On February 15, the government disclosed
the personal assets of the cabinet ministers of the Aso administration, who
were appointed on December 26, 2012, and their political appointee subordinates
as well as their spouses and dependent children*. This is conducted under a longstanding
cabinet decision that requires them to make such public disclosure when they
assume and leave office. These disclosures are intended to prevent these
political appointees from profiting from their terms in office. So, you were a
reporter, you would wait until a political appointee leaves office, and then
file a report if and only if you see any significant changes in the financial
status of said appointee, right?
But you won’t, will you? Instead, you will
file a report when they assume office, and your attention will be focused on
who has the most assets (and if you’re really creative, who has the least) and
whether this cabinet is worth more than the last one. You’ll do that not
because that has anything to do with the “value” of that cabinet and its
components but because that’s what the public is fascinated with and because
that’s what every other reporter on the cabinet beat is writing about. But when
they leave office…fuggidaboutit.
And their upfront efforts are nothing to
throw Pulitzers at, either. Some media reports at least have the decency to
mention that there’s no way to figure out what shares in privately held
companies are worth, but they never bother to mention that the real value of real
estate holdings is vastly underestimated even though most of it is relatively
easy to figure out. More specifically, real estate is disclosed at the actual
tax base, which is 1/3rd of the notional tax base for land (and as low as 1/6
for housing up to 200 m2*), which in turn is only 70% of the publicly assessed market value.
Buildings get lesser discounts off the notional value of up to 2/3rds off
current value minus notional depreciation. So, if you believe that the current
value of real estate is what the disclosures say it is, well, I have a bridge
in New York that you can afford.
I’m not saying that the media should do the arithmetic. It’s just that
they satisfy the prurient interests of the public in a half-assed way and get
paid for it without doing the homework. And that pisses me off mightily.
Speaking of prurient interests, though,
there is a truly bizarre factoid lurking in the disclosures. The 70 year-old
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Aso claims two children as
dependents. Now he’s a Catholic—a surprisingly large number of Japanese prime
ministers are Christians—and the two children are listed as “oldest son” and “oldest
daughter”, and the son has a golf club membership—yes, you have to disclose that,
too—and a car, so I don’t think Aso is pulling a Rupert Murdoch/Andres
Segovia here. Is that any of our business? No, but it will be if one of them
decides to seek public office. I mean, it’s okay for one of my… but let’s not
go there.**
* Yes, there’s a very serious human rights issue here.
But it gains little traction here.
** In case you wondered, I have been drinking.
* Added for clarification.
* Added for clarification.
2 comments:
Are there any other Christians in the Abe Cabinet?
Dunno, Armchair. The media doesn't care much about that stuff. But it's public knowledge that Shigeru Ishiba, the top LDP official, who lost to Abe in the LDP leadership runoff election, is a Christian.
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