Kyoto City has signed a partnership agreement with Kyoto Women's University, Kyoto Tachibana University, and Otani University for hometown tax payment.With the aim of calling on graduates who left Kyoto City to make donations after graduating from university, there was a ceremony to conclude an agreement with the attendance of the mayor of Daisaku Kadokawa and the president of Kyoto Women's University, Hideko Takeyasu. rice field.
According to Kyoto Women's University, Kyoto City will set up a new support menu for hometown tax payment based on this agreement.In response to this, the three schools encourage graduates who have left Kyoto to pay their hometown tax to Kyoto.The collected donations will be used for collaborative projects between students and the community, such as community development carried out by Kyoto City and the three schools.
There are a total of 38 universities and junior colleges in Kyoto, and about 15 people are studying.In terms of the number of students per capita, Kyoto Prefecture has the highest number in Japan, surpassing Tokyo and Osaka Prefectures, but it is said that about 8% of students leave Kyoto for employment after graduation.
In Kyoto City, the number of foreign tourists visiting Japan has disappeared due to the spread of the new coronavirus, and the number of domestic tourists has decreased due to a series of emergency declarations. It has been hit hard.
For this reason, the public debt redemption fund and other funds have been withdrawn to make up for the lack of financial resources, but the situation is becoming more tense due to the prolonged corona disaster.Since there is a possibility that it will fall into a fiscal reconstruction organization as early as 2028, it has begun intensive spending reforms and is working to secure new financial resources.