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Japan's top business lobby pledges better China ties

Aepsilons

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Onto some business news....




The incoming head of Japan's top business lobby wants to play a greater role in helping Tokyo to improve its badly-frayed ties with China, according to interviews published Tuesday.

Sadayuki Sakakibara, who will become the chairman of Keidanren -- the Japan Business Federation later Tuesday -- said the business sector could share environmental technologies to help foster better Japan-China relations.

The 71-year-old chairman of synthetic materials maker Toray said Japan Inc's environmental technologies could help smooth over tense diplomatic ties with its biggest trade partner.

"China really wants (Japanese environmental technologies)," he said, according to the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper.

"Efforts to improve ties with China and South Korea are among our top priorities," he said, according to the Yomiuri.

Japan's relations with China and South Korea have been badly strained over emotional territorial disputes and bitter memories of Japanese soldiers' violence in Asia before and during World War II.

Those already-chilly diplomatic relationships got colder after the nationalist Shinzo Abe came to power in 2012.

Big business has generally welcomed Abe, with his domestic emphasis on trying to kickstart Japan's slumbering economy.

Keidanren has been a traditional supporter of his long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

But relations hit a snag after the organisation's outgoing chief Hiromasa Yonekura criticised Abe's unconventional and aggressive monetary policies as "reckless," shortly before the LDP leader took office in late 2012.

Abe's economic programmes remain controversial, not least because they have added yet more debt onto Japan's staggering pile of IOUs.

However, they have markedly perked up corporate confidence and consumption, driven up Japanese shares and lowered the value of the yen, giving a boost to exporters.

A package of reforms to areas such as employment law and aimed at making life easier for the business community is also expected.

Sakakibara reiterated the lobbying group's call to cut the corporate tax rate to 25 percent, from the top effective rate of 35.64 percent in metropolitan Tokyo, to spur growth, according to the Nikkei.

And he voiced support for tentative government plans to raise consumption tax to 10 percent in October 2015, as scheduled, major media said.

The tax went up from five percent to eight percent in April, to cheers from economists who said it was desperately needed if Japan was to get its fiscal house in order.

Abe has given himself until the end of this year to decide whether to raise the tax to 10 percent.



Japan's top business lobby pledges better China ties - Yahoo Finance UK
 
as normally, chinese could misunderstand that China is center of the world to day, :close_tema:
 
Sure, we squabble on the table, while swap the currency under the table.

It is the Yankees who are going to get their eyes popped out at the end. :haha:
 
Onto some business news....




The incoming head of Japan's top business lobby wants to play a greater role in helping Tokyo to improve its badly-frayed ties with China, according to interviews published Tuesday.

Sadayuki Sakakibara, who will become the chairman of Keidanren -- the Japan Business Federation later Tuesday -- said the business sector could share environmental technologies to help foster better Japan-China relations.

The 71-year-old chairman of synthetic materials maker Toray said Japan Inc's environmental technologies could help smooth over tense diplomatic ties with its biggest trade partner.

"China really wants (Japanese environmental technologies)," he said, according to the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper.

"Efforts to improve ties with China and South Korea are among our top priorities," he said, according to the Yomiuri.

Japan's relations with China and South Korea have been badly strained over emotional territorial disputes and bitter memories of Japanese soldiers' violence in Asia before and during World War II.

Those already-chilly diplomatic relationships got colder after the nationalist Shinzo Abe came to power in 2012.

Big business has generally welcomed Abe, with his domestic emphasis on trying to kickstart Japan's slumbering economy.

Keidanren has been a traditional supporter of his long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

But relations hit a snag after the organisation's outgoing chief Hiromasa Yonekura criticised Abe's unconventional and aggressive monetary policies as "reckless," shortly before the LDP leader took office in late 2012.

Abe's economic programmes remain controversial, not least because they have added yet more debt onto Japan's staggering pile of IOUs.

However, they have markedly perked up corporate confidence and consumption, driven up Japanese shares and lowered the value of the yen, giving a boost to exporters.

A package of reforms to areas such as employment law and aimed at making life easier for the business community is also expected.

Sakakibara reiterated the lobbying group's call to cut the corporate tax rate to 25 percent, from the top effective rate of 35.64 percent in metropolitan Tokyo, to spur growth, according to the Nikkei.

And he voiced support for tentative government plans to raise consumption tax to 10 percent in October 2015, as scheduled, major media said.

The tax went up from five percent to eight percent in April, to cheers from economists who said it was desperately needed if Japan was to get its fiscal house in order.

Abe has given himself until the end of this year to decide whether to raise the tax to 10 percent.



Japan's top business lobby pledges better China ties - Yahoo Finance UK

That's very good. Japan will be very smart to capitalize on the growing economic prowess of China more than any other. I can envision a competition between South Korea and Japan for the Chinese market in the medium-run and the US and others will be left in dust.

Mutual economic leverage can also help solve certain territorial disputes.
 
That's very good. Japan will be very smart to capitalize on the growing economic prowess of China more than any other. I can envision a competition between South Korea and Japan for the Chinese market in the medium-run and the US and others will be left in dust.

Mutual economic leverage can also help solve certain territorial disputes.

If Japan wanna rebuild its military strength, fine. Since it is the US who has wrapped the rope around its neck, not China.

But if Japan wants to cozy up with the US to against China is absolutely unacceptable.
 
If Japan wanna rebuild its military strength, fine. Since it is the US who has wrapped the rope around its neck, not China.

But if Japan wants to cozy up with the US to against China is absolutely unacceptable.

Very true.

I think the only unmovable roadblock between a true China-Japan rapprochement is the presence of the US which is not to protect Japan (because the US soldiers on Japan are trained for assault, not for defense) but to protect the US interests by strangulating China.

I think Japanese political elite know this but their country has long been colonized. Seven years of active colonization and about 60 years of passive colonization is not easy to bear.

I think we need strategic patience. Lot of it.
 
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