How a joke about rice cost a Japan cabinet minister his job – BBC
Source: BBC News
When Japan’s farm minister declared that he never had to buy rice because his supporters give him “plenty” of it as gifts, he hoped to draw laughs.
Instead Taku Eto drew outrage – and enough of it to force him to resign.
Japan is facing its first cost-of-living crisis in decades, which is hitting a beloved staple: rice. The price has more than doubled in the last year, and imported varieties are few and far between.
Eto apologised, saying he had gone “too far” with his comments on Sunday at a local fundraiser. He resigned after opposition parties threatened a no-confidence motion against him.
His ousting deals a fresh blow to Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s minority government, which was already struggling with falling public support.
Rice can be a powerful trigger in Japan, where shortages have caused political upsets before. Riots over the soaring cost of rice even toppled a government in 1918.
So it’s not that surprising that rice prices have a role in Ishiba’s plummeting approval ratings.
“Politicians don’t go to supermarkets to do their grocery shopping so they don’t understand,” 31-year-old Memori Higuchi tells the BBC from her home in Yokohama.
Ms Higuchi is a first-time mother of a seven-month-old. Good food for her postnatal recovery has been crucial, and her daughter will soon start eating solid food.
“I want her to eat well so if prices keep going up, we may have to reduce the amount of rice my husband and I eat.”
It’s a simple issue of supply and demand, agricultural economist Kunio Nishikawa of Ibaraki University says.
But he believes it was caused by a government miscalculation.
Until 1995, the government controlled the amount of rice farmers produced by working closely with agricultural cooperatives. The law was abolished that year but the agriculture ministry continues to publish demand estimates so farmers can avoid producing a glut of rice.
But, Prof Nishikawa says, they got it wrong in 2023 and 2024. They estimated the demand to be 6.8m tonnes, while the actual demand, he adds, was 7.05m tonnes.
Demand for rice went up because of more tourists visiting Japan and a rise in people eating out after the pandemic.
But actual production was even lower than the estimate: 6.61m tonnes, Prof Nishikawa says.
“It is true that the demand for rice jumped, due to several factors – including the fact that rice was relatively affordable compared to other food items and a rise in the number of overseas visitors,” a spokesperson for the agriculture ministry told the BBC.
“The quality of rice wasn’t great due to unusually high temperatures which also resulted in lower rice production.”
Rice farmers have been unable to make enough money for many years, says 59-year-old Kosuke Kasahara, whose family have been in farming for generations.
He explains that it costs approximately 18,500 yen ($125.70; £94.60) to produce 60kg of rice but the cooperative in his area of Niigata on the west coast of Japan offered to buy it last year at 19,000 yen.
“Until three or four years ago, the government would even offer financial incentives to municipalities that agreed to reduce rice production,” he adds.
The ministry spokesperson confirms that the government has offered subsidies to those choosing to produce wheat or soybeans instead of rice.
Meanwhile, younger farmers have been choosing to produce different types of rice that are used for sake, rice crackers or fed to livestock because demand for rice in Japan had been falling until last year.
“I got tired of fighting retailers or restaurants that wanted me to sell rice cheaply for many years,” says Shinya Tabuchi.
But that’s been flipped on its head, with the going rate for 60kg of rice today at 40,000 to 50,000 yen.
While higher prices are bad news for shoppers, it means many struggling farmers will finally be able to make money.
But as the public grew angry with the surge, the government auctioned some of its emergency reserves of rice in March to try to bring prices down.
Many countries have strategic reserves – stockpiles of vital goods – of crude oil or natural gas to prepare for exceptional circumstances. In Asia, many governments also have stockpiles of rice.
In recent years, Japan’s rice stockpile had only been tapped in the wake of natural disasters.
“The government has always told us that they would not release its emergency rice stocks to control the price so we felt betrayed,” Mr Tabuchi says.
Despite the government’s rare decision to release rice, prices have continued to rise.
The cost of rice is also soaring in South East Asia, which accounts for almost 30% of global rice production – economic, political and climate pressures have resulted in shortages in recent years.
In Japan though the issue has become so serious that the country has begun importing rice from South Korea for the first time in a quarter of a century, even though consumers prefer homegrown varieties.
PM Ishiba has also hinted at expanding imports of US rice as his government continues
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