Advertisement

Honesty in Japan: Tokyo marks record US$29.1 million in lost cash found, 20% surge in belongings returned

  • The largest single amount was 16.8 million yen (US$110,900) discovered in Shinjuku, eventually returned to the relieved owner
  • A sociology expert says there is trust in Japanese society, where it is considered safe to leave belongings unattended while snoozing on commute

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
9
Crowd of commuters waiting for rail train at Shinjuku Station in Tokyo. Photo: Shutterstock

The honest people of Tokyo handed in a record 4.4 billion yen (US$29.1 million) in cash that had been lost around the city in 2023, usually on public transport or in dropped wallets or purses.

Advertisement

That total figure – which works out at a remarkable 12 million yen or US$79,291 per day – is a significant increase from the previous record of 3.99 billion yen handed in to police or public transport operators in 2022, and the 3.84 billion yen declared in 2019.

Announcing the 2023 statistics for lost property, Tokyo Metropolitan Police attributed the 10.3 per cent increase in cash returned and the nearly 20 per cent surge in belongings retrieved – a total of 4,444,854 items – was the result of more people commuting and visiting the city after the lifting of coronavirus restrictions last spring.

The largest single amount of cash found was 16.8 million yen discovered in Shinjuku Ward, which was eventually reunited with a relieved owner. Of the 4.4 billion yen found, some 3.23 billion yen was returned.

Izumi Tsuji, a professor of sociology at Tokyo’s Chuo University, said of the trend: “It would be unthinkable for me to not give the money to the police and I’m sure that the vast majority of Japanese feel the same.”

Advertisement
Advertisement