Sushi and the yakuza

A fascinating story from the August 15th edition of the Far Eastern Economic Review on the smuggling of seafood from Russia to Japan, controlled mainly by the Japanese yakuza and the Russian mafia. According to the Japan Fisheries Association, the illegal trade pulls in roughly $1.2 billion (USD) a year.

Because so much fish is being caught and sold within Japan, there are environmental concerns at stake:

[U]ncontrolled and unsupervised fishing is causing immense environmental damage in these fragile northern waters, threatening to wipe out whole species of fish. […] “We have to think about the amount of sushi being eaten,” says Isamu Abe, a senior official at the Japanese Fisheries Association in Tokyo, one of the most powerful players in the global seafood trade. “It can’t go on like this. It shouldn’t.”

In addition to organized crime, it should come as no surprise to anyone following this year’s myriad corporate scandals involving Japanese food companies (Snow Brand Foods and Nippon Ham are just two such examples) that large Japanese corporations are being implicated in the fish smuggling business as well:

Although foreign governments have long pushed Tokyo to crack down on this trade, a number of factors have prompted successive Japanese governments to drag their feet. To begin with, illegal imports suppress retail prices in Japan by almost a third–no small matter in the world’s costliest nation. Also, some of Japan’s biggest companies have profited from illegal fishing. In 1999, for instance, the giant trading firm Mitsubishi Corp.–which accounts for 30% of all Japanese tuna imports–publicly admitted handling illegally caught tuna.

The article also poignantly examines the effects any cleanup of the illegal fishing trade would have on Hokkaido.

New money, but same old same old?

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Last week the Japanese government and the Bank of Japan announced that it would introduce three new currency bills into circulation in fiscal year 2004. The new 1,000-, 5,000-, and 10,000-yen bills are the first new currency designs in roughly 20 years.

Ostensibly the bills are being introduced in an effort to thwart counterfeiting, and will, according to Dow Jones, make use of state of the art printing techniques such as “holograms, advanced bar-coding and pearl ink – used to print semitransparent patterns that shift when viewed from different angles” to foil would-be counterfeiters.

There can be no denying as well that the government hopes the new issuance might give Japan’s moribund economy a shot in the arm. From a Daily Yomiuri article,

The government and central bank announcement raised expectations it would have a positive impact on the economy, since vending machines, bank ATMs, ticket machines and other machines that accept banknotes must be modified to handle the new bills, thus leading to more business.

Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute Inc. estimates that about 960 billion yen will be spent in the coming two years on such upgrades, pushing up the gross domestic product by about 0.1 percent.

Indeed, Finance Minister Masajuro Shiokawa was quoted as saying the new bills would “brighten the mood” among Japanese consumers. Whatever boost does result, it will not come cheaply. From a sampling in the Daily Yomiuri article of various costs involved, printing the actual yen notes will cost 317 billion yen; modifying ATM machines will cost 330 billion yen; and upgrading vending machines will run about 312 billion yen.

An intriguing angle to the story regards the personages chosen to grace the new 1,000- and 5,000-yen notes, which will feature Hideo Noguchi and Ichiyo Higuchi respectively. Noguchi was a microbiologist who isolated the cause of syphilis. Higuchi, shown in the image accompanying this post in a prototype of the 5,000 bill, was a Meiji-era novelist and poet who died of tuberculosis at only 24 years of age. She will be the first woman to grace the front of a Japanese banknote.

The Asahi Shimbun recently delved into the irony of choosing these two figures to grace the new money, given that both came from poverty-stricken backgrounds where by necessity they piled up many debts. Regarding Higuchi, “[i]n her desperate quest for money, she made requests for loans even to people she was not acquainted with.” According to Asahi’s article, Noguchi does’t come off much better: “[He] was loose with money. He would ask his friends and relatives for loans, spend the money quickly and go back to them for more, apparently with no intention of paying them back.”

Naturally the goverment spun the choice of these two a different way. According to Finance Minister Shiokawa, Higuchi and Noguchi were chosen out of consideration for gender equality, “as pioneers of modernization” and because they had “difficult-to-counterfeit faces.”

The 10,000-yen note, though part of the anti-forgery printing plans, will not be getting a new personage gracing its front. Speculates the Asahi Shimbun,

What is a bit worrisome is that the portrait of Yukichi Fukuzawa, a prominent author and educator of the Meiji Era (1868-1912), will be retained on the 10,000-yen bill, although the bill will be redesigned like the notes of lower denominations. The retention of Fukuzawa, who founded Keio University, could feed speculation that it may have resulted from close ties between two Keio alumni – Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and Finance Minister Masajuro Shiokawa.

Japan’s uyoku trucks

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An interesting story at the New York Times about the various right-wing (or uyoku in Japanese) sound trucks that ply their message at near-deafening levels in the streets of Tokyo (and I’m assuming, in other major Japanese cities as well). The article puts forth the suspicion on the
part of some that the groups that these trucks belong to, which appear so fringe and dismissed, actually enjoy quite cozy relations with the police, and perhaps with the ruling Liberal Democratic Party as well.

Former far-rightists, retired policemen and historians say […] that they are not just noisy pressure groups. These observers contend that many of the nationalists disturb the peace and intimidate people freely because of their deep ties to the country’s conservative political elite.

Those who have studied them say that they are useful in bullying opponents of the long-governing, and conservative, Liberal Democratic Party and that many of them are actually members of criminal gangs that use their influence and protection to practice extortion.