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Viewing cable 07TOKYO2251, The Japan Economic Scope - May 18, 2007

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07TOKYO2251 2007-05-18 06:48 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO9145
RR RUEHFK RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #2251/01 1380648
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 180648Z MAY 07
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 3728
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
INFO RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS 5478
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 1145
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 0380
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 3579
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 4705
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 08 TOKYO 002251 
 
SIPDIS 
 
PARIS PLEASE PASS TO USOECD 
STATE PLEASE PASS TO USTR 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ETRD ECON JA ZO EAGR
SUBJECT: The Japan Economic Scope - May 18, 2007 
 
Sensitive but unclassified.  Please protect accordingly. 
 
1. (U) This cable contains the Japan Economic Scope from May 18, 
2007. 
 
2.(SBU) Table of Contents 
 
3.  LDP and DPJ Staff Members Discuss Upper House election 
4.  Keidanren Joins G-8 Business Declaration (SBU) 
5.  KORUS Creates Some Pressure for Japan-U.S. FTA (SBU) 
6.  FTA/EPA Debate Continues in Japan (SBU) 
7.  LDP Ag Caucus: PM Advisory Subcommittee Shoots Japan in the 
Back (U) 
8.  Beef: the Road Map Ahead (SBU) 
9.  GOJ Unhappy with U.S. National Trade Estimate Report (SBU) 
10.  JFTC Chairman to Be Reappointed (SBU) 
11.  Consulate Fukuoka Resumes Visa Services (U) 
12.  Fidelity to Sell Investment Trusts at Post Offices (SBU) 
13.  Keidanren Urges Japan to Stop Cutting Aid (U) 
14.  GOJ-Funded Tuna Institute's Kick-Off Conference Packed to 
15.  Sarkozy Win Spurs Interest in French Economic and Family 
Policies (SBU) 
16.  New Center Established to Boost Service Sector Productivity 
17.  Government Split Over Foreign Trainee Labor (SBU) 
18.  Central Japan's Latin American Workforce Swells (SBU) 
19.  KIAC Seeks Restoration of U.S. Routes and Increased Cargo 
Capacity (SBU) 
20.  787 Production Enters New Phase (U) 
21.  New Train-Bus Hybrids for JR Hokkaido (U) 
22.  Toyota Hybrid and U.S. Sales Plans (SBU) 
23.  Yamazaki Mazak Machine Tools: Export Controls and Japan's 
Demographic Crisis (SBU) 
24.  U.S. and Japanese IT Firms Consortium to sell Linux Systems 
in Japan (U) 
25.  Japanese MLB Update  (U) 
 
3.  (SBU) LDP and DPJ Staff Members Discuss Upper House election 
------------------------------ 
 
A Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) Policy Research Council staff 
member revealed to the Embassy that the party was having 
difficulty finding a strong argument against the Liberal 
Democratic Party (LDP) in the Upper House election, as the debate 
on social disparity is losing its initial steam.  He noted the 
defeat in the Tokyo gubernatorial race in April had been 
devastating. 
 
Although it depends on party leader Ichiro Ozawa, who is known to 
take a top-down approach, the staff member revealed that pensions 
and agriculture may be raised and environmental issues could also 
be a future topic although probably not this election. 
 
The DPJ staff member added that the party, in an effort to 
collect votes from Japan Agricultural Cooperatives (JA) members, 
has been sending questionnaires to local JAs, traditionally 
supporters for the ruling LDP, in hopes of attracting their 
attention. 
 
In a separate meeting, an LDP staff member admitted he had 
detected some change in the relationship between Upper House 
candidates and the interest groups that traditionally support 
them.  For example, JA has ceased to support Keishiro Fukushima, 
a former Agriculture Ministry official and former Parliamentary 
Secretary for the Foreign Ministry, because he at times does not 
 
SIPDIS 
represent the organization's views. JA has now decided to back 
one of its own, former JA executive director Toshio Yamada, as 
its LDP candidate. 
 
The staff member also indicated that Keizo Takemi, who used to 
enjoy strong support from the Japan Medical Association, seems to 
have had difficulty securing its support this time.  (ECON: 
Ryoko Nakano) 
 
4.  (SBU) Keidanren Joins G-8 Business Declaration 
------------------------------ 
 
The Japan Business Federation (Keidanren) joined other business 
groups from G-8 countries in calling on their governments to push 
for a successful conclusion to the Doha Trade Round. 
 
Noting that Doha talks have "dragged on for five years without 
 
TOKYO 00002251  002 OF 008 
 
 
any tangible results," the joint declaration calls on G-8 
governments to break the impasse, particularly over agricultural 
trade, and make a successful conclusion of the round a "matter of 
urgency and top priority." 
 
The joint declaration also calls for more coordination on IPR 
enforcement and facilitation of foreign investment.  G-8 
governments should avoid what the business groups call 
"investment protectionism," while at the same time do more on 
transparency and "predictability" in government investment 
decisions. 
 
The following organizations signed the document: Confederation of 
British Industry; Confederation of Italian Industry; Federation 
of German Industries; Japan Business Federation; French Business 
Confederation; Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs; 
the Canadian Chamber of Commerce; and the United States Council 
for International Business. 
 
Click here to view the joint declaration.  (ECON:  Nicholas Hill) 
 
5.  (SBU) KORUS Creates Some Pressure for Japan-U.S. FTA 
------------------------------ 
 
The immediate economic implications for Japan of the U.S. - Korea 
Free Trade Agreement (KORUS) could be much smaller than the long- 
term trade policy implications, according to two economists we 
have met. 
 
If KORUS leads to sweeping changes in Japan's trade policies, 
pushing the country to open up more aggressively, a senior 
economist at Mizuho Bank told us last week, KORUS could prove to 
be "an historical agreement," not only in terms of its impact on 
Japan's trade policy, but on its impact on the global trade 
regime. 
 
He added that Japan needs to reevaluate its stand on a wider East 
Asia FTA framework and its position on where the United States 
belongs in the regional architecture.  Clearly KORUS has served 
to raise the profile of Japan's FTA policies. 
 
The economist noted that South Korea continued to hold Japan and 
China at arms' length while it pursued a deal with the United 
States and now is putting its sights on a deal with the European 
Union. 
 
An economics professor from Tokyo University echoed these views. 
He told us separately on May 17 that KORUS will not have a 
substantial direct economic impact on Japanese business because 
tariff rates in United States are already very low. 
 
He said he has been advising the Trade Ministry (METI), which was 
taking a similar position.  METI has noted on its website that 
the economic implications of a deal between Korea and the EU 
would be far greater for Japan than KORUS because tariff rates in 
Europe at present are significantly higher than in the United 
States. (Click here to read in Japanese.) 
 (ECON:  Nicholas Hill/Ryoko Nakano) 
 
6.  (SBU) FTA/EPA Debate Continues in Japan 
------------------------------ 
 
Last week the Foreign Ministry's latest Economic Partnership 
Agreement roadmap was put on the internet. (Click here to read in 
Japanese.)  For the first time, MOFA refers to a need to consider 
in the future working on free trade deals with the United States 
and European Union. 
 
The FTA debate continues to figure prominently in the press. 
Chief Cabinet Secretary Shiozaki was quoted in the International 
Herald Tribune: "it is not simply a matter of Japan making an 
issue just because South Korea did it," he said.  "It is 
important to study this matter with the aim of developing a 
forward-looking, win-win relationship. 
 
His comments came after Japanese newspapers conveyed the 
impression of Japan as an FTA laggard.  "FTA, Japan is Left 
Behind," read one headline in Nikkei.  "U.S. Japan FTA a Topic - 
Government to Revamp Trade Policies," the Yomiuri wrote.  (ECON: 
Nicholas Hill/Ryoko Nakano) 
 
 
TOKYO 00002251  003 OF 008 
 
 
7.  (U) LDP Ag Caucus: PM Advisory Subcommittee Shoots Japan in 
the Back 
-------- 
 
We have seen mixed reactions to a report of the Subcommittee for 
the Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy (CEFP) since its 
release last week.  The advisory body calls for the government to 
accelerate FTA negotiations and agriculture reform.  (See last 
week's Scope for details.) 
 
Japan's Mainichi said the report's proposals were "innovative." 
LDP Policy Research Council Chair and former Trade Minister, 
Shoichi Nakagawa, echoed Agriculture Minister Matsuoka's views 
that the proposals were detrimental to Japan in its ongoing trade 
talks, akin to "being shot in the back when the WTO talks are at 
a sensitive stage."  Nakagawa was likely alluding to the 
Subcommittee's call for Japan to slash its "excessive" tariff 
rates. 
 
According to press reports, during a May 15 meeting of the LDP 
agriculture caucus, some members criticized the CEFP Subcommittee 
report saying it needed "adjustments."  They do not want to see 
some of the report's proposals incorporated into the Government's 
economic and fiscal guidelines, which are due out next month. 
The ruling party's agriculture caucus is particularly unhappy 
about calls for tariff reductions and reforms to the gate price 
system for pork.  (ECON:  Ryoko Nakano) 
 
8.  (SBU) Beef: the Road Map Ahead 
---------------------------------- 
 
According to Japanese press reports, Agriculture Minister 
Matsuoka was "circumspect" when pressed by Agriculture Secretary 
Johanns to review Japan's age limit on U.S. beef imports. 
The two met in Paris where the OIE this week will pronounce beef 
in the United States to be in a "controlled risk" -- or in effect, 
safe -- category, no longer necessitating special restrictions on 
trade. 
 
In Tokyo, Deputy Assistant U.S. Trade Representative Cathy 
Enright and Embassy officials met with Health and Agriculture 
Ministry officials to discuss the way forward after the new OIE 
risk classification for the United States is announced. 
The two sides are set to begin a dialogue in coming weeks and the 
Japanese officials indicated they plan to review very carefully 
the data supporting the OIE decision.  For more details on the 
meeting, please see Tokyo 2193. (ECON:  Nicholas Hill) 
 
9.  (SBU) GOJ Unhappy with U.S. National Trade Estimate Report 
------------------------------ 
 
The Japanese government delivered its reply this week to the U.S. 
2007 National Trade Estimate Report, which USTR issued in April. 
In the reply, which is on the Foreign Ministry website, the GOJ 
continues to be unhappy about the criticisms leveled at it across 
a range of sectors, citing "inappropriate or inaccurate 
descriptions..." 
 
Written in unusually unvarnished prose, the 11-page report 
rejects point-by-point the concerns raised in the NTE, stating 
that some statements in the NTE do not "reflect the facts" 
The GOJ document specifically states that, where concerns raised 
in the NTE are not addressed, this does not imply that the GOJ 
shares an "understanding" with the U.S. government on them. 
According to separate sources at MOFA, the GOJ is considering not 
replying to the NTE Report in the future, although no final 
decision on that is expected anytime soon. 
Click here to see MOFA's reply.  (ECON:  Nicholas Hill) 
 
10.  (SBU) JFTC Chairman to Be Reappointed 
------------------------------ 
 
According to press reports, Kasuhiko Takeshima will be 
reappointed as chairman of the Japan Fair Trade Commission (JFTC), 
once the government has obtained agreement from the Diet for the 
move. 
 
Takeshima's five-year term expires in September, and any 
successor would have needed approval from the Diet before the 
regular session closes in June.  Takeshima, age 64, entered the 
Ministry of Finance in 1965.  After having served in such posts 
 
TOKYO 00002251  004 OF 008 
 
 
as director-general of the National Tax Agency, director of the 
Cabinet Councillors' Office on Internal Affairs, and assistant 
deputy chief cabinet secretary, he was named head of the JFTC in 
July 2002. 
 
During Takeshima's tenure, the JFTC, characterized in the past as 
a "watchdog that never barked," has become a substantially more 
robust and aggressive competition regulator, actively 
investigating and prosecuting a series of high-profile bid- 
rigging cases.  Most significantly, Takeshima successfully 
advocated for the passage in 2005 of a set of amendments to 
Japan's Antimonopoly Act that strengthened the investigatory and 
punitive powers of the JFTC.  (ECON: Chris Wurzel) 
 
11.  (U) Consulate Fukuoka Resumes Visa Services 
------------------------------ 
 
On May 9, the U.S. Consulate in Fukuoka began accepting non- 
immigrant visa applications for the first time since 1995. 
The resumption of visa services in Fukuoka follows the decision 
last year to begin processing visa applications in Sapporo, and 
is a part of the USG's efforts to facilitate travel to the U.S. 
Interviews will be conducted two to four days per month, 
depending on demand, and post anticipates approximately 3,500 
visa applicants annually. 
 
The GOJ frequently urges the USG to expand its visa services in 
Japan as part of the two countries' regulatory reform dialogue. 
In addition, local leaders and organizations in the Kyushu- 
Yamaguchi region have long been interested in reducing the amount 
of time and expense which the area's applicants have had to incur 
in order to apply for visas at other Japan posts. 
 
Local media coverage of the resumption of services has been 
extensive and highly favorable, and post's contacts are extremely 
pleased that the USG is now offering more convenient services to 
visa applicants in Kyushu and Western Honshu. (Fukuoka:  Jim 
Crow) 
 
12.  (SBU) Fidelity to Sell Investment Trusts at Post Offices 
------------------------------ 
 
Starting on June 11, Fidelity International will begin selling 
investment trusts at post office branches throughout Japan. 
Fidelity will thus become the second U.S. company to have such a 
tie up with Japan Post. 
 
A contact at Fidelity told us that Japan Post had selected their 
investment trust because of its strong track record and its 
expected appeal for Japan Post's banking customers, who are known 
for their conservatism. 
 
The product Fidelity will sell through the post offices will 
offer both income through distributions and long-term growth. 
(ECON: Marc Dillard) 
 
13.  (U) Keidanren Urges Japan to Stop Cutting Aid 
------------------------------ 
 
On May 15, the Japan Business Federation (Keidanren) urged the 
Government of Japan to halt a multi-year trend of budget cuts for 
official development assistance (ODA). 
 
Keidanren argued that ODA should be more effectively used, 
particularly in the areas of energy security, environmental 
issues, assistance to African countries, and the promotion of 
economic partnership agreements. 
 
Noting its high expectations for reform of the Japan 
International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and the Japan Bank for 
International Cooperation (JBIC), which is slated for 2008, 
Keidanren expressed regret that untied loans have become the norm 
in Japanese concessional lending, a development which discourages 
private sector involvement. 
 
To make ODA programs more effective, Keidanren recommended making 
the program more commercially attractive so that the private 
sector's expertise could be brought to bear in developing 
countries. 
 
Keidanren also urged Japan to shorten the programs' decision 
 
TOKYO 00002251  005 OF 008 
 
 
making process, and to establish US dollar and local currency 
loans. (ECON:  Eriko Marks) 
 
14.  (SBU) GOJ-Funded Tuna Institute's Kick-Off Conference Packed 
to the Gills 
------------ 
 
At a kick-off conference of a GOJ-funded Tuna Institute on April 
26, Fisheries Agency of Japan (FAJ) officials and researchers 
stressed Japan's determination to lead the world in tuna issues 
from fishing techniques to stock management. 
 
Attended by over 500 people from industry, government, academia 
and the general public, the conference featured the latest 
farming R&D projects and detailed the 14-fold increase in global 
tuna consumption for the past century. 
 
With an annual GOJ budget of 2.6 billion yen ($21 million) and 
about 100 staff members, the Tuna Institute is a "virtual" 
organization centered in the FAJ-sponsored Fisheries Research 
Agency in Yokohama but drawing contributions from researchers all 
over Japan. 
 
Its current focus is Bluefin tuna, the most sought-after and 
costly tuna species, in the Pacific as the fish spawn and grow up 
mostly in Japan's EEZ.  Research results will be reflected in 
FAJ's tuna policy and international negotiations.  (EST:  Keiko 
Kandachi/Bart Cobbs) 
 
15.  (SBU) Sarkozy Win Spurs Interest in French Economic and 
Family Policies 
--------------- 
 
Nicolas Sarkozy's victory over Socialist Segolene Royal in the 
French presidential election has generated considerable interest 
in the Japanese press over questions of economic policy. 
 
Interest has run particularly strongly in France's relatively 
high birth rate, which is at a 30-year high (just exceeding two 
children per woman) versus Japan's fertility rate, which dropped 
to 1.26 per woman in 2005. 
 
Newspaper articles and television shows have highlighted aspects 
of the French system, including support payments scaled to the 
number of children a family has, flexible childcare arrangements, 
and France's 35-hour workweek.  (ECON: Marc Dillard) 
 
16.  (U) New Center Established to Boost Service Sector 
Productivity 
------------ 
 
On May 10, the Services Industry Productivity Conference (SIPC) 
was established to raise the productivity of the services sector 
through collaboration between the government, industry and 
academia, an idea promoted by METI's Commerce and Information 
Policy Bureau. 
 
The SIPC is a membership organization, headed by Ushio Inc. 
Chairman and former CEFP member Jiro Ushio, who is also the 
Chairman of the Japan Productivity Center for Socio-Economic 
Development (JPC-SED). 
 
The Conference's administrative work will be handled by the JPC- 
SED, which is a non-profit and non-governmental organization. The 
SIPC has 19 "founding promoters," including 14 businessmen and 
five academics. It expects that service sector companies, 
industry organizations, services divisions of manufacturing 
companies, researchers, consultants, and individuals will be the 
audience for its services. The SIPC plans to hold seminars and 
issue bulletins and annual reports. 
 
The SIPC plans to focus on four areas: (1) Encouraging services 
innovation by using scientific and engineered approaches (e.g., 
collecting and analyzing best practices); (2) Improving the 
quality of services and fostering human resources (e.g., 
introducing voluntary certification and third-party certification 
schemes); (3) Improving infrastructure of the services sector 
(e.g., improving government statistics on the services sector), 
and (4) Conducting productivity improvement campaigns (e.g., 
creating awards and holding symposiums).  (FINATT:  Maureen 
Grewe) 
 
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17.  (SBU) Government Split Over Foreign Trainee Labor 
------------------------------ 
 
The Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare (MHLW), the Ministry 
of Economy, Trade, and Industry (METI), and the Ministry of 
Justice (MOJ) have offered competing proposals on revising rules 
which allow overseas "trainees" to work in Japanese companies for 
up to three years. 
 
MHLW has formulated plans to protect those workers' rights, while 
METI is urging that more trainees be allowed entry into Japan to 
address labor shortages. 
 
Meanwhile, Minister of Justice Nagase has weighed in with a 
proposal to develop a short-term working visa. 
 
The current system, under which foreigners train for a year and 
then work for up to two more years to gain practical experience, 
is widely seen as a temporary laborer program, and there have 
been complaints that trainees are treated unfairly. 
 
Under the current legislation, trainees are not recognized 
legally as workers, thus exempting them from some regulations 
under Japanese labor law, such as the minimum wage.  (ECON: Marc 
Dillard) 
 
18.  (SBU) Central Japan's Latin American Workforce Swells 
------------------------------ 
 
METI estimates that Brazilian and Peruvian nationals now account 
for up to 3.8% of the total manufacturing workforce in Central 
Japan. 
 
In a report issued this week, the Chubu (Central Japan) METI 
Bureau noted that since the wage gap between Japanese and Latin 
American workers has decreased significantly in recent years, the 
regional labor shortage in the booming manufacturing sector, 
rather than cost savings, is driving the increasing demand for 
foreign labor. 
 
Anecdotally, industry contacts continue to tell us that beyond 
the South Americans mentioned in the study, area manufacturers 
are also relying more and more on gray market Chinese citizens in 
Japan on technical intern visas but used as ordinary factory 
labor.  Thus the total foreign percentage of the workforce is 
actually higher than reckoned by METI. 
 
The METI report stressed the social issues, particularly for 
workers' children, that have arisen as a result of the 159,000 
Brazilians (over half of all Brazilians in Japan) and 18,000 
Peruvians concentrated in the four Central Japan prefectures 
centered on Nagoya. 
 
The report noted that employers, local governments, and NPOs are 
becoming more engaged in the issue. Local government officials 
we've spoken with throughout the region have told us of their 
increasing efforts and resources to deal with these issues. 
(Nagoya: Tamiki Mizuno) 
 
19.  (SBU) KIAC Seeks Restoration of U.S. Routes and Increased 
Cargo Capacity 
-------------- 
 
Kansai International Airport Co. (KIAC) President Atsushi 
Murayama announced in late April that the airport would seek to 
restore the U.S. routes it has recently lost and make a major 
capital investment in the KIX cargo zone in order to meet its 
revenue goal for 2007. 
 
In 2006, KIAC turned a profit due to cost-cutting measures, but 
was unable to reach its target of 119,000 annual flights. 
Murayama blamed a decrease in large aircraft business due to 
higher fuel costs and the decision of several carriers to cease 
operating flights to the United States from the Kansai.  KIAC's 
flight target is 129,000.  Murayama has stated publicly that if 
the airport misses this target, he will step down from the helm. 
In 2007, KIAC will make a 65.5 billion yen ($546 million) capital 
investment to expand the number of plane parking spots in KIX's 
air cargo zone.  Officials were mum on their forecast of 
potential demand for increased cargo service at KIX, however. 
 
TOKYO 00002251  007 OF 008 
 
 
(Osaka-Kobe: Phil Cummings/Naomi Shibui) 
 
20.  (U) 787 Production Enters New Phase 
------------------------------ 
 
Boeing's 787 Dreamliner project reached a significant milestone 
with the May 16 delivery of the final major structure for the 
first assembly of the aircraft in Everett, Washington. 
The integrated mid-body fuselage consists of a forward fuselage 
section made by Kawasaki Heavy Industries in Nagoya; the center 
wheel well and center wing tank, made by KHI and Fuji Heavy 
Industries in Nagoya; and center fuselage sections made by Alenia 
Aeronautica in Italy -- all of which were flown to Charleston, 
South Caroline, where they were joined by Global Aeronautica. 
The 84 ft. long, 19 ft. diameter fuselage was then flown to 
Everett, where it arrived one day after a pair of composite wings 
built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in Nagoya. 
 
Final assembly of the first 787 is to begin shortly, with roll- 
out reportedly scheduled for early July and delivery to ANA of 
the first 787 for passenger use slated for May 2008.  In recent 
days, top Boeing and ANA executives have repeatedly stressed to 
the media that the 787 remains on schedule. 
The Boeing photo shows the 787 wings being unloaded May 15 in 
Everett. (Nagoya:  Dan Rochman) 
 
21.  (U) New Train-Bus Hybrids for JR Hokkaido 
------------------------------ 
 
Hokkaido's rural railroads have become increasingly unprofitable 
as their passenger levels fall because of population decline. 
Japan Railways Hokkaido (JR Hokkaido) has developed the world's 
first operational train-bus hybrid called the Dual Mode Vehicle 
(DMV) in an ambitious attempt to create a new cost-effective 
means of rural transportation. The DMV is generating a great deal 
of interest both inside and outside of Hokkaido. Whether it will 
be a commercial success, however, remains to be seen. For more 
information, see Sapporo 0024.    (Sapporo: Ian Hillman/Yumi 
Baba) 
 
22.  (SBU) Toyota Hybrid and U.S. Sales Plans 
------------------------------ 
 
On May 9, we toured the Toyota Motomachi automobile manufacturing 
plant near Nagoya with a group of Industrial College of the Armed 
Forces students.  In operation since 1959, the plant produces 
12,000 vehicles a month of eight models for the Japanese market 
on one production line.  We were treated to a view of the famous 
welding robots performing their mechanical dance; 95 percent of 
all the body welds are automated, according to the plant 
representative. 
 
Hybrid production is very much on Toyota's mind for the United 
States.  A plant official said Toyota sold 240,000 hybrids in the 
United States in 2006.  Toyota hopes hybrids will be 10 percent 
of their U.S. sales in the next few years.  Although the 
official's remarks suggested the going might be getting tougher 
for hybrids.  He noted that it is not clear that customers will 
continue to pay the premium for the more costly hybrid power 
train and that strong sales would most likely depend on gas 
prices. 
 
Toyota has introduced hybrids in Japan, but they are not selling 
comparably as well as in the United States.  Some 72,000 hybrid 
vehicles were sold in Japan in 2006.  Toyota's representative 
noted that mini-cars in Japan compete with hybrids for sales as 
their fuel efficiency is just as good. 
 
Toyota plans to increase the percentage of U.S. built vehicles in 
their sales in the United States.  It used to be 65 percent, but 
has now slipped to 55 percent and Toyota would like to increase 
it back to 60-65 percent.  The Toyota representative anticipates 
this will be achieved around 2010 when Toyota's new Texas plant 
is fully operating and the plant being built in Mississippi comes 
on line. 
 
Toyota coincidently released its year-end financial results on 
May 9, which reported record high revenues and profits.  Globally, 
vehicle sales reached 8.52 million units, an increase of 550,000 
units over the last fiscal year.  For more information, click 
here.  (ECON: Josh Handler) 
 
TOKYO 00002251  008 OF 008 
 
 
 
23.  (SBU) Yamazaki Mazak Machine Tools: Export Controls and 
Japan's Demographic Crisis 
-------------------------- 
 
A company spokesman for world leader in machine tools production 
Yamazaki Mazak Corp. told us that the company is concerned about 
unauthorized re-exports of its precision machine tools during a 
tour of a Mazak machine tool plant near Nagoya last week. 
Mazak is also working hard to invent new procedures and machines, 
including the award winning e-Bot Cell 720 shown below, to 
counter the shortages of skilled labor in the area. 
 
Mazak's efforts give insights into how Japan's manufacturing 
sector is addressing Japan's demographic challenge.  A cable on 
the visit is to follow shortly.  (ECON: Josh Handler) 
 
24.  (U) U.S. and Japanese IT Firms Consortium to sell Linux 
Systems in Japan 
---------------- 
 
In response to recently adopted GOJ government procurement 
guidelines which give preference to open source systems, a group 
of major U.S. and Japanese IT firms have formed a consortium to 
produce servers and software running an identical form of Linux 
operating system.  The consortium includes Oracle, IBM, Hewlett- 
Packard, Dell, NEC, Hitachi, and NTT Data.  Oracle will manage 
the maintenance of the operating system thus lowering costs for 
those are considering switching to Linux. 
 
The Communications Ministry is concerned about over-reliance on 
Microsoft Windows systems and claims that the fact that the 
Windows' source code is not open might limit freedom in 
developing new systems.  According to Nikkei, currently, 78 
percent of the servers in Japan run Microsoft Windows, compared 
to 14 percent that run Linux. (ECON:  Marilyn Ereshefsky) 
 
25.  (U) Japanese MLB Update 
---------------------------- 
 
Right-handed starter Daisuke Matsuzaka pitched the first complete 
game for the Boston Red Sox all season, a dominating 7-1 six- 
hitter against the Detroit Tigers on May 15.  Left-handed 
reliever Hideki Okajima extended his streak of scoreless 
appearances to 17 games, as his earned run average plunged to 
0.48. 
 
Left-handed starter, Kei Igawa, demoted by the New York Yankees 
last week, showed up on the roster of the Tampa Yankees of the 
Florida State League, but has so far not made an appearance.  We 
have no indication if NHK will begin to broadcast his Single A 
league games in Japan.   (ECON:  Nicholas Hill) 
SCHIEFFER