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WSWS : News
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: Japan
Japans political establishment rocked by pension scandal
By Joe Lopez
31 May 2004
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Over the past month, a scandal over the non-payment of mandatory
pension scheme contributions has forced the resignations of senior
government and political figures. The speed and scope of the crisis
has revealed once again a deep divide between the countrys
political establishment and a majority of the population, particularly
younger layers.
The first major figure to go was Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo
Fukuda, a key political strongman in the Liberal Democratic Party
(LDP) government of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. Fukuda quit
on May 7 to head off demands for the resignation of six other
government ministers who had also been exposed for their non-payment
into the pension scheme.
Fukuda is the son of a former prime minister and one of the
main right-wing ideologues behind Koizumi. He is widely regarded
as the architect of the governments close relations with
the Bush administration, the highly unpopular dispatch of Japanese
troops to Iraq and its drive to amend the countrys constitution
and remilitarise Japan.
When the scandal first erupted in April, Fukada dodged questions
about his own payments by insisting that it was a personal matter.
He later acknowledged that he had failed to make payments over
a three-year period. According to several political commentators,
Fukada resigned to take the heat off the government and has been
privately guaranteed a top ministry following upper house elections,
which are due in July.
The opposition had seized on the scandal as a means of making
political mileage prior to the poll. In a speech on April 24,
leader of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) Naoto Kan demagogically
declared of the three cabinet ministers initially implicated:
They themselves havent paid into the system, so [they
are] asking people to pay higher premiums into the national planthats
a joke. They are three non-payment brothers. There might be a
fourth or fifth non-payment brother.
As it turned out, Kan himself had failed to pay into the scheme
for 10 months in 1996, while he was in charge of the health and
welfare ministry that oversees the pension program. For several
days after Fukada resigned, Kan insisted that he would not follow
suit, even as newspaper headlined declared that he would. On May
10, however, he stepped aside leaving the DPJ in disarray.
The top-level resignations are an indication of the depth of
public hostility over the issue. In the midst of the scandal,
the Koizumi government was attempting to push through new legislation
to finance the seriously under-funded scheme. It has argued that
because of the countrys aging population and shrinking workforce,
pension premiums had to be raised and benefits reduced if the
scheme were to survive.
Currently 13.58 percent of a persons income is paid into
the scheme but, under the legislation, the proportion will rise
in steps to 18.3 percent by 2017. Similarly benefits will be cut
over the same period from the present 59.3 percent of average
annual earnings to 50.2 percent.
The changes are highly unpopular, particularly among young
people who doubt that they will receive proper benefits when they
reach retirement age. The sentiment is compounded by a climate
of fear and uncertainty over the economy and continuing high levels
of unemployment.
To sell the legislation and encourage payment into the pension
scheme, the Koizumi government organised a national television
and poster advertising campaign costing $6.5 million. It employed
a popular Japanese actress Makika Esumi who appeared on television
screens saying: If you pay now youll be paid later.
Do you want to end up crying in the future?
The campaign collapsed when it was revealed that Esumi had
failed to make pension contributions. Public anger grew as it
became apparent that many politicians were also non-payers. The
disparity between the pensions paid to ordinary workers and those
of politicians only added to the bitterness.
Currently people are required to pay pension premiums for at
least 25 years to become eligible for an annual pension of just
797,000 yen. However, politicians receive 4,120,000 yen a year,
more than five times the benefits for a retired worker, after
serving in parliament for 10 years.
To capitalise on the hostility, the DPJ proposed its own alternative.
Rather than raised pension premiums and cut benefits, the opposition
called for a rise in the countrys consumption tax, first
introduced in 1989, from 3 to 5 percent to fund the pension scheme
shortfalls.
The consumption tax, however, is just as hated as the pension
payments. Either way it means increasing the hardship on working
class families, students, the unemployed and the poor in Japan
whose living standards have been decimated after a decade of economic
decline, corporate restructuring and job destruction.
A recent poll by the Kyodo News showed that 67.7 percent
of people were opposed to the pension reform bills following the
revelations of non-payment by many politicians. Some 78.9 percent
of respondents said they want all parliamentarians to disclose
details of their payment of mandatory pension dues.
The amendments were finally passed in the lower house of the
parliament on May 11 and are expected to be presented to the upper
house in early June. But the scandal could claim further political
scalps. The Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper alleges that as many
as 118 lawmakers have failed to make pension contributions.
Prime Minister Koizumi has revealed that he had not paid into
the pension scheme for a total of six years and 11 months, although
this was prior to the pension scheme being made mandatory in 1986.
According to a nationwide survey in the Asahi Shimbun in
mid-May, support for the government slipped by 5 percent over
the previous month to 45 percent.
The opposition is also under pressure. Ichiro Ozawa, who initially
agreed to take over the DPJ leadership, was compelled to decline
the offer after it was discovered that he was also a non-payer.
The top DPJ job was eventually taken over by Katsuya Okada, the
partys general secretary. His main qualification appears
to be that he has religiously made all of his payments into the
pension scheme.
Commenting on the sensitive character of the issue, Naohiro
Yashiro, president of the Japan Centre for Economic Research,
told the Guardian that the scheme was a dinosaur. [W]e
cant afford it now; we cant feed the dinosaur any
more. Younger generations will sooner or later launch a coup detat
because they cannot bear the increasing burden. We dont
know when that will happen, but this is a time-bomb that is sure
to explode.
The scandal is a symptom of broader dissatisfaction being fueled
not only by economic uncertainty, but also by hostility to reemerging
Japanese militarism. A series of polls have registered the opposition
of a majority to the dispatch of Japanese troops to Iraq. This
hostility to the government, however, has not translated into
support for opposition parties and politicians whose policies
are not fundamentally different.
The latest national elections last November continued the trend
of falling voter participation and support for independents. Voter
turnout dropped by nearly 3 percent from the 2000 election to
60 percent last year. While the DPJ made some gains at the expense
of the ruling LDP and its allies, the current scandal has undermined
its support. The Social Democratic Party and Communist Party both
lost seats.
A similar result is likely in the forthcoming upper house election.
With no other alternative, many people will simply not bother
to vote at all.
See Also:
Japanese parliament ratifies
troop deployment for Iraq
[7 February 2004]
Japan stakes its claim to
Iraqi oil and gas
[26 January 2004]
Japanese government
holds power, but with reduced majority
[18 November 2003]
Why Junichiro Koizumi
is being retained as Japanese leader
[20 September 2003]
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