What the tweet was about
Takanofood (タカノフーズ), maker of Japan’s iconic Okame Natto (おかめ納豆), announced on May 8 that it would raise prices on all natto products by 15% starting June 1, 2026. The company cited rising raw material costs, energy prices, and logistics expenses. Mitsukan (ミツカン), another major natto producer, had already announced hikes of up to 20% on 19 products.
Natto occupies a unique place in Japan’s food culture. At roughly 88-100 yen for a three-pack, it has long been considered one of the most affordable sources of protein and nutrition in the Japanese diet. For many households, it is a daily fixture at breakfast, eaten over rice with soy sauce and mustard. The price hike follows similar increases to eggs, rice, and other kitchen staples, deepening what many Japanese feel is an unrelenting cost-of-living squeeze.
The timing is politically charged. Prime Minister Takaichi Sanae had campaigned on bringing food prices under control, including a promise to zero out consumption tax on food items. Critics in the thread repeatedly noted that this promise remains unfulfilled, even as everyday staples continue climbing.
Sentiment distribution (engagement-weighted)
anti-govt comment
blaming Takanofood
Highest-engagement comments
Activity timeline (JST · 2026-05-08)
Key themes in detail
🏛️ Blame the Government · 52.2% of engagement
The single largest bloc of commenters directed their anger squarely at the ruling LDP and Prime Minister Takaichi. Many pointed out that she had promised to address inflation but delivered nothing, while others broadened the critique to Japan’s energy policy, defense spending priorities, and the geopolitical factors (Trump, Iran) they see as driving costs up. The most common refrain: “Why do people keep voting LDP if they hate price hikes?”
This political dimension transformed what could have been a simple consumer complaint into a referendum on governance. Several commenters explicitly connected natto prices to constitutional reform debates, weapons exports, and consumption tax policy, arguing the government’s priorities are misaligned with ordinary people’s needs.
🛡️ Last Bastion Falls · 19.2% of engagement
A recurring metaphor across the thread cast natto as “the last ally” or “the final fortress” of affordable nutrition. Commenters mourned its fall alongside eggs, rice, and bean sprouts (moyashi) in a cascade of staple-food price hikes. One commenter wrote: “Rice went up, eggs went up, and now the last ally, natto, gets a 15% hike.” For many, natto was not just cheap food but a symbol of a social contract: that basic nutrition should remain accessible to everyone.
😔 Resigned but Still Buying · 2.8% of engagement
A substantial portion of commenters expressed a weary acceptance summed up by the Japanese sentiment “shikata ga nai” (it can’t be helped). Many acknowledged the company had no choice given rising input costs, with some praising Takanofood for holding out as long as it did. The key phrase: “I’ll keep buying anyway.” Loyalty to Okame Natto as a daily staple outweighed frustration at the price increase, revealing the deep emotional bond many Japanese have with this particular food.
💰 Wages Must Follow · 6.4% of engagement
Multiple commenters argued that the real problem is not price hikes but the failure of wages to keep pace. “Prices go up but salaries stay flat,” was a common sentiment. Some took a more structural view, arguing that Japan’s decades of suppressing price increases created a false equilibrium that is now collapsing all at once, and that gradual, steady price increases paired with wage growth would have been healthier for everyone.
🛒 Consumer Coping Strategies · 18.7% of engagement
A practical-minded subset of commenters pivoted from complaint to action. Suggestions included switching to private-brand (PB) alternatives, stocking up at Gyomu Super (a discount chain), evaluating whether the mustard and sauce packets justify their cost, and comparing domestic vs. imported soybeans. One detailed breakdown compared every major natto brand’s pricing, weight per pack, and packaging costs, arguing that consumers need to become more deliberate shoppers.
😂 Natto Puns and Humor · 0.7% of engagement
Even in frustration, Japanese commenters found room for wordplay. One noted that “Okame” (the brand) should be renamed “Takame” (expensive). Another played on the homophone between natto (the food) and nattoku (acceptance/understanding): “The poor can’t eat natto (natto kuu ikan), and they can’t accept the government either (nattoku ikan).” A self-deprecating salaryman quipped: “The only thing I never see going up is my paycheck.”