
Some small municipalities in Japan began distributing on Thursday
one-off cash handouts to people to help cushion them from the economic fallout
related to the new coronavirus' spread.
But the handouts of 100,000 yen
per person may begin later in big cities because of the amount of paperwork,
including processing the applications.

In the town of Higashikawa,
Hokkaido, financial institutions first give residents the cash and the town
office will later pay the amount back using funds from the state.
Those who have accounts at the
bank affiliated with a local agriculture cooperative or a credit union are
eligible to receive the 100,000 yen in the town, which has a population of
about 8,000.
"We hope (the financial
institutions) will make sure all citizens receive the handout," said an
official of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications.
In the village of Nishimeya,
Aomori Prefecture, officials began handing out the cash to elderly residents in
person.Meanwhile, the city of Sapporo plans to open registrations for eligible
recipients in 970,000 households from May, although the start could be
postponed to June.
"Upgrading the system to
create the registration forms and sending them out will take time," an
official of the Hokkaido capital said.Otsu, the capital of Shiga Prefecture,
will begin accepting registrations from June 1 and is planning on distributing
handouts from mid-June.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
declared a state of emergency for Tokyo, Osaka and five other prefectures
earlier this month. He then expanded it to the entire nation on April 16, while
pledging to launch the cash handout scheme for all residents regardless of
income.
His administration's earlier
plan to give 300,000 yen each to households whose income has fallen met with
sharp criticism.
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