Private sector bribery is not currently an offence under the Penal Code. However, the Companies Act punishes the:
- giving of a bribe to, or acceptance of a bribe by, a director or auditor;
- giving or acceptance of a bribe in relation to the exercise of rights of shareholders; and
- giving of benefits by a director or auditor at the cost of a company or its subsidiaries.
In addition, the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act punishes the giving of a bribe to, or the acceptance of a bribe by, an officer or official of a financial instruments business operator. The Bankruptcy Law punishes giving a bribe to, or acceptance of a bribe by, a trustee in bankruptcy.
The Penal Code prohibits the offering of a bribe to domestic public officials and persons to be appointed public officers, as well as the acceptance of the bribe by the aforementioned persons. Officers of specific organisations are regarded as public officials according to the specific statutes. Examples include officers of independent administrative corporations, the Bank of Japan, Japan Bank of International Cooperation and Japan Post Co Ltd.
The types of bribery offences in relation to domestic public officials are giving or offering or promising to give a bribe to:
- a domestic public official, in connection with his or her duties;
- a person to be appointed a domestic public official, in connection with a duty to be assumed with agreement to perform an act in response to a request, if the person is appointed a domestic public official;
- a third party, agreeing with a domestic public official to perform an act in response to a request in connection with the official’s duty;
- a person who resigned from the position of a public official, in connection with having acted illegally to having refrained from acting in the exercise of his or her duty with agreement thereof in response to a request;
- a domestic public official, as consideration for the influence that the official exerted or is to exert, in response to a request, upon another public official so as to cause the other to act illegally or refrain from acting in the exercise of official duty.
Bribery of a foreign public official involves giving or offering or promising to give any money or other gain to a foreign public official for the purpose of having the foreign public official:
- act or refrain from acting in a particular way in relation to his or her duties,; or
- use his or her position to influence another foreign public official, etc., to act or refrain from acting in a particular way in relation to that official's duties
in order to acquire an illicit gain in business with regard to international commercial transactions.
Both the key anti-corruption laws of Japan have extraterritorial effect. The UCPA criminalises the bribery of foreign public officials within as well as outside the territory of Japan. Article 197 of the Penal Code applies to Japanese public officials who commit any bribery offence outside Japan.
There are no legal presumptions about corrupt intent under the UCPA.