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Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry

Yasutoshi Nishimura, who was Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry from 10 August 2022 until 14 December 2023[1][2]

The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (経済産業省, Keizai-sangyō-shō), METI for short, is a ministry of the Government of Japan. It was created by the 2001 Central Government Reform when the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) merged with agencies from other ministries related to economic activities, such as the Economic Planning Agency.

METI has jurisdiction over a broad policy area, containing Japan's industrial/trade policies, energy security, control of arms exports, "Cool Japan", etc.

The Ministry has its headquarters in Kasumigaseki, Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo. Its current head is Ken Saitō, who was appointed minister by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in 14 December 2023.

Overview

The mission stipulated in Article 3 of the Act for the Establishment of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (Act No. 99 of 1999) is to "enhance the economic vitality of the private sector and develop economic and industrial development centered on the smooth development of foreign economic relations, as well as the stable and efficient development of mineral and energy resources."[3] In order to achieve the goal of ensuring supply, it has jurisdiction over macroeconomic policies, industrial policies, trade policies, trade control operations, industrial technology policies, distribution policies, and energy policies.

Some middle-ranking bureaucrats selected from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry are based in the Japan External Trade Organization in foreign countries and are engaged in various research work as industrial investigators.

Since many of the industrial policies initiated by METI, such as the nuclear fuel cycle program and the 5th generation computer program and software development program ("Sigma Plan"), have failed, the ministry is not highly regarded or trusted in Japan in the 21st century.[4]

History

The Ministry's predecessor, the Ministry of International Trade and Industry, was in operation from 25 May 1949 to 5 January 2001. However, due to the reorganisation of central government ministries and agencies on 6 January 2001, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry was established by reorganising and renaming the Ministry of International Trade and Industry.

In the past, the Ministry of International Trade and Industry was regarded as the driving force behind high economic growth as the "Economic General Staff Headquarters", the general control centre of the Japanese economy or Japan Inc.

It made full use of the licences and administrative guidance that it possessed, and was mainly in charge of industrial policy, using allocated loans (FILP) from government-affiliated financial institutions, budget allowances, and subsidies as sources of power. In addition, it held a wide range of authority in areas such as science and technology research and development, trade, patents, energy policy, and small and medium enterprise policy according to technological innovation. It was also involved in monetary policy.

However, after Japan's period of high economic growth ended, one-off policy ideas were inevitably created because, despite having a wide range of authority, they were unable to administer licensing and subsidies compared to other ministries and agencies such as "operational government agencies", it became the main one. Ad balloons for various new policies are launched around May and June every year. For this reason, while the Ministry of Finance is still a "general government agency" that is widely involved in decision-making through fiscal policy, budget assessments, and taxation, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry is an "administrative department store" that has jurisdiction over most industries. It is described as a "limited general government office".

Structure

METI is organized into the following bureaus, offices, departments and 3 agencies (Agency for Natural Resources and Energy, Small and Medium Enterprise Agency, Japan Patent Office):

List of ministers

Controversial circumstance

In July 2019, restrictions were taken on the export of semiconductor components without any consultation with South Korea.[5][6]

Footnotes

  1. ^ "NISHIMURA Yasutoshi." Tokyo: Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. Retrieved (19 September 2022) from https://www.meti.go.jp/english/aboutmeti/profiles/individual/aMinister.html.
  2. ^ ""SAITO Ken", Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry". Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  3. ^ Act for the Establishment of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (trans.) (Act No. 99 of 1999). Tokyo: National Diet. Retrieved from https://elaws.e-gov.go.jp/document?lawid=411AC0000000099_20220401_502AC0000000049&keyword=%E7%B5%8C%E6%B8%88%E7%94%A3%E6%A5%AD%E7%9C%81%E8%A8%AD%E7%BD%AE%E6%B3%95
  4. ^ "経産省、続発するスキャンダルより大きな問題は「産業政策の失敗続き」". Newsweek日本版 (in Japanese). 2021-07-14. Retrieved 2023-02-04.
  5. ^ Ju-min Park (31 July 2019). "South Korean chip giants face 'strangling' from Japanese export curbs". Reuters.
  6. ^ "Japan and South Korea exchange barbs at WTO meeting over trade dispute". South China Morning Post. Reuters. 25 July 2019.

External links

35°40′19″N 139°45′04″E / 35.672°N 139.751°E / 35.672; 139.751