Guidebook for Government Assets
State Guest House (Source: Cabinet Office website)
Kenrokuen Matsumoto Castle (photo by Administration Office of Matsumoto Castle)
December 2020
INDEX
1. What are Government Assets?
.01 • 1‐1. Current value of government assets
1‐2. Area of national land
.02
• .03
2. Effective use of government assets including use for disaster management .04
• 2‐1. Use for the development of nursing care facilities
2‐2. Use for the elimination of childcare waiting lists
2‐3. Effective use of administrative assets
2‐4. Lease of vacant spaces in administrative assets to set up childcare centers
2‐5. Response at the time of a natural disaster
2‐6. Use of national government officials' housing facilities as tsunami evacuation buildings
.04
• .04
• .05
• .05
• .06
• .06
3. Methods of selling off unused national land
4. Changes in the sales proceeds and the stock of unused national land
5. Information on Government Assets
6. Local Finance Bureaus, etc. Across Japan
7. Do You Know about Government Assets Day?
.07
.08
.09
.10
.11 [Cover photographs] State Guest House (official property / administrative asset under the jurisdiction of the Cabinet Office) Matsumoto Castle (official property / administrative asset under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology) Kenrokuen (non‐administrative asset under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Finance / lent to Ishikawa Prefecture)
[Photo on the right] Main building of the Ministry of Finance (official property / administrative asset under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Finance)
1. What are Government Assets? Page 01/11 The national government owns a wide variety of assets, including real estate, movables (cash,
desks, vessels, aircraft, etc.) and claims. “Government assets” as referred to by the nationalgovernment are those assets specified in the National Government Asset Act, and include realestate such as land and buildings, some movables such as vessels and aircraft, and stocks andother securities.
(Cash, claims and articles such as desks and chairs are not included in government assets.)
Government assets are classified into “administrative assets” and “non‐administrative assets.”"Administrative assets" are categorized into the following four types: "official properties," such asgovernment buildings; "public properties," such as national government parks, roads and rivers;"imperial properties," such as the Imperial Palace; and "forest management properties," which areused for national forest projects. Each of these assets is managed by the head of the relevantministry or agency that has jurisdiction over them.
Assets other than administrative assets are called "non‐administrative assets." In principle, theMinistry of Finance is responsible for the management and disposal of these assets.
•
•
Non‐administrative assets
Official properties
Public properties
Imperial properties
Forest management properties
Government assets
Administrative assets
National Diet Building
Bandai‐Asahi National Park (Oguninuma Pond)
(Source: Ministry of Environment website URL: https://www.env.go.jp/park/bandai/photo/index.html)
The Shosoin Repository
Yakushima
Assets other than administrative assets (e.g., land formerly used for government buildings, land transferred to the government as in‐kind tax payment, and government‐owned stocks)
Government office buildings, housing facilities for national government officials, penal institutions, etc.
National roads, rivers, national government parks, etc.
The Imperial Palace and other properties used by the Imperial Family
National forests used for national forest projects
1‐1. Current value of government assets Prices and quantities of government assets are managed under the GovernmentAsset Register. As of the end of FY2019, the current value of government assetsstood at 109.8 trillion yen, out of which national land was worth 19.3 trillion yen.
Note: The current value of government assets does not include public properties (roads, rivers, etc.) managed under registers other than the Government Asset Register
[Breakdown of government assets: end of FY2019] Imperial properties
Forest management properties0.6 trillion yen 4.2 trillion yen
Public properties 0.7 trillion yen
Other 1.4 trillion yen
Unused national land 0.3 trillion yen
Assets on loan to local governments, etc.
2.0 trillion yen
Assets provided as facilities for the United States Forces Japan (USFJ) 2.8 trillion yen
Note: Totals may not match due to figures being rounded down.
Investments in incorporated administrative agencies, etc.
Official properties
19.5 trillion Non‐administrative yen
77.9 trillion yen
assets 84.6 trillion
Administrative assets
25.2 trillion
Government assets
109.8 trillion yen
yen yen
Page 02/11
[Breakdown of national land: end of FY2019]
Administrative assets
Value Type Breakdown
(trillion yen)
Defense facilities 4.1
Airport facilities (Tokyo 0.9 International Airport, etc.)
Diet facilities 1.1
Correctional institutions 0.3 (prisons, etc.) Official
Court facilities 0.4
Other 4.9
Sub‐total 11.9
Shinjuku Gyoen National Public Garden, Showa Kinen Park, 0.6
etc.
Imperial Imperial Palace, etc. 0.6
Forest National forest projects 1.0
management
Total A 14.3
Non‐administrative assets
Breakdown Value
(trillion yen)
Land provided to the USFJ (Yokota Air Base, Yokosuka Naval Base, Iwakuni Air Base, etc.)
2.0
Land on loan to local governments, etc. (Yoyogi Park, Osaka Castle Park, etc.) 2.0
Unused national land 0.3
Other (mountains, wasteland, etc.) 0.5
Total B 4.9
Total (A + B) 19.3
Note: Totals may not match due to figures being rounded down.
1‐2. Area of national land National land measured 8.767 million hectares, accounting for about one quarter of Japan’s total land area.
The greater part of it (approx. 97%) consists of forest management properties (national forests)which is used for national forest projects. Forest management properties (national forests) plays animportant role in the conservation of national land and the protection of the natural environment.Some land areas in this category are registered as world heritage sites, such as Shiretoko,Ogasawara Islands, and Shirakami‐Sanchi.
National land 8.765 million ha (23.1 %)
3.190 million ha (8.4%)
Privately owned land 19.800 million ha (52.3%)
Roads, rivers, etc. 6.040 million ha
(15.9 %)
Total land area 37.795 million ha
Public la(owned by lgovernmen
Official Public pImperia
nd ocal ts)
properties: roperties: 1l properties
119,000 ha (1.36%) 2,000 ha (0.14%) : 1,000 ha (0.02%)
Non‐administrative assets 101,000 ha (1.1%)
Total area 8.767 million ha
Administrative assets 8.665 million ha (98.8%)
Forest management properties 8.531 million ha (97.3%)
Page 03/11
[Ratio of national land to Japan’s total land area] [Breakdown of national land (area)]
(as of the end of FY2018) (end of FY2019)
Note : Based on data from the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.
Note 1: The above data do not include public properties (roads, rivers, etc.) managed under registers (such as the Road Register and the Register of Current River Conditions) other than the Government Asset Register
Note 2: Totals may not match due to figures being rounded down.
National land areas registered as world heritage sites
Note: The percentage above represents the proportion of national forests in the total land area of each world heritage site.
Shiretoko (94%) Ogasawara Islands(81%)
Shirakami‐Sanchi(100%)
2. Effective use of government assets including use for disaster management Page 04/11
Government assets are common property of the people. In addition to improvingthe nation’s fiscal condition through their sale, the Ministry of Finance has beenmeeting community and social needs by promoting their effective use incoordination with local communities. These assets are also used for disastermanagement and assistance for affected people.
2‐1. Use for the development of nursing care facilities Based on the Urgent Policies to Realize a Society in Which All Citizens are Dynamically Engaged
(November 2015), with the aim of realizing the goal of “no one forced to leave their jobs fornursing care” by the early 2020s, the Ministry of Finance intends to make further use of nationalland by lending land at reduced rents (at discounts of up to 50% for a 10‐year period from thestart of the loan) through the fixed‐term land lease arrangement, in order to help facilitate thedevelopment of nursing care facilities in urban areas where securing land is difficult.
Effective period: New lending agreements made through the fixed‐term land lease arrangement that determines a lessee between January 1, 2016 and March 31, 2026
Target areas: Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama, Chiba, Aichi, Osaka, Hyogo and Fukuoka Prefectures (8 prefectures)
Target facilities: Homes for the elderly requiring special care, including those with annexed day‐care nursing facilities, etc.
A nursing care facility in Nerima Ward, Tokyo, which utilized the fixed‐term land lease arrangement (opened in October 2019)
2‐2. Use for the elimination of childcare waiting lists The Plan to Accelerate the Elimination of Childcare Waiting Lists (April 2013) includes an
initiative to develop nursery schools using national land. Based on this initiative, the Ministry ofFinance is actively taking measures such as selling national land through preferential sales andleasing national land under a fixed‐term leasehold.
The Plan for Child Rearing with Security (June 2017)includes an initiative to make use of national land,urban areas, post offices, and unused classrooms inschools. Based on this initiative, the Ministry ofFinance promotes the conversion of the use ofnational land that is currently lent with no charge assites of urban parks and provides it as nursingcenters spaces so that more children can beaccepted.
A nursery school‐type center for early childhood education and care in Shibuya Ward, which is located on national land within the urban park (opened in October 2017; Tokyo Metropolitan Yoyogi Park)
Page 07/122‐3. Effective use of administrative assets Page 05/11
The Ministry of Finance actively provides information concerning available administrative assets(government office buildings and housing facilities for national government officials) andinformation concerning the systems for leasing out these assets and granting permission for theiruse in order to promote their use by local communities, with the aim of optimizing the use ofadministrative assets to make more profit therefrom.
In accordance with the principle that administrative assets, including those under the jurisdictionof respective ministries and agencies, should be assigned first to official use and public use, theMinistry of Finance provides information concerning available administrative assets to localgovernments, and then if no application for use is filed from local governments, it publishes theinformation on public real estate websites to solicit prospective users.
From the perspective of promoting the effective use ofadministrative assets, the Ministry of Finance has revisedthe rules for the period of permission for use inconsideration of the purposes of use and needs ofindividual assets and the time required to recoupinvestment costs, so that the period of use can be setflexibly to the extent that does not interfere with thefunctions and undertakings of the national government(the period of permission for use is revised from "one yearin principle and five years at the maximum" to "five yearsin principle and ten years at the maximum").
A parking space company is granted permission to use the visitor parking spaces of the Fukuoka Government Office Building when the government office is closed.
2‐4. Lease of vacant spaces in administrative assets to set up childcare centers In "Japan’s Plan for Dynamic Engagement of All Citizens" (decided by the Cabinet on June 2,
2016), the government aimed at promoting the expansion of childcare arrangements by furtherutilization of government‐owned sites. Accordingly, from the perspective of enhancing theeffective use of government assets, the Ministry of Finance leases out vacant spaces inadministrative assets (e.g., government office buildings and housing facilities for nationalgovernment officials) to local governments and other entities in order to set up childcarecenters.
<Achievements> As of the end of March 2020, 21 Hoiku‐Mama projects (childcare services provided by caretakers certified by local governments) were carried out nationwide using vacant spaces in housing facilities for national government officials.
Hoiku‐Mama project carried out using a housing facility for national government officials
Project location Number of project
operators Miyagi Prefecture: Sendai City 2 Yamagata Prefecture: Yamagata City 1 Tokyo Metropolis: Kiyose City 1 Kanagawa Prefecture: Yokohama City, Sagamihara City, Yokosuka City 5
Aichi Prefecture: Nagoya City 4 Osaka Prefecture: Osaka City 1 Kyoto Prefecture: Kyoto City, Uji City 2 Hyogo Prefecture: Kobe City, Nishinomiya City 3 Fukuoka Prefecture: Fukuoka City 2
Total 21
2‐5. Response at the time of a natural disaster Page 06/11
After a natural disaster occurs due to an earthquake or typhoon, the Ministry of Finance offers national government officials' housing facilities and unused national land free of charge as evacuation sites for disaster victims and sites for placing debris. If an alarm is issued by the Japan Meteorological Agency or there is otherwise a high probability of occurrence of a disaster, such facilities and land can be used for stopgap measures prior to the occurrence.
Unused national land that was leased free of charge to Saka Town, Aki‐gun, Hiroshima Prefecture, as a place to put earth and sand that flowed into the town due to the torrential rain in July 2018
Process for offering national government officials' housing facilities
Local finance bureau (local finance office), ministries and agencies
(3) Lease out the(1) Provide information on available housingfacilities (Note)
(2) Applyfor use facilities free of
charge, grantpermission for use
Local government
(4) Lease
Disaster victims
Note: Information on available housing facilities is provided by the relevant local finance bureau or local finance office in a centralized manner.
2‐6. Use of national government officials' housing facilities as tsunami evacuation buildings With the aim of saving the lives of residents from a tsunami with force beyond expectations, the Ministry of Finance has been working in cooperation with responsible local governments to designate national government officials' housing facilities as tsunami evacuation buildings and hold evacuation and disaster drills with local residents using the designated housing facilities. [Tsunami evacuation buildings] Facilities located in areas with the potential for tsunami flooding, where local
residents and other affected people can find shelter temporarily or in an emergency.
National government’s joint housing facility in Wakayama (Wakayama City/Kinki Local Finance Bureau)
An evacuation drill making use of the national government’s joint housing facility
3. Methods of selling off unused national landIn accordance with the principle of assigning unused nationalland first to official use or public use in consideration of their value as common property of the people, the Ministry of Finance accepts applications for use from local governments and sells off unused national land to them, and if no application for use is filed, it sells off unused national land through general competitive bidding.
In recent years, the Ministry of Finance selects methods according to characteristics of individual properties, aiming to promote the effective use in response to the needs of community and society.
Specifically, the Ministry of Finance employs district plan‐based general competitive bidding and two‐stage general competitive bidding, and in order to meet the needs of future generations, it also employs a fixed‐term land lease of properties for which the government reserves ownership and properties to be used in fields associated with security for people such as childcare and nursing care.
Unused national land
Sale through general competitive bidding
Sale to the applicant local
government, etc.
If an application is
filed
If no application is filed
Accept applications from local governments, etc. for acquisition (period of acceptance: 3 months)
* Information on general competitive biddingis in Bidding Guides distributed at localfinance bureaus, etc., and is also posted innewspapers and on the websites of localfinance bureaus, etc.
Page 07/11
Characteristics
‐National land located in areas where many children are on childcare waiting lists ‐National land located in urban areas where it is difficult to secure sites to build nursing facilities
‐Achievement of policy measures (elimination of childcare waiting lists, no forced separation from a nursing care job)
Purpose Methods
Giving priority to local governments in: ‐ selling off national land ‐ leasing out national land under fixed‐term land leasehold
‐Large‐scale national land the use of which is expected to revitalize the local economy though systematic town planning
‐Right to site obtained through transfer of rights in redevelopment projects
‐ District plan‐based general competitive bidding (*1) ‐ Two‐stage general competitive bidding (*2) ‐ Discretionary contracts with local governments in response to the needs of the local community
‐ Trust ‐ Exchange
‐Scarce national land with high utility
‐ Concluding fixed‐term leasehold agreements in response to the needs of community and society, while reserving ownership
‐Contribution to the local community (revitalization of the local economy)
‐Optimization through the effective use of government assets
‐Response to the needs of future generations
*1: General competitive bidding to be held after a local government makes a city planning decision to adopt a districtplan for the area that includes national land through consultation with the Ministry of Finance.
*2: General competitive bidding to be held after the Ministry of Finance solicits proposals on the use of national landfrom prospective purchasers and allows only those that pass the screening to participate in the bidding
Note: If no application for use is filed, the Ministry of Finance holds a general competitive bidding to sell off national land.
4. Changes in the sales proceeds and the stock of unused national land Page 08/11
Unused national land, classified as non‐administrative assets, is sold by local finance bureaus,etc.
By selling off unused national land that doesn't need to be retained as government assets, theMinistry of Finance strives to secure fiscal revenues, while promoting the effective use of such land in response to the needs of community and society
Non‐statutory public assets (local roads, waterways, etc.)
Assets that have lost function *2
Assets that have function
*1
Transferred to municipality without
consideration
Managed by national government;
demarcated and sold
[Former Non‐Statutory Public Assets]
【土地売払代の推移(財務省一般会計)】
決算額(復興財源)
決算額(一般財源)
予算額
692 516 668 456 307
413
1,121
191
13 0
1,058 1,070 890
706 240
1,106
1,638
859
470
307
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
[Changes in the sales proceeds of unused national land (general account of the Ministry of Finance)]
Closing amount (reconstruction revenue resources)
Closing amount (general revenue resources)
Budget amount
(100 million yen)
End FY2015 End FY2016 End FY2017 End FY2018 End FY2019
平成27年度末 平成28年度末 平成29年度末 平成30年度末 令和元年度末
台帳価格(億円)
【未利用国有地のストック推移(財務省一般会計)】
1,486 1,323 1,422 1,300 1,057
1,364 1,143 610 649 568
1,707 1,767
1,593 1,339 1,740
4,558 4,234
3,626 3,288 3,366
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
7,000
End FY2015 End FY2016 End FY2017 End FY2018 End FY2019
[Changes in the stock of unused national land (general account of the Ministry of Finance)]
Registered value (100 million yen)
Assets planned to be used by local governments, etc. Assets planned to be sold through general competitive bidding Assets with special circumstances (those located within a district of a land rezoning project, those requiring fixing of boundaries, etc.) Total
Former Non‐Statutory Public Assets
Former non‐statutory public assets are public assets that have lost their function as local roads or waterways and are not currently used for public purposes. They are under the management of the national government. In cases where a former local road or waterway is currently being used as a site for a dwelling, etc., it is sold
to the user. For queries concerning demarcation and procedures for purchasing former non‐statutory public assets,
please contact your closest local finance bureau, local finance office or local finance branch office.
[Originally (farmland)] [Rezoned for residential land]
Local road Former Former local road
Waterway waterway Field
Field Dwelling
*1 “Public assets that have function” are those that arecurrently used for public purposes such as local roads or waterways.
*2 “Public assets that have lost function” are those thathave lost their function as local roads or waterways and are not currently used for public purposes.
5. Information on Government Assets Page 09/11
The Ministry of Finance and local finance bureaus, etc. disclose a variety of information on government assets through their website and other means.
Ministry of Finance website URL https://www.mof.go.jp/national_property/
The Ministry of Finance’s Japanese website has a “Government Assets” (国有財産)link on its front page. The linkedpage includes the “Government Asset Report”(国有財産レポート)cont aining updates on the administration ofgovernment assets, as well as detailed statistical data such as the current value of government assets. The webpage also contains reports submitted to the Diet as well as press releases concerning government assets. From the “Government Assets”(国有財産) page on the Ministry of Finance’s Japanese website, you can access “theGovernment Asset Information Disclosure System”(国有財産情報公開システム) . Click “Search”(調べる) to viewthe information on specific government assets, including the location, registered size, registered value, and map information, for each government asset.
Government Asset Information Disclosure System URL https://www.kokuyuzaisan.mof.go.jp/info/
E‐mail Newsletter on Government Asset Information (国有財産物件情報メールマガジン)The Ministry of Finance began distributing its E‐mail Newsletter on Government Asset Information in June
2014. The Ministry provides updated information on scheduled sales of government assets at local finance
bureaus, etc. across Japan, in a timely manner through email.
Front page “Search”(調べる) : Information on specificgovernment assets
Local finance bureau websites URL https://www.mof.go.jp/about_mof/zaimu/zaimu.htm
The Japanese websites of each local finance bureau, etc. also have a “Government Assets”section, where a variety of information is posted, including assets for which the relevant bureau, etc. has commenced general competitive bidding, the results of those bids, and notices concerning requests for acquisition of assets for official or public use.
(国有財産)
(LIFULL) URL https://www.homes.co.jp/akiyabank/pres/all/ (at home) URL https://kokuyuzaisan.akiya‐athome.jp/
Information on government assets put up for general competitive biddings or sales to first‐comers by local finance bureaus is posted on the dedicated pages of public real estate websites.
Public Real Estate (PRE) websites
6. Local Finance Bureaus, etc. Across Japan Page 10/11 ○ The Ministry of Finance and local finance bureaus, etc. are responsible for the management and disposal of non‐
administrative assets (excluding non‐administrative assets belonging to a special account, etc.) as well as for theoverall coordination of managing and disposing of government assets by individual ministries and agencies.*The management of administrative assets is conducted by the ministries and agencies that have jurisdiction overthe assets.The Ministry of Finance has ten local finance bureaus (including one branch bureau) across Japan, and 40 localfinance offices and 13 branch offices located in the areas under the jurisdiction of the respective local financebureaus. In Okinawa Prefecture, the Okinawa General Bureau of the Cabinet Office performs the operations of alocal finance bureau.
○
Hokkaido Local Finance Bureau Phone: (011)709‐2311 Sapporo Joint Government Building No. 1, Kita 8‐jo Nishi 2‐chome, Kita‐ku, Sapporo‐shi, Hokkaido 060‐8579 http://hokkaido.mof.go.jp/
Tohoku Local Finance Bureau Phone: (022)263‐1111 Sendai Joint Government Building B, 3‐3‐1 Honcho, Aoba‐ku, Sendai‐shi, Miyagi 980‐8436 http://tohoku.mof.go.jp/
<Mascot of the Tohoku Local Finance Bureau> Zaicchi
Kanto Local Finance Bureau Phone: (048)600‐1111 Saitama Shintoshin Joint Government Building No. 1, 1‐1, Shintoshin, Chuo‐ku, Saitama‐shi, Saitama 330‐9716 http://kantou.mof.go.jp/
Hokuriku Local Finance Bureau Phone: (076)292‐7860 Kanazawa Shinkanda Joint Government Building, 4‐3‐10 Shinkanda, Kanazawa‐shi, Ishikawa 921‐8508 http://hokuriku.mof.go.jp/
Tokai Local Finance Bureau Phone: (052)951‐1772 3‐3‐1 Sannomaru, Naka‐ku, Nagoya‐Shi, Aichi 460‐8521 http://tokai.mof.go.jp/
<Image character of the Tokai Local Finance Bureau> Zaimu‐kun, Zaiko‐chan
<Image character of the Chugoku Local Finance Bureau> Chuzai‐kun
<Mascot of the Kyushu Local Finance Bureau> Nyankyu
Kinki Local Finance Bureau Phone: (06)6949‐6390 Osaka Joint Government Building No. 4, 4‐1‐76 Otemae, Chuo‐ku, Osaka‐shi, Osaka 540‐8550 http://kinki.mof.go.jp/
<Mascot of the Kinki Local Finance Bureau> Kinki CATs
Chugoku Local Finance Bureau Phone: (082)221‐9221 Hiroshima Joint Government Building No. 4, 6‐30 Kami‐Hacchobori, Naka‐ku, Hiroshima‐shi, Hiroshima 730‐8520 http://chugoku.mof.go.jp/
Shikoku Local Finance Bureau Phone: (087)811‐7780 Takamatsu Sunport Joint Government Building, South 3‐33 Sunport, Takamatsu‐shi, Kagawa 760‐8550 http://shikoku.mof.go.jp/
Kyushu Local Finance Bureau Phone: (096)353‐6351 Kumamoto Joint Government Building A, 2‐10‐1 Kasuga, Nishi‐ku, Kumamoto‐shi, Kumamoto 860‐8585 http://kyusyu.mof.go.jp/
Fukuoka Local Finance Bureau Phone: (092)411‐5095 Fukuoka Joint Government Building, 2‐11‐1 Hakataeki‐Higashi, Hakata‐ku, Fukuoka‐shi, Fukuoka 812‐0013 http://fukuoka.mof.go.jp/
Finance Department, Okinawa General Bureau Phone: (098)866‐0091 Naha Second Joint Government Building No. 2, 2‐1‐1 Omoromachi, Naha‐shi, Okinawa 900‐0006 http://www.ogb.go.jp/zaimu
~ Be wary of national land sale scams! ~ Lately, there have been numerous reports of scams trying to sell national land. If you ever have any doubt at all, please contact your closest local finance bureau, local finance office or local finance branch office immediately for advice.
7. Do You Know about Government Assets Day? Page 11/11
Drawing of land survey following the land tax reform (collection of the Akita
Prefectural Museum)
As a result of this establishment of private land subject to the imposition of land tax, the scope of state‐owned land (national land) became clear, and this led to the formation of the concept of government assets in real estate. The Ministry of Finance has designated November 7—the day on which the decree was issued
by the Grand Council of State—as “Government Assets Day.”
Land tax revision map (collection of the Tax Historical Materials Room, Tax Research and Archives Center, National Tax College)
Under the Meiji Government, which had formed under the Meiji Restoration, a survey of land across the country was undertaken for the purpose of levying a land tax pursuant to the Land Tax Reform Ordinance of 1873. The start of government assets in real estate goes
back to the time of the Meiji Restoration. Certificates of land title were issued for land
confirmed as being privately owned, and standards for distinguishing between state‐owned land and privately owned land were clarified i n t he “Revised Classificationof Land Names” as part of the decree issued by the Grand Council of State on November 7, 1874.
If you have comments or requests concerning the management of government assets, please share them with us via the following website:
Ministry of Finance website (Feedback to the Ministry of Finance) https://www2.mof.go.jp/enquete/ja/index.php
Government Asset Information Office, Financial Bureau, Ministry of Finance 3‐1‐1 Kasumigaseki, Chiyoda‐ku, Tokyo 100‐8940. Phone: 03‐3581‐4111 (Extension: 5978)
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