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Troll
03-15-2008, 11:27pm
Under the Futon
The Japanese love affair with cash shows signs of going out of control.
In Japan, cash is truly king. Credit cards are regarded with suspicion; fat wallets are the norm. Banknotes are used even for big transactions. Yet even the Japanese were taken aback by this week's announcement of a massive bust by the tax authorities. Investigators arrested two sisters in the city of Osaka on charges of evading taxes by hoarding the equivalent of $56.4 million in cash.

Hatsue Shimizu, 64, and Yoshiko Ishii, 55, were said to have hidden the money away in Shimizu's garage. Last fall, when tax inspectors first raided the property, they were stunned to find stacks of cardboard boxes (50 in all) stuffed with yen banknotes. The stash is said to have weighed in at around 1,300 pounds. Many of the wads of bills still had the original bank bands around them; some were moldy with age. It took the tax bureau days to count out all of the money.

The two sisters had apparently siphoned off the cash in dribs and drabs from a larger sum ($72.5 million) that they inherited from their father, a real estate magnate, on his death in 2005. Apparently, the women were spooked when one of the banks that held their money went bankrupt a few years back. The reporters who descended on the house where the money had been kept were surprised to discover a modest two-story wooden dwelling with no visible signs of affluence. Neighbors interviewed by the hordes of journalists said that the elder sister had always been conspicuous for her modesty.

The same can't be said of the tax bill the two women will now be facing. Their inheritance should have been taxed at a whopping 50 percent, and the authorities say they can expect to fork out $28 million in back taxes. It's still unclear whether they will be fined as well. That would make this Japan's biggest inheritance-tax scandal ever. The previous record (held by the president of a taxi company who ended up owing the government $24 million) was set just two years back, suggesting that such cases might be growing more frequent.

Prohibitive inheritance-tax rates are certainly the main reason, but other factors might be at fault as well. In the late 1990s, widespread fears about bank stability thanks to a nationwide financial crisis triggered a rush to convert assets to tansu yokin ("drawer deposits").

The amount of cash in circulation has grown from 29 trillion yen in 1988 to 81 trillion in 2008. According to the Bank for International Settlements, that's a much higher ratio of cash to GDP than in any other developed country. As of 2003, Japan's ratio was 14.5 percent, compared to 6.1 percent in the United States and 3.3 percent in Britain. Of course, the continuing popularity of cash might well have something to do with the long years when Japan's interest rate hovered near zero. Not exactly the sort of conditions, in short, to make you run to the bank.

Unfortunately, as Japan's economy once again finds itself teetering on the brink of recession, possible motives for squirreling away cash aren't fading away. Last year it was revealed that the bureaucrats in charge of Japan's national social security system had misplaced or garbled millions of records on the contributions paid by citizens over the decades. Now countless pensioners are worrying that they may end up receiving next to nothing of the retirement funds to which they have a right. Against that backdrop, it's hard to blame ordinary Japanese for thinking that storing money under the futon looks like a much better bet.


http://www.newsweek.com/id/123322?GT1=43001

SevenUp!
03-16-2008, 12:40am
Quite the stash of cash they had:eek:

faithfully
03-16-2008, 1:59am
:funny:some taxing they receive:D

ELEANOR MAW
03-16-2008, 4:20am
Thanks for the Japanese article Andrew, did you know that pugs are one of the most popular pets in Japan.

faithfully
03-16-2008, 4:33am
Thanks for the Japanese article Andrew, did you know that pugs are one of the most popular pets in Japan.

And the most popular Wuggie's in the Shania Forums:funny:

ELEANOR MAW
03-16-2008, 4:42am
Wuggie get everywhere nowadays.

Roger
03-16-2008, 11:32am
Cash is used less and less in Canada. The number of ATMs is dropping. I am old so I still use cash for all purchases of $20 or less. But most people swipe their bank cards or a credit card. It used to be that people with credit cards were not allowed to use express lines in stores because they took too long. Now there is talk of not allowing cash purchasers to use express lines for the same reason. In my opinion, they made cash much harder to use once they did away with the one and two dollar bills. It is much harder to fumble through a large amount of coins to find the right change than to thumb through bills. Also most people find that their coins just build up and and build up to the point where they dump it in jars at home. All of this encourages people to stop using cash.

ELEANOR MAW
03-16-2008, 11:44am
I like to use cash as much as possible Roger, they seem to still take a long time to processes the cash at the tills, they seem to fart about having to put all the different information into their systems and take a long time about it, today I bought a Sunday paper and handed £2 to the woman at the counter and she took ages farting around with the till before a got a small bit of change, sometimes I have said keep the change so I don't hang about, but I have been told that I have to wait for the change as the purchase is not complete until I have been handed the change.

faithfully
03-16-2008, 11:56am
Say the computers that store this financial information crash big style and I mean no back-ups, all the details will be totally lost. No thanks I prefer change unless I'm handling over £10,000:p

SevenUp!
03-16-2008, 12:07pm
Depends on a number of things sometimes....like who's doing the shopping, where they go, what they buy and how much it cost. The vast majority of people who come to my store still use cash and always will, but it's more practical to use a card for bigger purchases like electronic items at other places. We actually prefer cash and won't allow people to use a card for very small purchases as it's quite expensive to operate a machine. Other places are the same. Debit/credit card machines are also connected "on-line" to the banks and if there's ever a problem with that (and there have been) people will have to have cash, so it won't be going out of style anytime soon.

ELEANOR MAW
03-16-2008, 12:07pm
My husband went all the way to Argos to collect something and the shop was shut because they had a fault with their system.

SevenUp!
03-16-2008, 12:11pm
There you go Eleanor....Argos depended too much on "electronic" money and now they're losing business because of it.

ELEANOR MAW
03-16-2008, 12:15pm
So you have Argos's in Canada Robert. Do you have Woolworths?

SevenUp!
03-16-2008, 12:27pm
I've never seen an Argos store here, although they may have such a place in Toronto, or another larger city:dunno:

We did have a Woolworths at one point, this was back in the 1980s but they didn't survive as a simple retail chain. They became a sporting goods store, changing names more than once and are presently operating under the name Foot Locker.

ELEANOR MAW
03-16-2008, 1:35pm
Thanks for the info Robert.

Troll
03-16-2008, 3:37pm
That is interesting Roger