Is Japan Telephone and Telegraph Corporation NTT?

NTT Japan Telecom Telephone Co., Ltd., referred to as NTT for short, is the largest telecom service company in Japan, the most important flagship enterprise in Japan's communication industry at present, and is also listed as one of the world's leading communication companies. The headquarters address of Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Company is 〒 1 00-816. Before the restructuring of No.2 Dingmu Sanfan1in Otomachi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, the predecessor of NTT was Japan Telecom & Telephone Company, which was established in 1952. Before the NTT reform, TEPCO was the sole operator of domestic telecommunications services in Japan, while the international telecommunications services at the same time were monopolized by the International Telecommunication and Telephone Corporation, which was also funded by the Japanese government, which is now KDDI. Reform and Present Situation 1982 After Nakasone Yasuhiro, a citizen of the Liberal Democratic Party, became the Japanese Prime Minister, he began to vigorously promote the privatization of public utilities. The three major public institutions, namely, the electric power company, the Japanese state-owned railway (now JR) and the Japanese monopoly company (now JT), were listed as the primary targets of privatization. 1985, the newly established NTT formally inherited the business of the original power company and went public in February. At that time, it coincided with the peak of Japan's bubble economy. NTT's shares broke the new record of 3180,000 yen only two months after listing in Tokyo stock market. Because of the huge benefits brought by NTT's rich income, it has aroused the covet of politicians from all sides, and NTT once faced the fate of division. However, in 199 1, NTT first set up the mobile phone business independently, and then split other businesses into independent companies to solve it. However, NTT failed to resist political pressure. 1997 divides the fixed-line telecommunications business of its core business into two regions: East Japan (including Kanto, Tohoku and Hokkaido) and West Japan (outside NTT East Japan), and establishes subsidiaries to operate each region. These split businesses gradually turned NTT into a holding company. With the development of transnational operation, NTT began to export its developed communication technology and began to invest in overseas (especially in Asia) telecommunications industry. At present, NTT is moving towards becoming a world-class communication road. Related enterprise fixed telephone East Japan Telecom Telephone (NTT East Japan) West Japan Telecom Telephone (NTT West Japan) NTT Communication (NTT コミュニケーションズ) Mobile phone NTT DoCoMo Subgroup (NTT