9, 2007. 
 
3.  (SBU) Inbound FDI Negative for 2006, Japan Likely to Miss 
Five-Year FDI Target 
-------------------- 
 
In 2006, Japan experienced a net outflow of foreign direct 
investment by non-residents for the first time in 17 years. 
 
According to Ministry of Finance figures, total FDI inflow to 
Japan by non-residents was 4.93 trillion yen ($42.5 billion), up 
almost 50% from 2005.  Unfortunately, disinvestment by non- 
Japanese investors in the same period was 5.67 trillion yen or 
$49.1 billion.  The difference was a net outflow of FDI of 740 
billion yen ($6.6 billion.) 
 
The biggest contributing factor was the sale by British firm 
Vodafone of its Japan operations to Softbank in April 2006 for 
$16.3 billion.  The same month, General Motors Corporation sold a 
17 percent stake in Suzuki Motors for $1.98 billion.  These two 
deals contributed to a net outflow of $14.8 billion in the month 
of April 2006 alone.  Without these two large disinvestments, 
Japan's FDI flows in the first 11 months of 2006 would have been 
a respectable $11.68 billion, up from $2.8 billion in 2005 and 
$7.8 billion in 2004. 
 
As a result of these disappointing numbers, Japan will almost 
certainly fail to meet the target set by former Prime Minister 
Koizumi of doubling the nation's stock of FDI from its 2001 level 
within five years.  In nominal terms that target translates into 
13.2 trillion yen ($119 billion) of FDI by the end of 2006.  With 
only one month's figures left to be booked, Japan's year-end 
stock of FDI likely will be only about 11 trillion yen. 
 
See the attached Excel document for MOF's month-by-month figures 
for FDI flows. 
 
4.  (SBU) Keidanren Chairman Visits Australia, Wants an FTA 
 
TOKYO 00000645  002 OF 009 
 
 
-------------------- 
 
No talks have started yet since their launch was announced, but 
the Japanese continue to discuss the merits of a free trade -- or 
economic partnership -- agreement with Australia. 
 
Fujio Mitarai, Chairman of the Japan Business Federation 
(Keidanren), visited Australia the first week in February, 
meeting with government officials including Prime Minister John 
Howard and his counterparts in the Australian business 
community.  Mitarai underscored Keidanren's support for a 
deal.  He pointed to the difficulties of getting Japan's 
agricultural sector on board and suggested that one way forward 
would be to phase in tariff reductions over a 10-20 year period. 
For his part, according to press reports, Howard emphasized that 
he wanted to see key agricultural products on the table in the 
negotiations.  A MOFA official we talked to February 8 told us 
that Howard's strong public line underscores how "clever" he has 
been in handling the launch of the talks.  Note, the MOFA 
official said, that Howard called for "some movement" on 
agriculture.  The GOJ expects the Australians to be flexible when 
the talks begin, and "some" more accurately translates into not 
much. 
 
For more on Keidanren's views about a Japan-Australia FTA, click 
here. 
 
5.  (SBU) Japanese Reaction to U.S. WTO Subsidy Case Against 
China 
----- 
 
The Japanese press has covered extensively the U.S. decision late 
last week to file a subsidy case against China.  After the 
announcement, Japanese Trade Minister Amari indicated Japan may 
join the case as a third party.  He told reporters that U.S. 
Trade Representative Susan Schwab had asked him last month if 
Japan would be interested in joining the United States in filing 
the complaint together. 
 
Consultations with the Japanese on the possibility for a joint- 
filing had been on-going for several months prior to the February 
2 action.  Noteworthy among these discussions was a series of 
working level meetings between USTR officials and their MOFA/METI 
counterparts to identify common ground for joint-action -- the 
process of which began with an exchange of information on related 
areas of concern last May. 
 
According to Kyodo news, however, Amari has hinted that Japan 
would likely take a "softer" third party approach, because many 
Japanese companies run joint ventures with Chinese partners and 
capital.  A Nikkei editorial noted that the United States had 
moved quickly since its December Strategic Dialogue meetings with 
the Chinese to take a hard-line approach against Beijing.  In 
part, the newspaper notes, USTR is compelled to show a tough 
posture to satisfy Congress in advance of a request to extend 
Trade Promotion Authority. 
 
Click here to read Ambassador's Schwab's remarks and click here 
to read a recent press release. 
 
6.  The New Reg Reform Council Launched 
-------------------- 
 
Japan's new Council on Regulatory Reform was officially 
established in January, taking over the mandate of the Council on 
the Promotion of Regulatory Reform and the Office of Trade and 
Investment Ombudsman. 
 
Chaired by Takao Kusakari, its 15 members include eight experts 
who served in the previous Council.  In its first meeting on 
January 31, the Council identified some key issues reflecting 
Prime Minister Abe's priorities: promote innovation, raise 
productivity; build an open economy and society; realize high 
standards of living; revitalize regions; and realize a society 
with "a second chance."  It is not yet clear, however, how these 
goals will translate into deregulation policies. 
The Council is expected to issue a report in late May, and the 
Cabinet will adopt a new Three-year Regulatory Reform Plan soon 
 
TOKYO 00000645  003 OF 009 
 
 
after. 
 
See Tokyo 387 and 154 for more details.  Also, for more 
information in English click here and for more information in 
Japanese click here. 
 
7. (SBU) Meets Niigata and Kanagawa Prefecture Governors 
-------------------- 
 
On February 1 in Niigata and February 5 in Yokohama, EMIN met 
respectively with the governors of Niigata and Kanagawa 
prefectures. 
 
Although their current economic situations differ (Kanagawa's is 
booming, becoming a national center for biotechnology and R&D, 
while stereotypically rural Niigata barely has been able to stay 
abreast of the national average growth rate), both governors 
pressed their case to host jointly the next G-8 summit in 2008. 
Niigata and Yokohama have filed a joint application to host the 
summit -- foreign and finance ministers would meet on the west 
coast in Niigata, while Yokohama would receive the leaders' 
meeting.  They both see Kyoto as their main competition.  While 
they would welcome the prestige that accompanies hosting a G-8 
summit meeting, Kanagawa governor Matsuzawa was explicit that 
wining such a bid comes with high costs: the prefectures largely 
are expected to pick up the enormous fees for providing police 
and security protection.  Given the recent trend for summits to 
be located in remote resort areas, governor Matsuzawa was less 
than wholeheartedly enthusiastic about securing victory. 
 
8.  (SBU)  Central Asian Countries Discuss Improving 
Infrastructure in the Region 
-------------------- 
 
The Japanese government held its Second Tokyo Dialogue on Central 
Asia Plus Japan on January 30 during which representatives from 
Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan 
as well as officials from Japanese industry and government 
discussed regional cooperation on water resources, electric power 
and the diversification of Central Asia's energy supply routes. 
The Central Asian countries are seeking non-European customers 
for their energy and so have turned to Japan for its financial 
and technological cooperation to develop and modernize their 
respective infrastructures.  They also want more oil and gas 
exploration to increase production and export. 
 
 For Japan, Central Asia is attractive from an energy standpoint 
but poses geographical problems such as the lack of sea access 
and the volatile southern border with Afghanistan and Pakistan. 
Success for Japanese business and government will require a long- 
term commitment in the region, but that will require political 
stability and transparent decision-making processes. 
Central Asian countries stand ready to turn to Russia or China if 
Japan hesitates, despite their heavy-handed influence in the 
region. 
 
Japan Agency for Natural Resources and Energy Petroleum and 
Natural Gas Division Deputy Director Kazuhiro Iwatani emphasized 
Japan's need to diversify supply away from the Middle East and 
called on the central Asian countries to cooperate on improving 
the investment climate to meet Japan's efforts to provide funding, 
technology and human resources. 
 
Former Japanese Ambassador to Uzbekistan and Tajikistan Akio 
Kawato expressed his disappointment that the region's supply of 
uranium was not discussed during the dialogue and proposed that 
nuclear power plants be built in the region.  He also expressed 
concern over the lack of security in the southern regions 
bordering Afghanistan and Pakistan and suggested that Japan send 
a peace-keeping force to the area. 
 
9.  (SBU) M&As Continue to Expand in Kyushu 
-------------------- 
 
Kyushu is no exception to a recent M&A boom in Japan, which 
reached a record high in 2006. 
 
According to M&A consultancy Recof Corp, the value of M&As 
 
TOKYO 00000645  004 OF 009 
 
 
involving Kyushu, including Okinawa, firms nearly quadrupled to 
Yen 324.8 billion ($2.7 billion) in 2006 from Yen 83.5 billion 
($696 million) in 2005. 
 
The number of M&A transactions (140 cases) in the region in 2006, 
also a record, was up about 7 percent from the previous year. 
A Recof official noted that a call for structural reform, 
succession problems in small-medium companies, a declining 
birthrate and aging population, and a renewed perspective of M&A 
by top management are among the major factors behind this upsurge. 
 
The official predicts the number of M&As to continue to increase 
in Kyushu, with growth particularly strong in Okinawa. 
In addition, he expects that heavily regulated sectors, including 
financial and transportation services, will maintain a 
significant role in M&A activity throughout the region. 
 
10.  (SBU) METI Tasks Independent Study Group To Review Security 
Criteria for Investment 
 
METI has established an outside study group to recommend possible 
revisions to rules governing which sectors require prior 
notification and government approval for foreign direct 
investment. 
 
The group's report, due in April, will feed into formal 
recommendations from the ministry about whether changes are 
needed to the Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Control Law. 
The December announcement of the study group's formation 
coincided with a call from Keidanren for stricter national 
security review of inward M&A, but METI insists the timing is 
coincidental. 
 
The chairman of the study group told the Embassy he did not 
expect his group to recommend significant new restrictions on 
inward FDI. 
 
For more information see Tokyo 454. 
 
10.  (U) Opposition Takes Another Swipe at Government Over "White 
Collar Exemption" Bill 
-------------------- 
 
In a TV Asahi news roundtable devoted to measures to address 
Japan's growing "social gaps" and improve the nation's pension 
system, a Japan Communist Party Diet member criticized the Abe 
Administration for drafting a bill (since withdrawn) to decrease 
the number of workers eligible for overtime pay "under pressure" 
from the Japan Business Federation (Keidanren), the ACCJ, and the 
U.S. Government. 
 
In fact, reducing the eligibility for overtime for white-collar 
workers earning above nine million yen ($75,000) annually is one 
of the United States' labor mobility recommendations at the bi- 
annual Investment Initiative talks. 
 
Another commentator, reflecting negative press coverage of the 
draft bill, described it as leading to a "no-overtime-pay" system 
rather than a "go-home-on-time" system. 
 
11.  (U) Embassy Outreach on Bilateral Economic Relationship in 
Niigata and Ibaraki 
------------------- 
 
EMIN recently had the opportunity to speak to groups in Mito and 
Niigata, two large cities north of Tokyo on the bilateral 
economic and trade relationship. 
 
His basic message was that the U.S.-Japan economic relationship 
is in pretty good shape compared to that 10 or 20 years ago, but 
we should not be complacent and instead continue to push for 
reform and a further opening of Japan to foreign investment, 
goods and services. 
 
He acknowledged U.S. and Japanese industry's appeal for a 
bilateral FTA, cautioned that further reform, especially of 
Japan's agricultural sector, is first necessary, and asked his 
audiences if Japan is ready to undertake such reform. 
 
TOKYO 00000645  005 OF 009 
 
 
 
U.S. hopes and views for civair, regulatory reform and postal 
privatization were also reviewed. 
 
12.  (SBU)  Former CEFP Member Yoshikawa Talks Critically about 
Japan's Economy 
--------------- 
 
University of Tokyo Professor Hiroshi Yoshikawa had both praise 
and criticism for the current state of the Japanese economy at a 
lunch seminar hosted by the Maison franco japonaise on February 2. 
He spoke glowingly of the years he spent as a private sector 
member of former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's Council for 
Economic and Fiscal Policy (CEFP), noting in particular Koizumi's 
leadership of the Council and the fact that the former prime 
minister had attended nearly all of the 200 CEFP meetings during 
his tenure, which added greatly to the Council's effectiveness. 
Yoshikawa remains concerned over Japan's low consumption rate and 
its high youth unemployment rate--about 10 percent for people 
between the ages of 15 and 24.  One in three young people works 
only part-time, he said, and over 700,000 are classified as NEET, 
a British term meaning "not in employment, education or 
training." 
 
Yoshikawa raised Japan's public debt-to-GDP ratio of 150 percent, 
the worst among OECD countries, and compared Japan to Great 
Britain after WWII, whose public debt-to-GDP ratio at the time 
was 200 percent.  Yoshikawa described two groups of thought on 
shrinking the ratio, one headed by Hidenao Nakagawa that 
advocates achieving primary balance, and the other headed by 
Kaoru Yosano backing an increase in the growth rate; Yoshikawa 
places himself in the second group. 
 
Another concern is the Japanese government's growing social 
security obligations due to the aging population.  Yoshikawa 
pointed out, however, that Japan's capital expenditures and 
technological progress historically have had a much greater 
impact on GDP than labor, and he gave two examples:  During 1955- 
70 Japan's labor force grew only one percent while real GDP grew 
9.6 percent--similar to China's present GDP growth rate.  Not 
quite as spectacular but not insignificant either, Japan's labor 
force again grew only one percent during 1975-90 while real GDP 
grew 4.6 percent. 
 
Yoshikawa noted that raising the consumption tax would be 
necessary to fund social security and ruled out increasing income 
tax, because a large number of Japanese successfully avoid paying 
the tax, as well as increasing corporate tax, because corporate 
tax in Japan is already high compared to other financial centers. 
Yoshikawa commented that Tokyo should worry more about competing 
with Hong Kong and Singapore to become a world financial center 
than New York and London and said pointedly that Japan is not 
open enough.  In particular, he criticized Tokyo traffic, the 
distance from the city center to Narita Airport, and the lack of 
adequate English signs. 
 
 Yoshikawa also took the University of Tokyo to task.  Despite 
its ranking by the London Times as 11th or 12th in the world, he 
said non-Japanese professors make up a paltry one percent of its 
teaching ranks, unheard of in most other top-ranked schools. 
 
13.  (U) Japanese Customs Cracks Down on Counterfeits Imported 
for Individual Use 
------------------ 
 
Japanese Customs officials announced this week that they will 
step up inspections of luxury goods imported by individuals to 
intercept more counterfeits. 
 
In mid-2006, Japan's Customs began examining more name-brand 
goods that individuals were bringing in, including packages 
addressed to individuals.  They found that more and more fakes 
are being brought into Japan for resale under the guise of 
personal use, which is still legal in Japan. Most of the goods 
were purses and wallets and more than 80 percent of the 
counterfeits came from China. 
 
METI and the IP Strategy Headquarters have told the Embassy that 
 
TOKYO 00000645  006 OF 009 
 
 
they back bills to outlaw individual imports of fakes and to ban 
advertising of counterfeits in online auctions, an increasingly 
popular way to bring in fakes. 
 
Coach told Embassy during a recent visit that it is now the 
number two luxury brand in Japan in dollar terms after Louis 
Vuitton. 
 
14.  (SBU) Agriculture: Japan's Farmers to Get Their Voice in 
Washington 
---------- 
 
Japan's Central Union of Agricultural Cooperatives (JA), the 
country's chief farmers' lobbying arm, is dispatching a senior 
official to Washington on February 11 to sign a contract with a 
well known law firm to represent its interests in the United 
States better.  During a meeting at JA headquarters February 8, 
Executive Director Shigeo Fuji told us the Japanese Embassy was 
making arrangements for his visit. 
 
Fuji would not tell us which law firm the organization had 
selected to represent it, but the firm enjoys a high lobbying 
profile.  Fuji said JA would employ a full time representative at 
the firm to do its bidding.  JA is famous in Japan for its 
unbending opposition to expanded agricultural trade, either 
through the Doha Round or in Japan's bilateral negotiations, 
including the one set to begin with Australia. 
 
15.  (SBU) Last Chance for Japanese Farmers? 
-------------------- 
 
The second Task Force meeting under the auspices of the Council 
of Economic and Fiscal Policy to review economic partnership 
agreements and agriculture reforms met on February 7. 
 
According to the Japan Agriculture News, the group discussed mid- 
and long-term strategies for forging partnership agreements. 
A source we have on the Task Force told us that its function is 
in part to provide the "naiatsu," or domestic pressure, on 
Japan's farm sector to get it to reform. 
 
 According to our source, absent another round of significant 
agricultural reforms -- following up on last year's reforms which 
included the introduction of direct payments and measures 
intended to promote farm consolidation -- Japan's farm sector 
will begin to diminish. 
 
Our source, an agricultural economist, sees a future for Japanese 
farmers, but only if they become much more productive. 
 
16.  (U) Holy Cow, Beef Is Expensive! 
-------------------- 
 
On February 5, Japan's Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and 
Fisheries (MAFF) reported that retail prices for domestically 
produced beef are at their highest level in three and a half 
years. 
 
Retail prices for short loin beef averaged $26.76/lb (or 718 yen 
per 100 grams).  Import restrictions on U.S. beef, high feed 
prices, and strong demand for sukiyaki and other winter dishes 
are responsible for the high prices. 
 
In the United States, the USDA-reported wholesale price for a 
similar cut was $4.67/lb in the same period. 
 
17.  (U) Japan's 32nd Case of BSE May Raise Questions 
On February 5, 2007, Japan's Ministry of Health, Labor, and 
Welfare (MHLW) announced Japan's 32nd case of BSE (mad cow). 
 
Japan banned the use of ruminant meat and bone meal (MBM) in 
cattle feed on September 18, 2001, and a few weeks later extended 
the feed ban to all animals. 
 
The infected cow was born in August 2001, potentially raising 
questions about the enforcement of Japan's feed rules. 
Meat from the Hokkaido-born Holstein cow was destroyed and did 
not enter commerce. 
 
TOKYO 00000645  007 OF 009 
 
 
 
Japan remains the only country in Asia that is officially 
recognized as having BSE. 
 
18.  (U) Ban on U.S. Potatoes Lifted 
-------------------- 
 
On Wednesday the Government of Japan agreed to lift the re- 
instated ban on U.S. grown potatoes.  This action will allow 
fresh U.S. potatoes to come to Japan under a strict protocol that 
was agreed to about a year ago. 
 
Under the protocol, fresh potatoes must come from approved states 
that were visited by MAFF, be cleaned in the United States before 
shipping, sent inside special bags inside of a special sealed 
container, inspected upon import and sent directly to an approved 
controlled potato chip manufacturing facility near the port, to 
be made into potato chips. 
 
There are numerous other measures to mitigate potential risks 
such as the washing of containers after loading, special double 
doors in the chipping facility, and special measures for 
disposing of peels and waste material. 
 
The protocol also includes a seasonal restriction, allowing 
shipping between February 1 and June 30. This season restriction 
has nothing to do with phytosanitary concerns and was meant to 
appease Japanese domestic growers who do want to limit access to 
the fresh potato market. 
 
Domestic growers are nonetheless opposed to the protocol, even 
though the Japanese chip manufacturers claim that the domestic 
industry is not able to supply them with enough potatoes to keep 
their factories running throughout the year. 
 
Potatoes from the United States were imported for the first time 
in 2006 under this protocol until a new pest, white cyst nematode, 
was found in Idaho.  At that time Japan immediately banned all 
shipments of U.S. potatoes. 
 
USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service has been 
working closely with MAFF over the past year to provide 
information necessary to lift the ban.  The lifting of the ban on 
Wednesday excluded potatoes from Idaho. 
 
19.  (SBU) No Economic Impact from Avian Flu in Okayama -- Yet 
-------------------- 
 
According to Japanese government officials, the January 27 
discovery in Okayama Prefecture of Japan's seventh case of H5N1 
Avian Influenza has not adversely affected poultry prices or 
sales volumes to date.  All 12,000 chickens in the affected farm 
were culled and disinfected within three days.  The same 
officials suspect the source of the infections to be migratory 
birds from Mongolia and northern China. 
 
Rapidly setting up emergency disaster headquarters in Okayama, 
local officials appear to have learned from bitter experiences in 
Kyoto in 2004, when the spread of the virus went unreported for 
more than a week, resulting in a massive cull, a decline in 
consumer confidence, and the suicide of a poultry farm owner. 
Local MAFF offices conducted inspections throughout the region 
and directed several stores to remove inappropriate signs touting 
"no Okayama eggs or meat" and "no Miyazaki products" from their 
stores.  Post is reporting separately to EST Tokyo on the local 
AI situation. 
 
20.  Ports: Cost Reductions, Efficiency Boost Planned for Hanshin 
Super Core Port (U) 
------------------- 
 
As part of the GOJ Ministry of Finance (MOF) 52.4 billion yen 
($437 million) 'Super Core Port' project, the Hanshin (Osaka- 
Kobe) port will be dredged to a new depth of 16 meters by the end 
of fiscal 2008 in order to facilitate super-large ships in Osaka 
Bay. 
 
Operation costs at the Hanshin port will be cut by 30 percent and 
 
TOKYO 00000645  008 OF 009 
 
 
cargo loading/unloading time will be shortened in fiscal 2009 
through enhanced coordination of facilities and a software 
upgrade. 
 
The ports of Osaka Bay have been developed in a chaotic 
bureaucratic hodgepodge of jurisdictions, which has served to 
throttle efficiency in port services and reduce the 
competitiveness of the regional economy. 
 
Last September, regional leaders launched a working group 
designed to promote the comprehensive linkage of the four 
international trading ports of Kobe, Osaka, Amagasaki- 
Nishinomiya-Ashiya and Sakai-Semboku. 
 
Under the project, the four Osaka Bay ports will be treated as a 
single port, and tonnage dues paid by foreign vessels will be 
unified and streamlined starting in JFY 2007. 
 
21.  (U) Civair: Japan-Canada Aviation Talks Conclude 
-------------------- 
 
MLIT announced on its web page that bilateral aviation talks with 
Canada were concluded in Ottawa in January.  The bilateral 
negotiations were lead by Tadashi Shimura, Director of 
International Airport Division, MLIT and by Nadir Patel from 
Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade. 
The talks gave seven new passenger flights to each side for 
service to/from airports other than Tokyo, such as Osaka.  Also, 
Canadian airlines will change the current aircraft to a larger 
aircraft (B-777) for the existing routes out of Tokyo because the 
unit used to measure the air traffic will now be measured by 
number of flights rather than a coefficient unit as in the past. 
Unlimited flight numbers will be permitted for code shares with 
third country airlines as well. 
 
Japan and Canada have had aviation relation since 1955 and JAL 
and Air Canada (code shared with ANA) fly seven flights per week 
between Narita-Vancouver, Toronto-Narita, Vancouver-Narita, and 
Vancouver-Kansai.  The passenger numbers between the two 
countries were 790,000 and 796,000 in FY2004 and FY2005 
respectively. 
 
22.  (SBU) MLIT Hires U.S. Consulting Firm for Basic Study on 
Airports and Competitiveness 
-------------------- 
 
We recently learned that the Civil Aviation Bureau (JCAB) of 
Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (MLIT) has been 
conducting a basic study on airports' roles and competitiveness 
in other countries. 
 
JCAB engaged a U.S. consulting firm in August 2006 to survey 
foreign airports on: roles of multiple airports in metropolitan 
areas and international competitiveness of those airports. 
Studies were conducted in cities such as London, Paris and New 
York for the first topic and Dubai and Istanbul for the second. 
 
As a part this study, an ACCJ member told us that the U.S. 
consulting firm has reached out to foreign airlines about how 
they could run airport operations better on behalf of MLIT. 
The study is expected to be completed by the end of 2007, but it 
is yet to be determined how or if the GOJ will implement the 
final report. 
 
23.  (U) JAL's Plan with Eight Percent Layoffs and Pay Cuts 
-------------------- 
 
Japan Airlines announced a medium-term corporate business plan 
for the four years FY2007 to March 2011 on February 6. 
 
Through reduction of 4,300 employees, an early retirement 
allowance program, executive pay cuts of 45-60 percent, a general 
review of its domestic and international routes, and introducing 
first-class service on domestic routes and premium economy on 
international routes, the company seeks to prepare itself to take 
maximum advantage of the internationalization and expansion of 
Haneda Airport and the increase of slots at Narita Airport after 
2009. 
 
TOKYO 00000645  009 OF 009 
 
 
 
The airline outlined five goals: improvement of safety standards; 
improvement profitability through cost reductions; downsizing 
through aircraft renewal and strengthening aircraft 
competitiveness; shifting to high profit routes and strengthening 
overall product competitiveness and; concentrating resources to 
the air transport segment. 
 
For the company's international flights, JAL plans to increase 
its share of China services from 27 percent in 2006 to 33 percent 
by 2010.  It also plans to increase the flights between Tokyo and 
New York, Paris, Moscow, and Delhi in 2007, but plans to reduce 
flights between Tokyo and Hong Kong and Guangzhou, and cancel 
routes between Tokyo and Zurich, and Osaka-Brisbane-Sydney.  JAL 
is also scheduled to join One World this April. 
 
24.  (SBU) Bid-Rigging Post Mortem: Wakayama Wants More National 
Money for Road Construction 
-------------------- 
 
New Wakayama Governor Yoshinobu Nisaka, a former METI bureaucrat, 
mentioned at a lecture at the Kansai Press Club that Wakayama 
planned to build more national roads in the prefecture, which has 
the least developed highway system in the six-prefecture Kansai 
region. 
 
National roads are funded and managed by the national government, 
but there is a type of national road that the prefecture could 
manage on its own and still receive a GOJ subsidy. 
 
Governor Nisaka said his prefecture's budget was too tight to 
improve the road system on its own, and he instead wants to push 
for national funds for new road projects, citing the economic 
benefits from tourism promotion and disaster prevention measures. 
 
Governor Nisaka has to tread carefully to avoid becoming overly 
identified with new public works projects, given his 
predecessor's arrest in connection with bid-rigging on a public 
tunnel project and allegations of massive bribery. 
 
SCHIEFFER