Business Standard

Taizo Son ditches Japan to start afresh in Singapore

- YOOLIM LEE, DAVID ROMAN & CHANYAPORN CHANJAROEN

Singapore may have just added a new tech billionair­e, but it had to lure him from Japan first.

Taizo Son, who built his fortune on hit smartphone game Puzzle & Dragons, has relocated to the city-state from Tokyo and plans to invest $100 million in Southeast Asia within five years. The younger brother of SoftBank Group Corp’s founder said in Singapore on Monday he’d become frustrated by regulation in Japan as well as the country’s education system.

“I tried very hard by lobbying the Japanese government: ‘Why don’t we have a regulatory sandbox to bring some innovative ideas?,”’ Son told the event arranged by the private bank of DBS Group Holdings Ltd. “But the country’s too big and very slow to move. But here, even the government, regulators are innovation-minded.”

Singapore’s high rate of internet use and a reliance on online data-processing has helped propel Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s Smart Nation initiative since it was launched in 2014. The programme has seen the government, agencies and companies look to use technology to change how things are done, from self-driving buses and traffic management to public transport fares that are charged automatica­lly.

With little crime, low personal tax rates and no capital gains tax, the country has already drawn other billionair­es, including Eduardo Saverin, a co-founder of Facebook.

Taizo Son founded gamemaker GungHo Online Entertainm­ent Inc and is now chief executive officer of Mistletoe, a combinatio­n of early-stage venture firm, incubator and entreprene­ur-in-residence program. His brother Masayoshi Son is chairman of SoftBank and is Japan’s second-richest man with a net worth of $12.9 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

After moving to the wealthy enclave of Sentosa, Taizo Son expects to receive his permanent residency within three months.

He was partly motivated by his threeyear-old son after losing confidence in Japan’s education system, which he said has failed to adapt from the approach used to build the company into a postwar industrial giant.

The Japanese system is “extremely terrible” at creating entreprene­urs and Son said he intends to open a school in Singapore after recently opening a new school near Tokyo that encourages children to learn without teachers. Among his existing investment­s in the region is games and ecommerce operator Garena, the most valuable start-up in Southeast Asia.

At the event, Son laid out his vision for a futuristic city where large vehicles go undergroun­d, commuting is done on personal mobility devices and people can shower with water purificati­on systems the size of a suitcase.

“I’m getting an inspiratio­n from Venice because inside Venice there is no car,” he said. He added an aspiration to redesign cities away from the industrial­ised, car-centric model of the 20th century to one that is more “human-centric.”

 ?? TAIZO SON Entreprene­ur ?? I TRIED VERY HARD BY LOBBYING THE JAPANESE GOVERNMENT: ‘WHY DON’T WE HAVE A REGULATORY SANDBOX TO BRING SOME INNOVATIVE IDEAS?” BUT THE COUNTRY IS TOO BIG AND VERY SLOW TO MOVE. BUT HERE, EVEN THE GOVERNMENT, REGULATORS ARE INNOVATION-MINDED”
TAIZO SON Entreprene­ur I TRIED VERY HARD BY LOBBYING THE JAPANESE GOVERNMENT: ‘WHY DON’T WE HAVE A REGULATORY SANDBOX TO BRING SOME INNOVATIVE IDEAS?” BUT THE COUNTRY IS TOO BIG AND VERY SLOW TO MOVE. BUT HERE, EVEN THE GOVERNMENT, REGULATORS ARE INNOVATION-MINDED”

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