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Mulboyne wrote:The penalties on late payment are high so I suggest you work out what you want to do quickly. If you are planning on staying in Japan then you can't avoid ward tax. This is not the NHK guy]
As many people have noted paying is obligatory. A friend of mine who didn't pay had the money taken from his bank account without his knowing.
But then I was reading an article in the Asahi over the weekend. It was a generally horrible article about a woman who is famous for shopping and simultaneously getting away with the debt she racks up:
Weekend Beat: She shops, therefore she isWriter Usagi Nakamura sat at a cafe alfresco in Tokyo's Omotesando area, took a drag on a menthol cigarette and admitted, "I'm bad at numbers."
It is this talent-or lack of-that has made Nakamura one of the most talked about women in the country, and lead to her moniker, the "debt queen."
Calculating how much this math-challenged individual owes is futile. Even she says she has no idea. But guesstimates abound. Let's put the figure in the tens of millions of yen. Regardless, it's this insouciance-her seeming indifference to making things add up, not to mention her penchant for serial plastic surgery-that has garnered her a legion of fans.
Nakamura, 47, may not care, but one interested party that certainly wants to get paid is Tokyo's Minato Ward. She hasn't paid her residential taxes in a good long while. As it accumulates, the ward tacks on an additional annual interest penalty of 14.6 percent.
Captain Japan wrote:It was a generally horrible article about a woman who is famous for shopping and simultaneously getting away with the debt she racks up
For 14 months from mid-2001, she was totally absorbed in one of the host clubs in the Tokyo entertainment district of Kabukicho, the industry's "holy ground." Surprisingly (or maybe not), Nakamura spent a total of 15 million yen on her favorite host over that period.
Mulboyne wrote:Still the same off-topic topic.
MDN: ... Usagi Nakamura... "let's face it: now I'm an old bag of 47, and my sexual values have plummeted." And at that age, she ... arranges to get herself hired to a "delivery health," a type of outcall sex service ...
Taro Toporific wrote:Illusion ......VS ...... Lusion<--Usagi Nakamura
Japan's self-professed "queen of shopping," author and essayist Usagi Nakamura, is on a roll. After submitting some extremely explicit accounts of her experiences while working as an outcall sex service worker, and then subsequently relating several tragicomic efforts to buy a man's body to sate her lusts, she has found a new tack with which to entertain Shincho 45 (December) readers.
To wit, she made the scene at one of Tokyo's "happening bars" -- where unrestrained horniness among patrons is the name of the game -- and engaged in sexual intercourse before a live audience.
It was a weekend evening, she writes, and the "hapubaa" (happening bar) was unusually crowded, with a mixture of couples and some male patrons who came in alone, and who were prowling around the bar wearing nothing but their jockey shorts.
When Usagi complained that none of the bar's patrons offered much in the way of physical appeal, her companion Takanashi challenged her, saying "Aren't you just blowing steam about getting it on in here?"
"Like hell I am," countered the infuriated Nakamura. "I'm the kind of woman who matches her words with her actions. And just to prove it, I'm going to ball the next guy who propositions me, just so you can watch!"...more...
kurokohi wrote::neutral: Hey, just joined, this forum rocks and hope you can answer my questions. Came back to Japan this year and need some advice.
I left Japan in Feb 2006. I paid my bills - rent/electricity/water/gas/phone - but didn't pay city tax after Jan 2006 and health insurance after October 2006.
At Immigration in 2006 I didn't hand in the gaijin card because I thought I was coming back later that year. Instead got a job home and came back here because I lost it with the recession.
I haven't heard from my old ward office. My new one didn't say anything about old tax and health insurance but maybe the bills from the old place are gonna start coming soon? I now live very far from my previous residence.
Can anybody tell me what the penalties are likely to be? I know there was a tax increase when I was out of Japan. Or maybe my old ward office isn't going to catch up with me - but maybe that's too pessimistic. Will there be penalties for the health insurance too?
Samurai_Jerk wrote:I've always wondered what the rules are about residence tax. If you leave Japan before a bill is issued, are you still supposed to pay it?
rooboy wrote:I reckon you do. You pay up to the date you're gonna be a resident from what I know but maybe old hands can tell ya differently.
rooboy wrote:I reckon you do. You pay up to the date you're gonna be a resident from what I know but maybe old hands can tell ya differently.
GomiGirl wrote:My mother left in June and she was sent a bill for Ward tax after that for earnings last year. She had left money with me to pay it which I did.
GomiGirl wrote:My mother left in June and she was sent a bill for Ward tax after that for earnings last year. She had left money with me to pay it which I did.
Greji wrote:You mean your had Mums swamping out the pub for ya and youse didn't even pay her taxes?
That's a Sheelagh for ya. Good thing Mums went home, before you'd had her hawking used cell phones out in front of eki, if'n she'd stayed.....
gaijinpunch wrote:So have they made it possible to actually pay your taxes/bills after leaving Japan without entrusting someone else to do it? Stupidest fucking system ever.
It's minor compared to the unpaid ward taxes from the indigenous people. Minato-ku may be an exception though.GomiGirl wrote:Tis a huge loophole that most FG's exploit I am sure. I wonder what sort of monies this equates to in lost ward revenue?
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