His company's turnover and staff numbers have been ravaged by a decade of economic pain, his modest stock holdings decimated, but builder Kishiro Sone is convinced there can be no retreat from reform.
"Business has dropped like a stone. I used to have six or seven employees and now I have two ... Turnover is perhaps a third of what it once was," said the 72-year-old construction firm manager, sipping coffee in his tiny Tokyo office.
In Tsukiji, a stone's throw from the bustle of Tokyo's massive fish market, Sone explained how times have changed for the house construction business his grandfather started.
Times may be about to change for the worse again if Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi presses ahead with a strict new stance on banks' huge bad-loan portfolios, possibly creating a surge in bankruptcies and unemployment.
Sone has kept going until now partly thanks to low overheads. Like many small businessmen in Tokyo, he lives in a flat above the office. Across the narrow street is a small workshop that doubles as a garage at night.
In the boom years of the 1980s, Sone took on casual labourers to cope with the demand for new houses, as residents of central Tokyo rushed to sell their suddenly valuable land and move out to the suburbs.
Building workers in their distinctive wide-bottomed trousers and split-toed shoes were so common a sight they sparked fashion trends as far away as Europe.
Nowadays most of Sone's work is renovation, and there is just enough of it to keep his two staff occupied.
Koizumi's reforms are likely to make things tougher in the short term for builders like Sone, who comprise around 10 percent of the working population, but he still backs them to the hilt.
"I agree with structural reform. Something has to be done, because people are so afraid for the future they won't spend any money," Sone said.
He blames Japan's banks for creating the country's economic woes, cringing at the thought of more public money being pumped into them, a proposal that new financial tsar Heizo Takenaka is said to favour.
"Spending tax money on them feels like a contradiction. It was bank executives who created the bubble by getting involved in speculation," he said.
Despite his shrinking business, Sone counts himself among the luckier ones, thanks to strict family warnings against borrowing money.
"You could call it cowardice, but it turned out for the best. I know a lot of people who borrowed vast sums of money and now can't repay it," he said.
As president of a 450-member Tokyo trade association for small builders, he is constantly aware of their problems.
Despite his tumbling income and the slide in Tokyo share prices, Sone is upbeat.
"It's a question of attitude," he said.
"I suppose falling share prices will increase banks' losses, but I don't see why they should affect ordinary people."
The Central Weather Administration (CWA) yesterday said it expected to issue a sea warning for Typhoon Fung-Wong tomorrow, which it said would possibly make landfall near central Taiwan. As of 2am yesterday, Fung-Wong was about 1,760km southeast of Oluanpi (鵝鑾鼻), Taiwan’s southernmost point, moving west-northwest at 26kph. It is forecast to reach Luzon in the northern Philippines by tomorrow, the CWA said. After entering the South China Sea, Typhoon Fung-Wong is likely to turn northward toward Taiwan, CWA forecaster Chang Chun-yao (張峻堯) said, adding that it would likely make landfall near central Taiwan. The CWA expects to issue a land
Taiwan’s exports soared to an all-time high of US$61.8 billion last month, surging 49.7 percent from a year earlier, as the global frenzy for artificial intelligence (AI) applications and new consumer electronics powered shipments of high-tech goods, the Ministry of Finance said yesterday. It was the first time exports had exceeded the US$60 billion mark, fueled by the global boom in AI development that has significantly boosted Taiwanese companies across the international supply chain, Department of Statistics Director-General Beatrice Tsai (蔡美娜) told a media briefing. “There is a consensus among major AI players that the upcycle is still in its early stage,”
The Central Weather Administration (CWA) yesterday said it is expected to issue a sea warning for Typhoon Fung-wong this afternoon and a land warning tomorrow. As of 1pm, the storm was about 1,070km southeast of Oluanpi (鵝鑾鼻), Taiwan’s southernmost point, and was moving west-northwest at 28 to 32kph, according to CWA data. The storm had a radius of 250km, with maximum sustained winds of 173kph and gusts reaching 209kph, the CWA added. The storm is forecast to pass near Luzon in the Philippines before entering the South China Sea and potentially turning northward toward Taiwan, the CWA said. CWA forecaster Chang Chun-yao (張峻堯) said
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi yesterday said that China using armed force against Taiwan could constitute a "survival-threatening situation" for Japan, allowing the country to mobilize the Japanese armed forces under its security laws. Takaichi made the remarks during a parliamentary session while responding to a question about whether a "Taiwan contingency" involving a Chinese naval blockade would qualify as a "survival-threatening situation" for Japan, according to a report by Japan’s Asahi Shimbun. "If warships are used and other armed actions are involved, I believe this could constitute a survival-threatening situation," Takaichi was quoted as saying in the report. Under Japan’s security legislation,