2005 Japanese bridge scandal explained

The was centered around the use of bid-rigging between 47 colluding Japanese firms and Japan Highway Public Corporation (JH) in the granting of contracts to build steel bridges in violation of Japanese competition law.[1] [2] It was the biggest such scandal in the history of the nation up to that point, with an estimated 23.5 billion Japanese yen of unfair gains over fiscal years 2003 and 2004.[3] [4]

Background and history

The scandal is one example of the long-time practice of dango, where construction companies and bureaucrats exchange favors and kickbacks for a mutually beneficial outcome, causing less competition and increased costs for public infrastructure.[5] [4] In this case, former executives of JH had been given jobs in private firms in exchange for unreleased information about JH construction projects,[6] part of a tradition known as .[7] This had an effect on the public purse: an example is where contracts for bridges in Shizuoka Prefecture unfairly awarded in May 2004 increased JH's expenses by 45.7 million yen .[6] The parties involved included major steel companies such as Kobe Steel[8] and Nippon Steel, as well as conglomerates such as Nippon Sharyo and Kawasaki.[9] They were represented by two bodies: A-kai (A association) and K-Kai (K-association), which have reportedly existed since 1960.[1] [4] Businesses in both organizations had successfully netted most of the infrastructure orders between FY2002 and FY2004 put forward by regional bureaus of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT).[10]

Investigation

On 22 May 2005, prosecutors raided the offices of the 47 firms involved, with eight in particular being focused on.[3] Four days later, employees of 11 companies, including the eight previously scrutinized, were arrested.[1] The then-vice president of JH, Michio Usida, was taken into custody on 25 July and fired from his position on 22 August.[6] On 24 March 2006, the Fair Trade Commission of Japan ordered 44 companies to pay over 12.9 billion yen in surcharges to JH and the MLIT.[11]

Aftermath

The Japanese government amended and strengthened anti-bid-rigging laws in light of the scandal as well others around the same time. By 2009, it was determined that many of these measures worked, with a substantial decrease in noncompetitive bidding.[10]

Notes and References

  1. News: 2019-11-11. Bridge bid-rigging rings charged. The Japan Times Online. 16 June 2005. 0447-5763.
  2. News: 2019-11-13. Kobe Steel admits data fraud went on nearly five decades, CEO to quit. Reuters. 6 March 2018. www.reuters.com.
  3. Web site: 2019-11-13. Japan accuses 47 companies of rigging bids. UPI.
  4. Web site: 2019-11-11. Fourteen arrested in Japan's bid-rigging probe . Financial Times.
  5. Web site: 2019-11-11. Enough of make-believe bidding. 7 February 2006. The Japan Times.
  6. Book: Carpenter, S.. Springer. 978-0-230-36371-7. Japan's Nuclear Crisis: The Routes to Responsibility. 2011-12-12.
  7. Web site: 2019-11-14. Collusive ripoff 'from heaven'?. 19 July 2005. The Japan Times.
  8. News: 2019-11-14. Kobe Steel admits data fraud went on nearly five decades, CEO to quit. Reuters. 6 March 2018. www.reuters.com.
  9. Web site: 2019-11-14. The JFTC filed an accusation additionally with Public Prosecutors Office into a bid rigging case concerning steel bridge construction projects ordered by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport : Japan Fair Trade Commission. www.jftc.go.jp.
  10. Web site: Izumi. Junichi. Contracting Procedures of the Japanese Government. unafei.or.jp.
  11. Web site: 2019-11-14. The JFTC surcharged 44 participants in the bid-rigging for steel bridge construction projects : Japan Fair Trade Commission. www.jftc.go.jp.