Airbnb seeking to sway Japanese

A laborer works earlier this year inside a Tokyo building owned by Jeffery Corp., an operation that invests in condominiums tailored for Airbnb Inc. customers.
A laborer works earlier this year inside a Tokyo building owned by Jeffery Corp., an operation that invests in condominiums tailored for Airbnb Inc. customers.

Airbnb Inc. has gone on a charm offensive in Japan, hoping to drum up support as regulators there debate whether to clamp down on the startup's rapidly expanding operations.

The world's third-most valuable private startup dispatched high-powered lawyer and political strategist Chris Lehane to lay out how it can buoy a stagnant economy and support the 2020 Olympics. Just last month, co-founder Joe Gebbia was in Tokyo extolling its contributions to entrepreneurship.

The company is hoping to win over hearts and minds in what was its fastest-growing market in 2015, a country experiencing a tourism boom that's in turn constricting hotel room availability. Lehane, the ex-White House crisis manager known as the "master of disaster," recently helped Airbnb defeat a ballot measure seeking to curb its operations in San Francisco. One of his tasks now is to sidestep the sort of controversy that has dogged Airbnb in other markets -- and anticipate problems unique to Japan.

"We have certainly been warned by our experiences elsewhere in the world," Lehane said at a briefing Wednesday in Tokyo. "Airbnb offers a significant social value proposition in Japan."

The company's hosts and guests in Japan generated $2.2 billion in economic activity last year, said Lehane, a former strategist for former President Bill Clinton and Airbnb's head of global policy. Airbnb listings help increase available accommodation during major events, he said.

Airbnb has argued that its services support tourism and benefit the communities in which it operates. Because most of the rental fee goes to the host, the revenue directly benefits individuals and their neighborhoods, Lehane argued. Gebbia, who was in Tokyo to announce a partnership with a bookstore chain, said hosts are in effect micro-entrepreneurs.

Listings in Japan quadrupled last year to more than 35,000, hosting 1.38 million guests. A weakened yen and the relaxing of visa requirements pushed inbound tourists to a record 19.7 million last year from 8.4 million in 2012 -- and made Tokyo hotel occupancy rates tighter than Paris, Hong Kong or New York. The number of visitors will hit 35 million by 2020, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimates.

But Airbnb's rapidly growing service has drawn its share of controversy, pitting landlords against tenants and prompting regulators to take a closer look at a service that's upending traditional commercial rental and hotel models.

New York City has scrutinized Airbnb and taken steps to push back against commercial renters. San Francisco, the startup's hometown, voted down a divisive ballot initiative that would have restricted home-sharing in the city. Neighbors to Airbnb-listers the world over have complained of "party houses" that attract rowdy renters during major sporting events.

In Japan, Airbnb hosts have operated in a gray market in past years because current legislation doesn't explicitly address house rentals, called minpaku in Japanese. The government is weighing several options, including the loosening of hotel laws and the creation of new laws to deal with the peer-to-peer or sharing economy, which includes car services like Uber Technologies Inc.'s.

The country also is considering a two-tiered approach to minpaku, including looser regulations for hosts who share their homes and others doing business on a commercial scale, Lehane said. The government may set an annual 180-day cap on stays that applies to hosts without a hotel license, the Nikkei news service reported in May.

Airbnb is erecting a number of measures to assuage regulators. It has said it plans to collect taxes from local hosts, similar to deals struck with Paris, Chicago, San Francisco, and Portland, Ore. It will introduce a Japanese-language service to communicate with the police. And it plans to create a system for rapidly relaying information about disasters or disease outbreaks.

Airbnb also has rolled out a feature letting neighbors enter comments in an online form. Feedback is reviewed by a customer-support team that can take action as necessary. Airbnb didn't say whether the information will be made public or if the identities of neighbors will be disclosed.

"We are very encouraged and excited by the approach the Japanese government is looking to take thus far," said Lehane, a Harvard-trained lawyer who tried to contain the Monica Lewinsky scandal and later defended Goldman Sachs during the 2008 financial crisis. "It can be a model not just for Asia, but potentially a global model."

SundayMonday Business on 06/20/2016

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