UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


                             ---------------------
                                   FORM N-CSR
                             ---------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT
                              INVESTMENT COMPANIES

                  INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT FILE NUMBER 811-06142

                           THE JAPAN EQUITY FUND, INC.

               (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)



                       c/o Daiwa Securities Trust Company
                         One Evertrust Plaza, 9th Floor
                       Jersey City, New Jersey 07302-3051

               (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

                       c/o Daiwa Securities Trust Company
                         One Evertrust Plaza, 9th Floor
                       Jersey City, New Jersey 07302-3051

                     (Name and address of agent for service)

       REGISTRANT'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE: (201) 915-3054

                       DATE OF FISCAL YEAR END: October 31

                   DATE OF REPORTING PERIOD: October 31, 2005






--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Item 1.  Reports to Stockholders.





The Japan Equity Fund, Inc.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


General Information (unaudited)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Fund

     The investment  objective of the Fund is to outperform  over the long term,
on a total return basis (including appreciation and dividends),  the Tokyo Stock
Price Index ("TOPIX"), a composite  market-capitalization  weighted index of all
common stocks listed on the First Section of the Tokyo Stock  Exchange  ("TSE").
The Fund seeks to achieve its  investment  objective by investing  substantially
all of its assets in equity  securities of companies listed on the TSE or listed
on the  over-the-counter  market in Japan or listed on other stock  exchanges in
Japan.  Daiwa SB  Investments  (U.S.A.) Ltd. is the Fund's  Investment  Manager.
Daiwa SB Investments Ltd. is the Fund's Investment Adviser.  The Fund implements
an "active"  portfolio  management  policy,  which is an approach  that involves
quantitative  valuation of  securities  to identify an  appropriate  universe of
securities  from which to select  investments,  with  judgmental  analysis  then
applied to this universe to determine the actual  investments  to be made by the
Fund.

Shareholder Information

     The Fund's shares are listed on the New York Stock Exchange  ("NYSE").  The
Fund  understands  that its shares may trade  periodically on certain  exchanges
other  than the NYSE,  but the Fund has not  listed  its  shares on those  other
exchanges and does not  encourage  trading on those  exchanges.  The Fund's NYSE
trading symbol is "JEQ".  Weekly  comparative net asset value ("NAV") and market
price  information  about the Fund is  published  each Monday in The Wall Street
Journal,  each Sunday in The New York Times and each  Saturday in Barron's,  and
also appears in many other  newspapers.  The Fund's weekly NAV is also available
by visiting  www.daiwast.com or calling (800) 933-3440 or (201) 915-3020.  Also,
the Fund's website  includes a monthly  market review,  a list of the Fund's top
ten industries and holdings, its proxy voting policies and procedures,  its code
of ethics and its audit committee charter.

Inquiries

     Inquiries  concerning your  registered  share account should be directed to
the American  Stock  Transfer & Trust  Company (the "Plan  Agent") at the number
noted below. All written  inquiries should be directed to The Japan Equity Fund,
Inc., c/o Daiwa Securities Trust Company, One Evertrust Plaza, 9th Floor, Jersey
City, NJ 07302-3051.

Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures

     A description  of the policies and  procedures  that are used by the Fund's
Investment  Manager to vote proxies relating to the Fund's portfolio  securities
is available (1) without charge, upon request, by calling (201) 915-3054; (2) by
visiting  www.daiwast.com;  and (3) as an exhibit to the Fund's annual report on
Form N-CSR which is  available  on the website of the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission  (the  "Commission")  at www.sec.gov.  Information  regarding how the
Investment  Manager  votes these  proxies is now  available  by calling the same
number and the Commission's  website. The Fund has filed its report on Form N-PX
covering the Fund's proxy voting  record for the 12-month  period ended June 30,
2005.

Quarterly Portfolio of Investments

     A  Portfolio  of  Investments  will be filed as of the end of the first and
third  quarter  of each  fiscal  year on Form N-Q and will be  available  on the
Commission's  website at www.sec.gov and the Fund's web site at www.daiwast.com.
Additionally,  the  Portfolio of  Investments  may be reviewed and copied at the
Commission's  Public  Reference  Room  in  Washington  D.C.  Information  on the
operation  of the  Public  Reference  Room  may be  obtained  by  calling  (800)
SEC-0330.  The quarterly Portfolio of Investments will be made available without
charge, upon request, by calling (201) 915-3054.

Certifications

     The Fund's chief  executive  officer has  certified to the NYSE that, as of
June 22, 2005, he was not aware of any violation by the Fund of applicable  NYSE
corporate  governance  listing  standards.   The  Fund  also  has  included  the
certifications of the Fund's chief executive officer and chief financial officer
required by Section 302 and Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 in the
Fund's Form N-CSR filed with the Commission for the period of this report.

Dividend Reinvestment and Cash Purchase Plan

     A Dividend Reinvestment and Cash Purchase Plan (the "Plan") is available to
provide  Shareholders with automatic  reinvestment of dividends and capital gain
distributions  in  additional  Fund  shares.  The Plan also  allows  you to make
optional  annual  cash  investments  in Fund shares  through  the Plan Agent.  A
brochure fully  describing the Plan's terms and conditions is available from the
Plan Agent by calling (866) 669-9904 or by writing The Japan Equity Fund,  Inc.,
c/o the American Stock  Transfer & Trust  Company,  59 Maiden Lane, New York, NY
10038.

A brief summary of the material aspects of the Plan follows:

     Who can participate in the Plan? If you wish to participate and your shares
are held in your name, you may elect to become a direct  participant in the Plan
by completing and mailing the Enrollment Authorization form on the back cover of
the Dividend  Reinvestment  and Cash Purchase Plan Brochure  available  from the
Plan Agent.  However,  if your shares are held in the name of a brokerage  firm,
bank or nominee,  you should instruct your nominee to participate in the Plan on
your behalf.  If your nominee is unable to  participate in the Plan for you, you
should  request  that your shares be  registered  in your name,  so that you may
elect to participate directly in the Plan.

     May I withdraw  from the Plan? If your shares are held in your name and you
wish to receive all dividends and capital gain distributions in cash rather than
in  shares,  you may  withdraw  from the  Plan  without  penalty  at any time by
contacting  the Plan Agent.  If your shares are held in nominee name, you should
be able to  withdraw  from the Plan  without  a penalty  at any time by  sending
written  notice to your  nominee.  If you  withdraw,  you or your  nominee  will
receive a share  certificate for all full shares or, if you wish, the Plan Agent
will  sell  your  shares  and send you the  proceeds,  after  the  deduction  of
brokerage commissions. The Plan Agent will convert any fractional shares to cash
at the then-current market price and send to you a check for the proceeds.

     How are the dividends and distributions  reinvested? If the market price of
the Fund's  shares on the payment  date should  equal or exceed  their net asset
value per  share,  the Fund will  issue new  shares to you at the  higher of net
asset value or 95% of the  then-current  market  price.  If the market  price is
lower than net asset  value per share,  the Fund will issue new shares to you at
the market price. If the dividends or distributions  are declared and payable as
cash only,  you will receive  shares  purchased for you by the Plan Agent on the
NYSE or otherwise on the open market to the extent available.

     What is the Cash Purchase feature? The Plan participants have the option of
making annual  investments in Fund shares through the Plan Agent. You may invest
any amount from $100 to $3,000 annually. The Plan Agent will purchase shares for
you on the NYSE or  otherwise  on the open market on or about  February  15th of
each year. Plan participants  should send voluntary cash payments to be received
by the Plan Agent  approximately  ten days before the annual  purchase date. The
Plan Agent will return any cash payments received more than thirty days prior to
the purchase date. You may withdraw a voluntary cash payment by written  notice,
if the  notice is  received  by the Plan Agent not less that two  business  days
before the purchase date.

     Is there a cost to  participate?  There are no Plan  charges  or  brokerage
charges for shares issued directly by the Fund.  However,  each participant will
pay a pro rata portion of brokerage commissions for shares purchased on the NYSE
or on the open market by the Plan Agent.

     What are the tax implications?  The automatic reinvestment of dividends and
distributions  does not  relieve  you of any income tax which may be payable (or
required to be withheld) on such dividends and distributions.  In addition,  the
Plan  Agent  will  reinvest  dividends  for  foreign  participants  and  for any
participant  subject to federal  backup  withholding  after the deduction of the
amounts required to be withheld.

     Please  note  that,  if you  participate  in the Plan  through a  brokerage
account,  you may not be able to continue as a participant if you transfer those
shares to another  broker.  Contact  your broker or nominee or the Plan Agent to
ascertain what is the best arrangement for you to participate in the Plan.





Shareholder Letter (unaudited)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              November 16, 2005

Dear Shareholders:

     It is our  pleasure  on behalf of the Board of  Directors  to  present  the
Annual  Report for The Japan Equity Fund,  Inc. (the "Fund") for the fiscal year
ended October 31, 2005.

Performance  and Review of the Japanese  Stock Market  (November  2004 - October
2005)

     For the year ended  October 31,  2005,  stock  markets in Japan showed good
performance.  The total  return of the TOPIX  Index  ("TOPIX")  was 34% over the
period in local currency terms. The TOPIX hit bottom in April 2003 at 770 points
and bounced  strongly to finish 2003 at around 1000  points.  The TOPIX  climbed
further in early 2004, to reach 1200 points in April 2004, then largely moved in
the range  between 1100 points and 1200 points  until the end of July 2005.  The
TOPIX rose further over the quarter ended October 31, 2005 and it closed at 1445
points on October 31, 2005.

     Economic  fundamentals were supportive to companies in Japan. Over the past
year,  the  Japanese  economy  was on a steady  upward  trend.  Real term  Gross
Domestic Product ("GDP") increased 0.1% in the October to December 2004 quarter,
1.5% in the  January  to March  2005  quarter,  0.8% in the  April to June  2005
quarter,  and 0.4% in the July to  September  2005  quarter  (quarter-on-quarter
basis,  not  annualized).  Economies in the Americas,  Europe and Asia,  where a
large number of Japanese companies have extensive exposure, were generally doing
fine. The fast growing Chinese  economy  offered an alternative  production base
and some new markets for Japanese  companies,  as well as some new  competition.
The rise in natural resource prices, most starkly illustrated by the rise in the
price of oil, had a substantial effect on the operations of Japanese  companies.
Some  companies  suffered from rising  material  prices,  but others  benefited.
Higher oil prices drove up the costs for chemical producers, for example. At the
same time, trading houses benefited from higher natural resource prices, as they
succeeded  in raising  sales prices more than their cost  increase.  The Bank of
Japan continued its  "zero-interest-policy"  keeping  short-term  interest rates
minimal,  while the yield on the 10-year  government  bond stayed mostly between
1.2% and 1.6%.  The popular  Prime  Minister  Koizumi,  who has been running the
government since April 2001,  continued to push his reform policy toward smaller
government and more privatization of  once-government-run  organizations.  Prime
Minister Koizumi also changed many of the old-fashioned procedures that remained
in Japanese politics.

     Looking at stock market developments,  the steel, banking,  insurance, real
estate and metal sectors were the top  performing  sectors,  while the paper and
pulp,  airline and  telecommunication  sectors  performed  the worst  during the
one-year period ended October 31, 2005.  Steel producers  benefited from a surge
in steel demand,  after years of slump.  The sudden  increase in steel demand in
Asia,  particularly  in China,  helped  steel makers  increase  output and raise
prices,  more than  offsetting  the  cost-rise  of the  inputs  and fuel.  Banks
performed  well over the year, as investors  grew more  confident and optimistic
about their profitability and the once-quite-questionable state of their balance
sheet.  Consolidation  of the  industry  by mergers  among banks was also viewed
positively.  Insurers  performed well,  too. They were hit by natural  disasters
such as earthquakes and typhoons,  but investors seemed to have found more value
in the likely return from insurers' investments. In the central city areas, land
prices finally  started to rise. Land prices have been in decline all over Japan
from the peak of the "bubble  economy" in 1990.  Seeing the signs of turn-around
in land prices,  stocks of real estate operators performed well. The development
of  securitization in 4 real estate investment helped the revival of real estate
operators.  On the other hand, the paper industry in Japan  encountered  renewed
tough competition,  even after sizable  consolidation a few years ago, resulting
in profit  deterioration  at paper makers and poor  performance of paper stocks.
Airlines  in  Japan  suffered,  as was  the  case  with  many of  their  foreign
competitors,  from tough  competition  and high fuel  prices.  Telecommunication
operators and information  technology service providers were also hurt by severe
competition, resulting in a slump in share prices.

     Examples of top performers and bottom  performers  among the major names in
the TOPIX are as follows:

     The share price of Sumitomo  Metal  Industries  more than  trebled over the
period.  It performed best among major  stocks--its  steel  production  business
enjoyed buoyant  demand,  with an extra upside in its seamless pipes for oil and
gas industries.  Kobe Steel was also one of the top performers with 130% return.
Specialty   retailers  performed  well.  Yamada  Denki  (a  consumer  electronic
retailing chain), Isetan (a department store with strength in fashion items) and
Shimamura  (a retail  chain of  reasonably  priced  clothes)  were all among top
performers.  Shares of Yamada Denki gained 170%,  Isetan  shares  gained 93% and
Shimamura  shares gained 92% over the period.  Shares of financial  institutions
also  performed  well.  Juroku Bank returned 128%,  Aioi  Insurance 92%,  Resona
Holdings  91%,  Mitsui Trust 91% and Mizuho  Financial  Group 89%. All benefited
from a more optimistic view of the Japanese financial market. On the other hand,
companies in the  electronics and information  technology  industries  performed
poorly.  Shares in Net-One Systems, an IT system integrator declined by 45% over
the year because  expected  profit  growth did not  materialize  as  competition
remained tough. NEC Electronics'  shares lost 40%, because its IC chips suffered
from tough price  competition,  while  shares in  SkyPerfect  Communications,  a
satellite TV operator, declined by 35%.

Performance/Attribution Analysis



         Table 1. Performance in comparison with the benchmark (TOPIX), U.S. Dollar ("USD") base
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                               Latest 12 Months
                                                                                           (As of October 31, 2005)
                                                                                           ------------------------
                                                                                                 
                                                                                                      %
Japan Equity Fund (time weighted return).............................................               25.22
Benchmark (TOPIX)....................................................................               22.10
                                                                                           ------------------------
Difference...........................................................................                3.12






------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

         Table 2. Attribution Analysis Summary, Japanese Yen ("JPY") base (Latest 12 Months)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                                     (%)
                                                                                           ------------------------
                                                                                                 

Portfolio (Equity Only)..............................................................               39.86
Benchmark (TOPIX)....................................................................               34.60
                                                                                           ------------------------
Difference...........................................................................                5.26
Breakdown
Sector Selection.....................................................................                0.04
Stock Selection......................................................................                5.21
Others...............................................................................                0.01
                                                                                           ------------------------
Total................................................................................                5.26

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------








         Table 3. Portfolio Return (Equity Only) vs. Benchmark Return, USD base (monthly)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                         Portfolio       Benchmark        Relative
                                                                           Return          Return          Return
                                                                            (A)              (B)          (A) - (B
                                                                            (%)              (%)             (%)
                                                                         ----------      ----------       ----------
                                                                                                    
2004      November..................................................         3.97            4.17           -0.20
          December..................................................         3.68            3.59            0.09
2005      January...................................................        -1.26            0.27           -1.53
          February..................................................         1.49            1.62           -0.13
          March.....................................................        -2.55           -2.07           -0.48
          April.....................................................        -2.75           -3.49            0.74
          May.......................................................         0.65           -0.37            1.02
          June......................................................         1.21            0.54            0.67
          July......................................................         0.81            0.68            0.13
          August....................................................         7.18            6.52            0.66
          September.................................................        10.51            9.33            1.18
          October...................................................         0.56            0.04            0.52




------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


         Table 4. Attribution Analysis Breakdown, JPY base (Latest 12 Months) - Equity Only
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                                Sector     Stock
                                       Portfolio     Benchmark     Portfolio     Benchmark     Selection   Selection
                                         Weight       Weight        Return        Return        Effect       Effect
                                           %             %             %             %             %           %
                                       ----------    ----------    ----------    -----------   ----------  ----------
                                                                                             

Fishing, Agriculture & Forestry...         0.00        0.10           0.00        27.38           0.01         0.00
Mining............................         0.00        0.46           0.00        53.20          -0.12         0.00
Construction......................         3.09        2.36          52.86        42.88           0.02         0.27
Manufacturing.....................        56.19       50.70          31.17        28.94          -0.33         1.41
Electric Power & Gas..............         3.26        3.99          29.91        28.12           0.15         0.06
Transport and Communication.......        10.15       12.47          23.70        16.61           0.43         0.74
Commerce..........................         8.56        8.66          64.17        46.93          -0.09         1.13
Finance & Insurance...............        17.35       17.58          66.93        57.06          -0.10         1.50
Real Estate.......................         1.31        1.82          69.73        63.32          -0.02         0.10
Services..........................         0.09        1.86           5.97        30.39           0.09         0.01
Total.............................       100.00      100.00          39.86        34.60           0.04         5.21

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------







         Table 5. Attribution Analysis Breakdown, JPY base (Latest 12 Months) - Equity Only
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                                Sector     Stock
                                       Portfolio     Benchmark    Portfolio     Benchmark      Selection   Selection
                                         Weight       Weight        Return        Return        Effect       Effect
                                           %             %            %             %              %           %
                                       ----------    ----------    ----------    -----------   ----------  ----------
                                                                                             
Fishery, Agriculture & Forestry...          0.00        0.10           0.00       27.38            0.01         0.00
Mining............................          0.00        0.46           0.00       53.20           -0.12         0.00
Construction......................          3.09        2.36          52.86       42.88            0.02         0.27
Foods.............................          0.98        2.69          -7.61       32.06            0.16        -0.39
Textiles & Apparel................          1.38        1.10          49.01       45.01            0.03         0.32
Pulp & Paper......................          0.34        0.46          -0.50        1.29            0.10        -0.01
Chemicals.........................          6.97        5.27          31.66       29.67           -0.22         0.17
Pharmaceutical....................          4.29        4.27          25.57       21.46           -0.18         0.15
Oil & Coal Products...............          0.00        0.86           0.00       55.53           -0.17         0.00
Rubber Products...................          0.55        0.72           6.98       32.99           -0.01         0.04
Glass & Ceramics Product..........          1.67        1.11          19.48       45.69            0.14        -0.36
Iron & Steel......................          2.01        2.05          54.62       74.58            0.15        -0.32
Nonferrous Metals.................          2.87        0.96          55.94       57.78            0.45        -0.12
Metal Products....................          0.00        0.64           0.00       14.52            0.14         0.00
Machinery.........................          5.22        3.78          58.77       56.03            0.31         0.13
Electrical Appliances.............         14.86       13.45          16.42       14.58           -0.39         0.22
Transport Equipment...............         11.32       10.39          29.59       27.24            0.01         0.34
Precision Instruments.............          2.35        1.20          47.33       35.44            0.04         0.27
Other Products....................          1.38        1.74          15.69       22.98            0.22        -0.13
Wholesale Trade...................          2.50        4.00          44.81       55.14           -0.32        -0.41
Retail Trade......................          6.06        4.66          75.57       40.23            0.02         1.74
Banks.............................         10.35       10.55          67.85       63.21           -0.20         0.41
Other Financing Business..........          3.18        2.87          62.65       41.27           -0.01         0.58
Securities & Commodity Futures....          0.85        1.95          -4.12       40.26           -0.08         0.02
Insurance.........................          2.97        2.21          75.55       63.64            0.35         0.34
Real Estate.......................          1.31        1.82          69.73       63.32           -0.02         0.10
Land Transportation...............          2.92        3.06          14.80       23.98            0.06        -0.28
Marine Transportation.............          1.27        0.61          34.89       28.37           -0.02         0.09
Air Transportation................          0.00        0.33           0.00       11.43            0.08         0.00
Warehouse & Harbor Trans..........          0.00        0.24           0.00       52.65           -0.04         0.00
Info & Communication..............          5.96        8.23          27.43       12.46            0.41         0.88
Electric Power & Gas..............          3.26        3.99          29.91       28.12            0.15         0.06
Services..........................          0.09        1.87           5.97       30.39            0.09         0.01
Total.............................        100.00      100.00          39.86       34.60            1.15         4.11


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




Comment

     As shown in Table 1, the net asset value  ("NAV") of the Fund  increased by
25.22% in USD terms  during the twelve  months from  November 1, 2004 to October
31, 2005. Over the same period,  the Fund's  benchmark  (TOPIX) gained 22.10% in
USD terms. The depreciation of the JPY against the USD was a negative factor for
the absolute NAV return measured in USD.

     Table 2 shows that the  performance of the equity portion of the portfolio,
excluding  expenses  and some  cash  positions  in JPY  terms,  was  39.86%,  in
comparison with 34.60% for the benchmark, indicating out-performance of 5.26% on
this basis.

Attribution Analysis Throughout the Period

Tables 4 and 5.  (Stock Selection)

     The attribution analysis indicates that a sizable positive contribution was
made in Retailing (+1.74%),  Telecommunication & Information  Services (+0.88%),
and Other Finance (+0.58%)  sectors.  Negative  contributions in stock selection
mostly  came  from  Wholesale  Trade  (-0.41%),  Food  (-0.39%)  and the Glass &
Ceramics  (-0.36%)  sectors.  The total stock selection  contribution was +5.21%
over the period.

     Major positive  contributors were Sundrug (+1.02%,  a specialty  retailer),
Shimamura  (+0.70%,  a  specialty  retailer),  Mitsubishi  UFJ  Financial  Group
(+0.67%, a banking group),  Tokuyama (+0.59%, a specialty chemical producer) and
Orix (+0.55%,  a leasing  company).  Major  negative  contributors  were Net-One
Systems  (-0.69%,  a computer  system  integrator),  Sharp  (-0.59%,  a maker of
consumer  electronics  products)  and  TDK  (-0.48%,  an  electronic  components
producer).

(Sector Selection)

     The  attribution  analysis  shows  that  an  underweight  position  in  the
Communication sector resulted in a positive contribution  (+0.41%),  while there
were negative  contributions from an overweight position in Electronics (-0.39%)
and an underweight position in Wholesale Trade (-0.32%).

Outlook & Strategy

     Investors were quite active in the Japanese stock market, particularly from
the summer of 2005.  Foreign investors  continued to be major buyers of Japanese
stocks from the spring onwards,  while domestic individual  investors were quite
active  participants.  The Japanese stock market grew  relatively more volatile.
Stock price movement of individual stocks also grew volatile,  particularly from
the summer of 2005.  One  obvious  focus of market  participants  is whether the
rising trend of natural  resource  prices,  most notably observed in oil prices,
has reversed after a long-lasting up-trend.  Another focus would be the strength
of the U.S.  economy after natural  disasters.  Much concern has been  expressed
about the housing  market boom in the United States in view of the potential for
continuing  interest rate increases.  In Japan,  the rebound of the economy over
the last few years was  driven by the  corporate  sector.  Signs of a pick-up in
retail  consumption have been observed in 2005,  finally.  The Japanese domestic
economy could enjoy a prolonged expansionary phase, if the driver of the economy
shifts smoothly to personal consumption from certain cyclical sectors that could
face  downturn.  Over the long term,  we expect a healthy  return from  Japanese
stock  markets as of now.  The reasons  are:  1)  fundamentals  of the  Japanese
economy has much  improved  and it is in good  condition,  2) a large  number of
companies in Japan have overcome  troubles and are well  positioned to earn good
profits in total,  and 3) valuation of stocks  remain quite  reasonable.  At the
same time, we are careful about the state of the global economy,  housing market
condition in the U.S. and Japan, and possible  external shocks to economies.  We
will  keep  our  focus  on the  fundamentals  of the  companies  with  unchanged
attention to the quality of earnings.

Fund Performance

     During the year ended October 31, 2005,  the Fund's market price on the New
York Stock Exchange  ("NYSE")  ranged from a low of $5.73 per share on April 18,
2005 to a high of $8.88 on October 4, 2005.  The Fund's NYSE market price closed
at $8.51 per share on October 31, 2005.

     The NYSE trading price in relation to the Fund's net asset value per share,
as measured by the weekly closing prices during the year ended October 31, 2005,
ranged from a high  discount of 9.26% on May 12, 2005 to a high premium of 9.41%
on October 20, 2005, and ended the period at a premium of 9.24%.

     The  Fund has not  invested  in  derivative  securities.  Although  foreign
currency hedging is permitted by the Fund's prospectus, the Fund has not engaged
in any foreign currency hedging.

Portfolio Management

     Mr.  Koichi  Ogawa,  CFA, is the  Executive  Director  and Chief  Portfolio
Manager of Daiwa SB Investments Ltd. ("DSBI") for all North American clients.  A
senior member of the Investment Policy Committee (IPC) of DSBI, Mr. Ogawa has 30
years  of  investment  experience  and has  been  responsible  for  Japan  stock
selection  since  1984.  He  spent  nine  years  with  Daiwa  Securities  as  an
institutional  research  analyst  and  three  years in New York  analyzing  U.S.
securities. He graduated from Tohoku University with a B.A. in Law in 1972.

     Mr. Atsuhiko Masuda,  CFA, is a Senior Portfolio Manager with a total of 17
years of experience in the Japanese equity market. He joined Daiwa in 2003 after
spending two years as a Senior Fund Manager for Invesco Asset  Management.  From
1995 to 2001 he was a Fund Manager for Deutsche  Asset  Management and from 1988
to 1993 he was an advisor in the Corporate Finance Division of Morgan Grenfell &
Company.  In 1995 he earned an MBA from the Wharton  School at the University of
Pennsylvania  and in 1988 he  graduated  from  Keio  University  with a B.A.  in
Economics. He assumed the day-to-day portfolio management responsibility for the
Fund effective July 1, 2004.

     We thank you for your  support  of The Japan  Equity  Fund,  Inc.  and your
continued interest in the Japanese economy and marketplace.

Sincerely,





HIROSHI KIMURA                                                KIYOTAKA HOSHINO
Chairman of the Board                                         President





Portfolio of Investments

October 31, 2005

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMON STOCKS--96.87%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



  Shares                                    Value
----------                                ----------
Banks--11.74%
     412     Mitsubishi UFJ Financial
                Group, Inc.............   $5,153,110
     320     Mizuho Financial Group,
                Inc....................    2,130,941
      60     Sapporo Hokuyo Holdings,
                Inc....................      626,240
 120,000     The Bank of Fukuoka,
                Ltd....................      931,597
 150,000     The Bank of Yokohama,
                Ltd....................    1,221,427
  65,000     The Chiba Bank, Ltd.......      578,064
 300,000     The Sumitomo Trust &
                Banking Co., Ltd.......    2,551,540
                                         ------------
                                          13,192,919
Chemicals--6.97%
  70,000     Asahi Organic Chemicals
                Industry Co., Ltd......      271,112
  30,000     Fuji Photo Film Co.,
                Ltd....................      949,711
  46,000     Kao Corp..................    1,101,095
  21,000     Nitto Denko Corp..........    1,269,818
  57,000     Shin--Etsu Chemical Co.,
                Ltd....................    2,723,885
 153,000     Tokuyama Corp.............    1,517,726
                                         ------------
                                           7,833,347
Communication--6.77%
     200     KDDI Corp.................    1,145,519
  22,000     Nippon System
                Development Co., Ltd...      633,831
     660     NTT Corp..................    3,108,427
   1,580     NTT DoCoMo, Inc...........    2,725,783
                                         ------------
                                           7,613,560

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  Shares                                    Value
----------                                -----------
Construction--3.01%
  90,000     Daiwa House Industry
                Co., Ltd...............   $1,206,418
 250,000     Maeda Corp................    1,776,934
  60,000     Shimizu Corp..............      405,245
                                         ------------
                                           3,388,597
Electric Appliances--12.85%
  14,000     Canon Inc.................      733,029
  39,600     Enplas Corp...............      946,192
   7,000     Fanuc Ltd.................      549,469
  10,000     Hirose Electric Co.,
                Ltd....................    1,141,206
  10,000     Japan Electronic Materials
                Corp...................      134,564
   2,300     Keyence Corp..............      528,526
 158,000     Matsushita Electric
                Industrial Co., Ltd....    2,882,515
  20,000     Murata Manufacturing
                Co., Ltd...............      995,428
  41,000     Neomax Co., Ltd...........    1,237,816
 160,000     Sharp Corp................    2,194,428
      50     Sumida Corp...............          888
  22,000     TDK Corp..................    1,482,101
 350,000     Toshiba Corp..............    1,618,218
                                         ------------
                                          14,444,380
Electric Power & Gas--2.7%
  72,000     Kyushu Electric Power
                Co., Inc...............    1,546,450
  60,000     Tokyo Electric Power
                Co., Inc...............    1,493,142
                                         ------------
                                           3,039,592
Glass & Ceramic Products--0.58%
  18,000     Nichiha Corp..............      265,505
  90,000     Nippon Sheet Glass
                Co., Ltd...............      382,731
                                         ------------
                                             648,236

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------






Portfolio of Investments (continued)

October 31, 2005

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMON STOCKS (continued)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



  Shares                                    Value
----------                                ----------
Insurance--3.98%
 234,000     Aioi Insurance Co., Ltd...   $1,661,192
 100,000     Mitsui Sumitomo
                Insurance Co., Ltd.....    1,276,632
 210,000     Nissay Dowa General
                Insurance Co., Ltd.....    1,536,099
                                         ------------
                                           4,473,923
Iron & Steel--1.46%
  53,000     JFE Holdings, Inc.........    1,641,249
Land Transportation--3.20%
     430     East Japan Railway Co.....    2,559,303
 275,000     Fukuyama Transporting
                Co., Ltd...............    1,036,617
                                         ------------
                                           3,595,920
Machinery--5.61%
  36,000     Amano Corp................      593,117
  42,000     Komatsu Ltd...............      557,198
  51,400     Miura Co., Ltd............    1,194,885
 200,000     NSK Ltd...................    1,166,221
  21,000     SMC Corp..................    2,791,426
                                         ------------
                                           6,302,847
Marine Transportation--1.03%
 192,000     Nippon Yusen Kabushiki
                Kaisha.................    1,159,320
Non--Ferrous Metals--3.14%
 390,000     Mitsui Mining & Smelting
                Co., Ltd...............    2,220,305
 100,000     Sumitomo Electric
                Industries, Ltd........    1,312,861
                                         ------------
                                           3,533,166
Other Financing Business--3.99%
  70,400     Hitachi Capital Corp......    1,496,903
  16,000     Orix Corp.................    2,990,770
                                         ------------
                                           4,487,673

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Shares                                    Value
----------                                ----------
Pharmaceutical--4.58%
  28,000     Astellas Pharma Inc.......   $1,002,329
  33,300     Eisai Co., Ltd............    1,304,080
  12,000     Ono Pharmaceuticals Co.,        535,151
                Ltd....................
  42,000     Takeda Pharmaceutical
                Co., Ltd...............    2,304,149
                                         ------------
                                           5,145,709
Precision Instruments--2.33%
  41,200     Hoya Corp.................    1,442,871
   9,600     Micronics Japan Co., Ltd..      201,639
  32,000     Terumo Corp...............      968,861
                                           2,613,371
Real Estate--2.60%
  52,300     Daibiru Corp..............      469,631
 150,000     Mitsui Fudosan
                Co., Ltd...............    2,451,911
                                         ------------
                                           2,921,542
Retail Trade--5.27%
  13,000     Nitori Co., Ltd...........      986,802
  29,000     Seven & I Holdings Co.,         950,574
                Ltd....................
  13,700     Shimamura Co., Ltd........    1,758,440
  30,700     Sundrug Co., Ltd..........    1,729,242
  11,500     Xebio Co., Ltd............      494,005
                                         ------------
                                           5,919,063
Services--0.46%
   5,000     Nomura Research                 516,691
                Institute, Ltd.........
Textile & Apparel--0.85%
 161,000     Teijin Ltd................  ------------
                                             958,251
Transportation Equipment--12.02%
  42,000     Aisin Seiki Co., Ltd......    1,260,761
  38,000     Denso Corp................    1,078,409
  55,000     Honda Motor Co., Ltd......    3,007,850

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Portfolio of Investments (concluded)

October 31, 2005
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



COMMON STOCKS (concluded)


Shares                                      Value
----------                                ----------
Transportation Equipment (concluded)
 270,000     Mazda Motor Corp..........   $1,271,629
  11,400     NOK Corp..................      343,190
      80     Tachi--S Co., Ltd..........          867
  40,000     Tokai Rika Co., Ltd.......      910,895
 123,000     Toyota Motor Corp.........    5,633,831
                                         ------------
                                          13,507,432

Wholesale Trade--1.73%
  36,000     Hitachi High--Technologies       836,884
                Corp...................
 100,000     Sumitomo Corp.............    1,112,740
                                           1,949,624
                                         ------------
Total Common Stocks
   (Cost--$86,353,541)...............     108,886,412
                                         ------------


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS--0.01%
------------------------------------------------------
 Principal                                  Value
  Amount
   (000)
----------                                ----------
U.S. DOLLAR TIME DEPOSIT--0.01% $ 12 Bank of New York Time
                Deposit, 0.05%,
                due 11/1/05
                (Cost--$11,686)........   $   11,686
Total Investments--96.88%
   (Cost--$86,365,227)..............     108,898,098
Other assets less liabilities--3.12%.      3,507,297
                                         ------------

NET ASSETS (Applicable to
   14,420,917 shares of capital stock
   outstanding; equivalent to $7.79
   per share)--100.00%..............     $112,405,395
                                         ------------

================================================================================





                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.





EQUITY
CLASSIFICATIONS HELD
October 31, 2005
-------------------------------------------------------
Industry                                  Percent of
                                          Net Assets
--------                                  ----------
Electric Appliances.................         12.85%
Transportation Equipment............         12.02
Banks...............................         11.74
Chemicals...........................          6.97
Communication.......................          6.77
Machinery...........................          5.61
Retail Trade........................          5.27
Pharmaceutical......................          4.58
Other Financing Business............          3.99
Insurance...........................          3.98
Land Transportation.................          3.20
Non-Ferrous Metals..................          3.14
Construction........................          3.01
Electric Power & Gas................          2.70
Real Estate.........................          2.60
Precision Instruments...............          2.33
Wholesale Trade.....................          1.73
Iron & Steel........................          1.46
Marine Transportation...............          1.03
Textile & Apparel...................          0.85
Glass & Ceramic Products............          0.58
Services............................          0.46



                                                             
TEN LARGEST EQUITY
POSITIONS HELD
October 31, 2005
--------------------------------------------------------
Issue                                       Percent of
                                            Net Assets
--------                                    ----------

Toyota Motor Corp........................       5.01%
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc......       4.58
NTT Corp.................................       2.77
Honda Motor Co., Ltd.....................       2.68
Orix Corp................................       2.66
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co.,
   Ltd...................................       2.56
SMC Corp.................................       2.48
NTT DoCoMo, Inc..........................       2.42
Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., Ltd..............       2.42
East Japan Railway Co....................       2.28













--------------------------------------------------------------------------------






Statement of Assets and Liabilities
October 31, 2005
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                           
Assets
   Investment in securities, at value (cost--$86,365,227)..............................              $     108,898,098
   Cash denominated in foreign currency (cost--$3,220,036).............................                       3,198,631
   Receivable for securities sold.....................................................                         101,653
   Interest and dividends receivable..................................................                         394,484
   Prepaid expenses...................................................................                          35,318
                                                                                           --------------------------
      Total assets....................................................................                     112,628,184
                                                                                           --------------------------
Liabilities
   Payable for securities purchased...................................................                          79,871
   Payable for management fees........................................................                          12,165
   Payable for advisory fees..........................................................                          18,247
   Payable for other affiliates.......................................................                          33,506
   Accrued expenses and other liabilities.............................................                          79,000
                                                                                           --------------------------
      Total liabilities...............................................................                         222,789
                                                                                           --------------------------
Net Assets
   Capital stock, $0.01 par value per share; total 30,000,000 shares authorized;
      14,420,917 shares issued and outstanding........................................                         144,209
   Paid-in capital in excess of par value.............................................                     126,268,650
   Accumulated net realized loss on investments.......................................                     (36,509,130)
   Net unrealized appreciation on investments and other assets and liabilities
      denominated in foreign currency.................................................                      22,501,666
                                                                                           --------------------------
        Net assets applicable to shares outstanding...................................              $     112,405,395
                                                                                           ==========================
           Net Asset Value Per Share..................................................     $                     7.79
                                                                                           ==========================



================================================================================









                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.







Statement of Operations

For the Years Ended October 31, 2005 2004
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    
Investment income:
   Dividends (net of withholding taxes of $82,587)..........................................       $   1,097,233
   Interest.................................................................................                  58
                                                                                                   -------------
      Total investment Income...............................................................           1,097,291
                                                                                                   -------------

Expenses:
   Investment management fee................................................................             339,983
   Administration fee and expenses..........................................................             199,862
   Custodian fees and expenses..............................................................             130,997
   Audit and tax services...................................................................              80,450
   Legal fees and expenses..................................................................              67,396
   Reports and notices to shareholders......................................................              56,601
   Insurance expense........................................................................              51,473
   Directors' fees and expenses.............................................................              35,000
   Transfer agency fee and expenses.........................................................               8,802
   Other....................................................................................              61,763
                                                                                                   -------------
      Total expenses........................................................................           1,032,327
                                                                                                   -------------
Net investment income.......................................................................              64,964
                                                                                                   -------------

Realized and unrealized gains from investment activities and foreign currency transactions:
   Net realized gains on investments........................................................           5,430,721
   Net realized foreign currency transaction losses.........................................            (284,449)
   Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments in equity securities.          17,217,326
   Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on short-term investments and other
      assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currency................................             (63,054)
                                                                                                   -------------
Net realized and unrealized gains from investment activities and foreign currency transactions        22,300,544
                                                                                                   -------------
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations........................................       $  22,365,508
                                                                                                   =============
                                                  


================================================================================










                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.







Statement of Changes in Net Assets
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                           For the Years Ended
                                                                                               October 31,
                                                                                    ---------------------------------
                                                                                         2005              2004
                                                                                    ------------         ------------

                                                                                                
Increase (decrease) in net assets from operations:
   Net investment income (loss)................................................      $       64,964   $      (48,093)
   Net realized gain (loss) on:`
      Investments..............................................................           5,430,721        6,197,993
      Foreign currency transactions............................................            (284,449)         (92,782)
   Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:
      Investments in equity securities.........................................          17,217,326         (393,278)
      Translation  of  short-term  investments  and other  assets and  liabilities
        denominated in foreign currency........................................             (63,054)          31,761
                                                                                    ----------------   ---------------
   Net increase in net assets resulting from operations........................          22,365,508        5,695,601
                                                                                    ----------------   ---------------
From capital stock transactions: Sale of capital stock resulting from:
      Net proceeds from the sale of common shares pursuant to rights offering..                   --       19,425,914
                                                                                    ----------------   ---------------
   Net increase in net assets..................................................          22,365,508       25,121,515
Net assets:
   Beginning of year...........................................................          90,039,887       64,918,372
                                                                                    ----------------   ---------------
   End of year.................................................................      $  112,405,395   $   90,039,887
                                                                                    ================   ===============



================================================================================






                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.





Notes to Financial Statements
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Organization and Significant Accounting Policies

     The Japan Equity Fund,  Inc. (the "Fund") was  incorporated  in Maryland on
July 12, 1990 under its former name "The Japan Emerging  Equity Fund,  Inc." and
commenced  operations on July 24, 1992. It is registered with the Securities and
Exchange Commission as a closed-end, diversified management investment company.

     The  following  significant  accounting  policies  are in  conformity  with
generally  accepted  accounting  principles  in the United States of America for
investment companies. Such policies are consistently followed by the Fund in the
preparation of its financial statements. The preparation of financial statements
in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States
of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the
amounts and disclosures in the financial  statements.  Actual reporting  results
could differ from those estimates.

     Valuation  of  Investments--Securities  which are listed on the Tokyo Stock
Exchange  or listed on the  over-the-counter  market in Japan or listed on other
exchanges in Japan and for which market  quotations  are readily  available  are
valued at the last  reported  sales price  available to the Fund at the close of
business on the day the  securities are being valued or, lacking any such sales,
at the last available bid price. In instances  where  quotations are not readily
available or where the price as determined by the above procedures is deemed not
to represent fair market value,  fair value will be determined in such manner as
the Board of Directors  (the  "Board")  may  prescribe.  Short-term  investments
having a maturity of 60 days or less are valued at amortized cost,  except where
the Board  determines  that such  valuation does not represent the fair value of
the  investment.  All other  securities  and  assets are valued at fair value as
determined in good faith by, or under the direction of, the Board.

     Foreign  Currency  Translation--The  books  and  records  of the  Fund  are
maintained in U.S. dollars as follows:  (1) the foreign currency market value of
investment  securities and other assets and  liabilities  stated in Japanese yen
are  translated at the exchange rates  prevailing at the end of the period;  and
(2) purchases, sales, income and expenses are translated at the rate of exchange
prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions.  The resulting exchange
gains and losses are included in the Statement of Operations.  The Fund does not
isolate the effect of fluctuations in foreign  exchange rates from the effect of
fluctuations in the market price of securities.

     Tax Status--The Fund intends to continue to distribute substantially all of
its  taxable  income  and to  comply-with  the  minimum  distribution  and other
requirements  of the Internal  Revenue Code  applicable to regulated  investment
companies.  Accordingly,  no  provision  for federal  income or excise  taxes is
required.

     The Fund is not  subject to any  Japanese  income,  capital  gains or other
taxes except for withholding taxes on certain-income, generally imposed at rates
of 10% on interest and dividends, paid to the Fund by Japanese corporations.





Notes to Financial Statements (continued)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Investment Transactions and Investment Income--Investment  transactions are
recorded  on the trade  date  (the  date upon  which the order to buy or sell is
executed).  Realized and  unrealized  gains and losses from security and foreign
currency  transactions  are  calculated on the identified  cost basis.  Dividend
income and corporate actions are recorded  generally on the ex-date,  except for
certain  dividends and corporate  actions from Japanese  securities which may be
recorded after the ex-date, as soon as the Fund acquires  information  regarding
such dividends or corporate  actions.  Interest income is recorded on an accrual
basis.

     Dividends and Distributions to Shareholders--The Fund records dividends and
distributions payable to its shareholders on the ex-dividend date. The amount of
dividends and distributions  from net investment income and net realized capital
gains are determined in accordance  with federal income tax  regulations,  which
may differ from generally accepted accounting  principles.  These book basis/tax
basis differences are either considered temporary or permanent in nature. To the
extent these differences are permanent in nature,  such amounts are reclassified
within  the  capital  accounts  based  on their  federal  tax  basis  treatment;
temporary   differences   do  not  require   reclassifications.   Dividends  and
distributions  which exceed net investment income and net realized capital gains
for tax purposes are reported as distributions of paid-in-capital.

Investment Manager and Investment Adviser

     The Fund has an Investment  Management  Agreement with Daiwa SB Investments
(U.S.A.)  Ltd.  (the  "Manager").  Daiwa  SB  Investments  Ltd.  ("DSBI"  or the
"Adviser"),  an affiliate of the Manager,  acts as the Fund's investment adviser
pursuant to an Investment  Advisory  Agreement between the Manager and DSBI. For
such investment services, the Fund is obligated to pay the Manager a monthly fee
at an  annual  rate of 0.60% of the  first  $20  million,  0.40% of the next $30
million and 0.20% of the excess over $50  million of the Fund's  average  weekly
net assets,  of which fee 60% is paid by the Manager to DSBI.  In addition,  the
Fund has agreed to reimburse  the Manager and the Adviser for all  out-of-pocket
expenses  related to the Fund. For the year ended October 31, 2005,  expenses of
$6,263 were paid to the Adviser,  representing  reimbursement  to the Adviser of
costs  relating to the  attendance  by its  employees  at meetings of the Fund's
Board.

         At October 31, 2005, the Fund owed $30,412 to the Manager.

     Brokerage  commissions of $31,347 were paid by the Fund to Daiwa Securities
America,  Inc., an affiliate of both the Manager and DSBI,  in  connection  with
portfolio transactions during the year ended October 31, 2005.

Administrator and Custodian and Other Related Parties

     Daiwa  Securities  Trust  Company  ("DSTC"),  an  affiliate of the Adviser,
provides certain administrative services to the Fund, for which the Fund pays to
DSTC a monthly  fee at an annual  rate of 0.20% of the first $60  million of the
Fund's average weekly net assets, 0.15% of the next $40 million and 0.10% of the
excess over $100 million, with a minimum annual fee of $120,000. In addition, as
permitted by the Administration Agreement, the Fund reimburses the Administrator
for its  out-of-pocket  expenses related to the Fund. For the year ended October
31,  2005,  expenses  of  $6,072  were paid to the  Administrator,  representing
reimbursement  to the  Administrator  of costs relating to the attendance by its
employees at meetings of the Fund's Board.





Notes to Financial Statements (continued)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     DSTC  also  acts as  custodian  for the  Fund's  assets  and has  appointed
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation-(the  "Sub-Custodian"),  an affiliate of the
Manager,  to act as the  sub-custodian for all of the cash and securities of the
Fund held in Japan. As compensation for its services as custodian, DSTC receives
a monthly fee and reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses. Such expenses include
fees and  out-of-pocket  expenses  of the  Sub-Custodian.  During the year ended
October  31,  2005,  DSTC and the  Sub-Custodian  earned  $50,187  and  $80,810,
respectively, as compensation for custodial service to the Fund.

     At October 31, 2005,  the Fund owed $16,055,  $3,833 and $4,810 to DSTC for
administration,  compliance and custodian fees, respectively, excluding fees and
expenses of $8,807 payable to the Sub-Custodian.

     During the year ended  October 31, 2005,  the Fund paid or accrued  $67,033
for legal services in connection  with the Fund's  on-going  operations to a law
firm of which the Fund's Assistant Secretary is a partner.

Investments in Securities and Federal Income Tax Matters

     For federal  income tax purposes,  the cost of securities  owned at October
31, 2005 was $86,379,720.  At October 31, 2005, the net unrealized  appreciation
of investments for federal income tax purposes, excluding short-term securities,
of  $22,518,378  was composed of gross  appreciation  of  $23,514,470  for those
investments  having an excess of value  over  cost,  and gross  depreciation  of
$996,092 for those investments having an excess of cost over value. For the year
ended  October  31,  2005,  total  aggregate  purchases  and sales of  portfolio
securities,  excluding short-term securities,  were $68,677,580 and $70,686,021,
respectively.

     In order to present undistributed net investment income and accumulated net
realized loss on  investments  on the Statement of Assets and  Liabilities  that
more closely represent their tax character,  certain  adjustments have been made
to paid-in capital in excess of par value,  undistributed  net investment income
and accumulated net realized loss on investments.

     For the year ended October 31, 2005, the  adjustments  were to decrease net
investment  income by $(64,964)  and decrease  accumulated  net realized loss on
investments by $284,449 and decrease capital by $219,485  primarily  relating to
the reclassification of realized foreign currency losses. Net investment income,
net realized losses and net assets were not affected by this change.

         During the current year, the Fund utilized capital loss carryforwards
of $5,357,320.

     During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2005 and October 31, 2004 the Fund
had no distributable earnings.

     At October 31, 2005,  the Fund had a remaining  capital  loss  carryover of
$36,494,637,  of which $11,531,273 expires in the year 2006,  $6,225,150 expires
in the year 2009, $13,474,882 expires in the year 2010 and $5,263,332 expires in
the year 2011 available to offset future net capital gains.





Notes to Financial Statements (concluded)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Capital Stock

     There are 30,000,000 shares of $.01 par value common stock  authorized.  Of
the  14,420,917  shares of the Fund  outstanding  at  October  31,  2005,  Daiwa
Securities  America  Inc., an affiliate of the Manager,  Adviser and DSTC,  owns
14,532 shares.





Financial Highlights
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




                                                                     For the Years Ended October 31,
                                                     ----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       2005          2004         2003          2002         2001
                                                     ----------   ----------    -----------  -----------   -----------
                                                                                            
Net asset value, beginning of year.............      $   6.24     $   6.00      $   4.54     $   5.59      $   8.35
Net investment income (loss)...................        -- *          -- *            (0.02)       (0.04)        (0.04)
Net realized and unrealized gains (losses) on
   investments and foreign currency transactions         1.55         0.39          1.48        (1.01)        (2.72)
                                                     ----------   ----------    -----------  -----------   -----------

Net increase (decrease) in net asset value
   resulting from operations...................          1.55         0.39          1.46        (1.05)        (2.76)
                                                     ----------   ----------    -----------  -----------   -----------

Less: dividends and distributions to shareholders
   Dilutive effect of rights offering..........          --           (0.12)         --            --             --
   Offering costs charged to paid-in capital in
      excess of par value......................          --           (0.03)         --            --             --
                                                     ----------   ----------    -----------  -----------   -----------
Net asset value, end of year...................      $   7.79     $   6.24      $   6.00     $   4.54      $   5.59
                                                     ==========   ==========    ===========  ===========   ============
Per share market value, end of year............      $   8.510    $   6.080     $   7.160    $   4.150     $   4.990
                                                     ==========   ==========    ===========  ===========   ============
Total investment return:
   Based on market price at beginning and end of
      year+....................................         39.97%      (11.70)%       72.53%      (16.83)%      (29.35)%
   Based on net asset value at beginning and end
      of year+.................................         24.84%        5.74%        32.16%      (18.78)%      (33.05)%
Ratios and supplemental data:
   Net assets, end of year (in millions).......      $ 112.4      $  90.0       $  64.9      $  49.1       $  60.5
   Ratios to average net assets of:
      Expenses.................................          1.07%        1.12%         1.50%        1.44%         1.12%
      Net investment income (loss).............          0.07%       (0.06)%       (0.48)%      (0.74)%       (0.51)%
Portfolio turnover.............................         72.35%       90.03%        84.00%       76.19%        63.39%



+  For the year ended October 31, 2004, the total investment return includes
   the benefit of shares resulting from the exercise of rights.

*  Represents less than $0.005 per share.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

To the Shareholders and
Board of Directors of
The Japan Equity Fund, Inc.

     In our  opinion,  the  accompanying  statement  of assets and  liabilities,
including the portfolio of investments, and the related statements of operations
and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all
material  respects,  the financial  position of The Japan Equity Fund, Inc. (the
"Fund") at October 31,  2005,  the results of its  operations  for the year then
ended,  the  changes  in its net  assets for each of the two years in the period
then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period
then ended, in conformity with accounting  principles  generally accepted in the
United States of America.  These financial  statements and financial  highlights
(hereafter referred to as "financial  statements") are the responsibility of the
Fund's  management;  our  responsibility  is to  express  an  opinion  on  these
financial  statements  based on our  audits.  We  conducted  our audits of these
financial  statements  in accordance  with the  standards of the Public  Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a
test basis,  evidence  supporting  the amounts and  disclosures in the financial
statements,  assessing the accounting  principles used and significant estimates
made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at October
31, 2005 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers,  provide a reasonable
basis for our opinion.


PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

New York, New York
December 19, 2005





Tax Information (unaudited)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     The Fund is required by Subchapter M of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended,  to advise you within 60 days of the Fund's fiscal year end (October
31, 2005) as to the federal tax status of  distributions  received by you during
such fiscal  year.  There were no dividend  payments or foreign tax credits with
respect to the fiscal year 2005.

     Shareholders  are strongly  advised to consult  their own tax advisers with
respect to the tax consequences of their investment in the Fund.





Information Concerning Directors and Officers (unaudited)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     The following table sets forth information concerning each of the Directors
and  Officers  of the  Fund.  The  Directors  of the Fund  will  serve for terms
expiring on the date of subsequent  Annual  Meetings of Stockholders in the year
2006 for Class I Directors,  2007 for Class II Directors  and 2008 for Class III
Directors, or until their successors are duly elected and qualified.




                                                                                                          Number of
                                                                                                           Funds in
                                                    Principal Occupation                                     Fund
                                                 or Employment During Past                               Complex for
                                                       Five Years and                      Director or      Which
    Name (Age) and Address of                         Directorships in                     Officer of      Director
        Directors/Officers                        Publicly Held Companies                  Fund Since     Serves (1)
-------------------------------     ------------------------------------------------     --------------   ------------
                                                                                                    
Directors
   Austin C. Dowling (73) 1002 E    Retired; Director, The Thai Capital Fund, Inc.,         Class III         3
   Long Beach Boulevard North       since 1990; Director, The Singapore Fund, Inc.,         Director
   Beach, NJ  08008                 since 2000.                                            since 1992

   Martin J. Gruber (68)            Professor of Finance, Leonard N. Stern School of         Class I          3
   229 South Irving Street          Business, New York University, since 1965;              Director
   Ridgewood, NJ  07450             Director, The Thai Capital Fund, Inc., since 2000;     since 1992
                                    Director, The Singapore Fund, Inc., since 2000;
                                    Trustee, Scudder New York Mutual Funds, since 1992;
                                    Trustee, C.R.E.F., from 2001 to 2005 and Chairman
                                    from December 2003 to 2005; Trustee, T.I.A.A., from
                                    1996 to 2000; Director, National Bureau of Economic
                                    Research, since August, 2005.

   David G. Harmer (62)             Executive Director, Department of Community and         Class II          3
   4337 Bobwhite Court Ogden, UT    Economic Development for the State of Utah since        Director
   84403                            May 2002; Chairman, 2K2 Hosting Corporation, from       since 1997
                                    April 2001 to April 2002; President, Jetway
                                    Systems, a division of FMC Corporation, from 1997
                                    until 2001; Director, The Thai Capital Fund, Inc.,
                                    since 2000; Director, The Singapore Fund, Inc.,
                                    since 1996.

*  Hiroshi Kimura (52)              Chairman and President, Daiwa Securities Trust         Chairman of        1
   One Evertrust Plaza Jersey       Company, since July 2001; Director and Senior Vice      the Board
   City, NJ  07302-3051             President of Daiwa Securities Trust Company, from      and Class I
                                    April 1999 to June 2001; Associate Director,            Director
                                    Daiwa Europe Bank, from April 1996 to March 1999.        since 2001


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




Information Concerning Directors and Officers (unaudited) (concluded)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                                                                                                          Number of
                                                                                                           Funds in
                                                    Principal Occupation                                     Fund
                                                 or Employment During Past                               Complex for
                                                       Five Years and                      Director or      Which
    Name (Age) and Address of                         Directorships in                     Officer of      Director
        Directors/Officers                        Publicly Held Companies                  Fund Since     Serves (1)
-------------------------------     ------------------------------------------------     --------------   ------------
                                                                                                     
   Oren G. Shaffer (63)             Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer, Qwest        Class II          3
   1801 California Street Denver,   Communications International Inc., since July 2002;     Director
   CO  80202                        Executive Vice President and Chief Financial           since 2000
                                    Officer, Ameritech Corporation, from 1994 to 2000;
                                    Director, The Thai Capital Fund, Inc., since 2000;
                                    Director, The Singapore Fund, Inc., since 1997.
Officers
   Kiyotaka Hoshino (46)            General Manager, Daiwa SB Investments since            President of        --
   7-9, Nihonbashi 2-chome,         March 2005; Managing Director & Head of Asia, Daiwa     the Fund
   Chuo-ku, Tokyo  103-0027 Japan   SB Investments (Singapore) Ltd. and Daiwa SB           since April
                                    Investments (HK) Ltd., since December 2002; and           2005
                                    President of Daiwa SB Investments (USA) Ltd., from
                                    April 1999 to December 2002.

   John J. O'Keefe (46)             Vice President and Treasurer, The Thai Capital            Vice             --
   One Evertrust Plaza Jersey       Fund, Inc. and The Singapore Fund, Inc., since          President
   City, NJ  07302-3051             2000; Vice President, Fund Accounting Department of        and
                                    Daiwa Securities Trust Company, since 2000.            Treasurer of
                                                                                            the Fund
                                                                                           since 2000

   Yuko Uchida (27)                 Secretary, The Thai Capital Fund, Inc. and The         Secretary of        --
   One Evertrust Plaza Jersey       Singapore Fund, Inc., since 2004; Client Reporting      the Fund
   City, NJ  07302-3051             Department of Daiwa Securities Trust Company, since    since 2004
                                    2002.

   Anthony Cambria (51)             Chief Compliance Officer, The Thai Capital Fund,          Chief           --
   One Evertrust Plaza Jersey       Inc. and The Singapore Fund, Inc., since 2004;         Compliance
   City, NJ  07302-3051             Director and Executive Vice President, Daiwa           Officer of
                                    Securities Trust Company, since 1999.                    the Fund

                                                                                           since 2004
   Leonard B. Mackey, Jr. (54) 31   Partner in the law firm of Clifford Chance US LLP,      Assistant         --
   West 52nd Street New York, NY    since 1983; Assistant Secretary, The Thai Capital      Secretary of
   10019-6131                       Fund, Inc. and The Singapore Fund, Inc., since 2004.    the Fund
                                                                                           since 2004


1    "Fund  Complex"  includes  the  Fund,  The Thai  Capital  Fund,  Inc.,  The
     Singapore Fund, Inc. and other  investment  companies  advised by SCB Asset
     Management  Co.,  Ltd.,  Daiwa  SB  Investments   (H.K.)  Ltd.,  DBS  Asset
     Management  (United  States) Pte. Ltd.,  Daiwa SB  Investments  (Singapore)
     Ltd.,  Daiwa SB Investments  (USA) Ltd., Daiwa SB Investments Ltd. or their
     respective affiliates.




Information Concerning Directors and Officers (unaudited) (concluded)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

*    Directors  so noted are  deemed by the  Fund's  counsel  to be  "interested
     persons"  (as  defined  in the U.S.  Investment  Company  Act of  1940,  as
     amended).  Mr. Kimura is deemed an interested person of the Fund because of
     his affiliation with Daiwa  Securities  Trust Company,  an affiliate of the
     Fund's investment adviser, Daiwa SB Investments Ltd.




Board   Consideration  and  Approval  of  Investment   Advisory  and  Management
Agreements (unaudited)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Nature, Extent and Quality of Services

     At a meeting of the Board of Directors of The Japan Equity Fund,  Inc. held
on June 2, 2005,  the Board reviewed and considered the nature and extent of the
investment  advisory  services  provided  by  Daiwa  SB  Investments  Ltd.  (the
"Investment  Adviser")  under the Advisory  Agreement  and Daiwa SB  Investments
(USA) Ltd.  (the  "Manager"  and,  together  with the  Investment  Adviser,  the
"Advisers") under the Investment  Management  Agreement.  The Board reviewed and
considered   the   qualifications   of  the   portfolio   manager,   the  senior
administrative  managers and other key  personnel of the Manager who provide the
investment  advisory  services  to the  Fund.  The  Board  determined  that  the
portfolio  manager and key  personnel of the Manager are  qualified by education
and/or  training and  experience  to perform the  services in an  efficient  and
professional  manner.  The Board also reviewed the services provided to the Fund
by the  Investment  Adviser  and the  personnel  of the  Investment  Adviser who
provide those  services.  The Board  concluded that the nature and extent of the
advisory services provided were necessary and appropriate for the conduct of the
business and  investment  activities of the Fund.  The Board also concluded that
the overall quality of the advisory services was satisfactory.

Performance Relative to the Fund's Benchmark

     The Board  reviewed  the Fund's  performance  for the last one-,  three-and
five-year  periods,  as well as for the last 20  quarters,  as  provided  in the
materials distributed to the Board prior to the Meeting,  compared to the Fund's
benchmark,  the Tokyo  Stock  Price  Index.  The  Board  noted  that the  Fund's
performance  was lower  than the  benchmark  for the one-,  three-and  five-year
periods.   The  Board   discussed   with  the   Adviser   the  reasons  for  the
underperformance  in these  periods.  The Board also noted that, for the last 20
quarters,  the Fund's performance varied as compared to the benchmark,  however,
the Fund, in most quarters,  performed in line with, or only slightly below, the
benchmark.  The Board further noted that the Fund outperformed the benchmark for
the most recent period. The Board concluded that the Fund's overall  performance
was satisfactory.

Fees Relative to Other Funds Advised by the Advisers

     The Board  reviewed  the  advisory  fee paid by the Fund under the Advisory
Agreement  and the  Investment  Management  Agreement  (together,  the "advisory
fee").  The Board also  reviewed  information  showing the advisory fees paid by
other funds managed by each of the Advisers as compared to the advisory fee paid
by the  Fund.  The  Board  noted  that the  Manager  does not  manage  any other
closed-end  funds that would  provide an  appropriate  comparison  to the Fund's
advisory fee. The Board further noted that,  while the  Investment  Adviser does
not manage any other U.S. registered funds, it does advise other Japanese equity
funds with  advisory fees that are equal to or higher than the advisory fee paid
by the Fund.  The Board  concluded  that the  advisory  fee paid by the Fund was
appropriate as compared to other funds advised by the Advisers.

Fees and Expenses Relative to Comparable Funds Managed by Other Advisers

     The Board  considered the advisory fees paid by the other funds in the Fund
Complex,  The Singapore Fund, Inc. and The Thai Capital Fund,  Inc., as compared
to the  advisory  fee paid to the  Fund's  Advisers.  The Board  noted  that the
advisory fee paid by the Fund is lower than the advisory fees paid to





Board   Consideration  and  Approval  of  Investment   Advisory  and  Management
Agreements (unaudited) (continued)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Singapore Fund, Inc. and The Thai Capital Fund, Inc. In addition,  the Board
reviewed the fee paid to the other U.S. registered  closed-end fund investing in
Japan.  The Board noted that the advisory fee rate for the other fund was higher
than for the Fund,  although noting that the other fund generally  invested in a
different  part of the  Japanese  market.  In addition,  the Board  examined the
advisory  fees paid to other  closed-end  funds  investing in a single  country.
While the fees vary widely,  the majority of these fees paid in connection  with
these  country funds were in the 1.00% and higher  range,  especially  for those
funds that invested in countries in Asia.  The Board  concluded  that the Fund's
advisory fee was competitive  with these other country funds.  The Board further
noted that the total  expense ratio of the Fund was lower than that of the other
funds in the Fund Complex,  and many other country funds, and concluded that the
Fund's total expense ratio was competitive.

Breakpoints and Economies of Scale

     The Board reviewed the structure of the Fund's  advisory fee schedule under
the Advisory  Agreement and  Investment  Management  Agreement and noted that it
does include breakpoints.  The Board considered that the Fund is closed-end. The
Board  concluded  that  economies  of scale for this Fund were not a factor that
needed to be considered at the current asset levels.

Profitability of the Advisers

     The Board  considered and reviewed a  profitability  report for each of the
Advisers for the last year included in the materials  previously provided to the
Board.  Based on their  review  of the  information  they  received,  the  Board
concluded that the profits earned by each Adviser were not excessive in light of
the advisory services provided to the Fund.

Advisers Financially Sound and Financially Capable of Meeting the Fund's Needs

     The Board considered  whether each of the Advisers is financially sound and
has the  resources  necessary  to perform  its  obligations  under the  Advisory
Agreement  and  Investment  Management  Agreement.  The  Board  noted  that each
Adviser's  operations  remain  profitable.  The Board concluded that each of the
Advisers has the financial  resources necessary to fulfill its obligations under
the Advisory Agreement and Investment Management Agreement.

Historical Relationship Between the Fund and the Advisers

     The Board also reviewed and considered the historical  relationship between
the Fund and the Advisers, including the organizational structure of each of the
Advisers,  the policies  and  procedures  formulated  and adopted by each of the
Advisers  for  managing  the Fund's  assets and the  Board's  confidence  in the
competence and integrity of the senior managers and key personnel of each of the
Advisers. The Board concluded that it is beneficial for the Fund to continue its
relationship with the Advisers.





     Board  Consideration  and Approval of  Investment  Advisory and  Management
Agreements (unaudited) (concluded)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Other Factors and Current Trends

     The Board considered the controls and procedures adopted and implemented by
each of the Advisers and  monitored by the Fund's Chief  Compliance  Officer and
concluded that the conduct of business by each of the Advisers  indicates a good
faith effort on its part to adhere to high  ethical  standards in the conduct of
the Fund's business.

General Conclusion

     After  considering  and  weighing  all  of the  above  factors,  the  Board
concluded it would be in the best interests of the Fund and its  shareholders to
approve  renewal of each of the Advisory  Agreement  and  Investment  Management
Agreement for another year.






--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                  Annual Report
                                October 31, 2005

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The Japan Equity
   Fund, Inc.

c/o Daiwa Securities Trust Company
One Evertrust Plaza
Jersey City, New Jersey 07302

INVESTMENT MANAGER
Daiwa SB Investments (U.S.A.) Ltd.

INVESTMENT ADVISER Daiwa SB Investments Ltd.



                                                                                
-----------------------------------------------------------
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Hiroshi Kimura, Chairman
Austin C. Dowling
Martin J. Gruber
David G. Harmer
Oren G. Shaffer
OFFICERS
Kiyotaka Hoshino
President
-----------------------------------------------------------
John J. O'Keefe
Vice President and Treasurer
Yuko Uchida
Secretary
Anthony Cambria
Chief Compliance Officer
Leonard B. Mackey, Jr.
Assistant Secretary
                              ADDRESS OF THE FUND
c/o Daiwa Securities Trust Company
One Evertrust Plaza, 9th Floor
Jersey City, NJ 07302-3051
INVESTMENT MANAGER
Daiwa SB Investments (U.S.A.) Ltd.
INVESTMENT ADVISER Daiwa SB Investments Ltd.
-----------------------------------------------------------
ADMINISTRATOR AND CUSTODIAN
Daiwa Securities Trust Company
                          TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
American Stock Transfer and Trust Company
LEGAL COUNSEL
Clifford Chance US LLP
INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC
ACCOUNTING FIRM
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Notice  is hereby  given in  accordance  with  Section  23(c) of the  Investment
Company Act of 1940 that from time to time the Fund may  purchase  shares of its
common stock in the open market at prevailing market prices. This report is sent
to  shareholders  of the Fund for  their  information.  It is not a  prospectus,
circular or representation intended for use in the purchase or sale of shares of
the Fund or of any securities mentioned in the report.






                                                                                
Item 2.  Code of Ethics.

(a)  The  registrant  has adopted a code of ethics  (the "Code of Ethics")  that
     applies to the  registrant's  principal  executive  officer  and  principal
     financial and accounting officer. A copy of the registrant's Code of Ethics
     is attached hereto as Exhibit 12(a).

(b)  No information need be disclosed pursuant to this paragraph.

(c)  The registrant has not amended the Code of Ethics during the period covered
     by the shareholder report presented in Item 1 hereto.

(d)  The  registrant  has not  granted a waiver  or an  implicit  waiver  from a
     provision of the Code of Ethics.

(e)  Not applicable.

(f)  (1) The Code of Ethics is attached hereto as Exhibit 12(a).

     (2) Not applicable.

     (3) Not applicable.

Item 3.  Audit Committee Financial Expert.

     The registrant's  board of directors has determined that the registrant has
at least one audit committee  financial  expert serving on its audit  committee.
The audit committee financial expert is Oren G. Shaffer who is "independent" for
purposes of this item.

Item 4.  Principal Accountant Fees and Services.


         (a)(b)(c)(d) and (g). Based on fees billed for the periods shown:





           2005
                                                             Registrant            Covered Entities(1)
                                                                             

           Audit Fees..............................          $70,700               N/A

           Non-Audit Fees
                   Audit-Related Fees..............                                $0
                   Tax Fees........................          (3) $8,900            $0
                   All Other Fees..................                                $0
           Total Non-Audit Fees....................          $8,900                $0

           Total...................................          $79,600

           2004
                                                             Registrant            Covered Entities(1)
           Audit Fees..............................          (2)$96,750            N/A

           Non-Audit Fees
                   Audit-Related Fees..............                                $0
                   Tax Fees........................          (3) $8,400            $0
                   All Other Fees                                                  $0
           Total Non-Audit Fees....................          $8,400                $0

           Total...................................          $105,150



---------------------
N/A- Not applicable, as not required by Item 4.

(1)  "Covered  Entities" include the registrant's  investment adviser (excluding
     any  sub-adviser  whose  role  is  primarily  portfolio  management  and is
     subcontracted  with or  overseen  by another  investment  adviser)  and any
     entity  controlling,  controlled  by  or  under  common  control  with  the
     registrant's adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant.  (2)
     Audit Fees for 2004 include $30,000  representing  procedures  performed in
     connection with the December 2003 rights offering of the Fund. (3) Tax Fees
     represent  fees  received  for  tax  compliance  services  provided  to the
     registrant, including the review of tax returns.

(e)  (1) Before the registrant's principal accountant is engaged to render audit
     or  non-audit  services to the  registrant  and  non-audit  services to the
     registrant's  investment  adviser and its  affiliates,  each  engagement is
     approved by the registrant's audit committee.

(e)  (2) 100% of the services  described in each of (b) through (d) of this Item
     4 were approved by the registrant's  audit committee  pursuant to paragraph
     (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

(f)  Not applicable.

(g)  See table above.

(h)  The  registrant's  audit committee of the board of directors has considered
     whether the  provision of non-audit  services that were rendered to Covered
     Entities  that were not  pre-approved  pursuant to paragraph  (C)(7)(ii) of
     Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X is compatible  with  maintaining  the auditors'
     independence in performing audit services.

Item 5.  Audit Committee of Listed Registrants.

     The  registrant  has  a  separately-designated   standing  audit  committee
established  in  accordance  with Section  3(a)(58)(A)  of the Exchange Act. The
members of the audit  committee  are as follows:  Austin C.  Dowling,  Martin J.
Gruber, David G. Harmer and Oren G. Shaffer.

Item 6.  Schedule of Investments.

     A Schedule of Investments is included as part of the report to shareholders
filed under Item 1.

Item 7.  Disclosure  of Proxy Voting  Policies  and  Procedures  for  Closed-End
Management Investment Companies.

     The  registrant  has  delegated  to its  investment  adviser  the voting of
proxies  relating to the  registrant's  portfolio  securities.  The registrant's
policies and procedures  and those used by the  investment  adviser to determine
how to vote proxies relating to the registrant's portfolio securities, including
the  procedures  used when a vote presents a conflict of interest  involving the
investment  adviser or any of its  affiliates,  are contained in the  investment
adviser's Proxy Voting Guidelines, which are attached hereto as Exhibit 12(c).

Item 8.  Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies.

Not applicable.

Item 9.  Purchase  of Equity  Securities  by  Closed-End  Management  Investment
Company and Affiliated Purchasers.

Not applicable.

Item 10.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.

     There have been no material changes to the procedures by which shareholders
may recommend nominees to the registrant's board of directors.

Item 11.  Controls and Procedures.

(a)  The registrant's  principal  executive and principal financial officer have
     concluded  that the  registrant's  disclosure  controls and  procedures (as
     defined in Rule  30a-3(c)  under the  Investment  Company  Act of 1940,  as
     amended (the "1940 Act") (17 CFR 270.30a-3(c))) are effective, as of a date
     within  90 days of the  filing  date of this  Form  N-CSR  based  on  their
     evaluation of these controls and procedures required by Rule 30a-3(b) under
     the 1940 Act (17 CFR  270.30a-3(b))  and Rules 13a-15(b) or 15d-15(b) under
     the 1934 Act (17 CFR 240.13a-15(b) or 240.15d-15(b)).

(b)  There were no changes in the  registrant's  internal control over financial
     reporting  (as  defined  in  Rule  30a-3(d)  under  the  1940  Act  (17 CFR
     270.30a-3(d)))  that occurred during the registrant's second fiscal quarter
     that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect,
     the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Item 12.  Exhibits.

(a)  Code of Ethics for Principal Executive and Senior Financial Officers.

(b)  Certifications  required by Rule 30a-2(a) of the Investment  Company Act of
     1940,  as amended,  and Section 906 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of 2002 are
     attached hereto.

(c)  Proxy Voting Guidelines for the registrant and its adviser.






                                   SIGNATURES

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be
signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

                                    The Japan Equity Fund, Inc.


                                    By \s\ John J. O'Keefe
                                    -----------------------------------
                                    John J. O'Keefe, Vice President & Treasurer


Date:  December 28, 2005


     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the
Investment  Company  Act of  1940,  this  report  has been  signed  below by the
following  persons on behalf of the  registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated.

                                    By \s\ John J. O'Keefe
                                    -----------------------------------
                                    John J. O'Keefe, Vice President & Treasurer


Date:  December 28, 2005


                                   By \s\ Hiroshi Kimura
                                   -----------------------------------
                                   Hiroshi Kimura, Chairman


Date:  December 28, 2005






                                                                   EXHIBIT 12(a)


           CODE OF ETHICS FOR PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE AND SENIOR FINANCIAL
                                    OFFICERS


I.   This Code of Ethics (the "Code") for The Thai Capital Fund, Inc., The Japan
     Equity  Fund,  Inc.  and  The  Singapore  Fund,  Inc.  (each a  "Fund"  and
     collectively  the "Funds")  applies to each Fund's  President and Treasurer
     (or persons  performing  similar  functions)  ("Covered  Officers") for the
     purpose of promoting:

     o    honest and ethical  conduct,  including the ethical handling of actual
          or apparent  conflicts of interest  between  personal and professional
          relationships;

     o    full, fair, accurate,  timely and understandable disclosure in reports
          and documents  that a Fund files with,  or submits to, the  Securities
          and Exchange  Commission  ("SEC") and in other  public  communications
          made by a Fund;

     o    compliance   with   applicable   laws  and   governmental   rules  and
          regulations;

     o    prompt internal  reporting of violations of the Code to an appropriate
          person or persons identified in the Code; and

     o    accountability for adherence to the Code.

     Each Covered  Officer  should adhere to a high standard of business  ethics
and should be  sensitive to  situations  that may give rise to actual as well as
apparent  conflicts  of  interest.  A Fund will expect all  Covered  Officers to
comply at all times with the  principles  in this Code. A violation of this Code
by an employee is grounds for disciplinary  action up to and including discharge
and possible legal  prosecution.  Any question about the application of the Code
should be referred to the Audit Committee of the Fund's Board of Directors ( the
"Audit Committee").

II.  Covered Officers Should Handle  Ethically Actual and Apparent  Conflicts of
     Interest

     Overview.  A "conflict of interest" occurs when a Covered Officer's private
interest  interferes  with the  interests  of, or his  service  to, a Fund.  For
example, a conflict of interest would arise if a Covered Officer, or a member of
his family, receives improper personal benefits as a result of his position with
a Fund.

     Certain  conflicts  of  interest  arise  out of the  relationships  between
Covered  Officers  and a Fund and  already  are  subject to conflict of interest
provisions in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "Investment  Company Act")
and the Investment  Advisers Act of 1940 (the  "Investment  Advisers Act").  For
example,  Covered Officers may not individually  engage in certain  transactions
(such as the  purchase  or sale of  securities  or other  property)  with a Fund
because  of their  status as  "affiliated  persons"  of a Fund.  The  compliance
programs  and  procedures  of a Fund  and  the  Fund's  Investment  Manager  and
Investment Adviser are designed to prevent, or identify and correct,  violations
of these  provisions.  Certain  conflicts  of  interest  also  arise  out of the
personal   securities  trading  activities  of  the  Covered  Officers  and  the
possibility that they may use information  regarding a Fund's securities trading
activities  for their  personal  benefit.  Each Fund's Code of Ethics under Rule
17j-1 under the Investment Company Act is designed to address these conflicts of
interest. This Code does not, and is not intended to, replace these programs and
procedures  or a Fund's Rule 17j-1 Code of Ethics,  and this  Code's  provisions
should  be  viewed  as  being  additional  and  supplemental  to such  programs,
procedures and code.

     Although  typically not  presenting an  opportunity  for improper  personal
benefit,  conflicts arise from, or as a result of, the contractual  relationship
between a Fund and its  Investment  Adviser or  Investment  Manager of which the
Covered  Officers  are also  officers  or  employees.  As a  result,  this  Code
recognizes that the Covered  Officers will, in the normal course of their duties
(whether  formally  for a Fund  or for  its  Investment  Adviser  or  Investment
Manager,  or  for  all  parties),  be  involved  in  establishing  policies  and
implementing  decisions  that  will have  different  effects  on the  Investment
Adviser or  Investment  Manager  and a Fund.  The  participation  of the Covered
Officers in such activities is inherent in the contractual  relationship between
a Fund and its Investment  Adviser or Investment  Manager and is consistent with
the  performance by the Covered  Officers of their duties as officers of a Fund.
Thus, if performed in conformity  with the provisions of the Investment  Company
Act and the Investment Advisers Act, such activities will be deemed to have been
handled ethically.  In addition, it is recognized by a Fund's Board of Directors
(the "Board") that the Covered Officers may also be officers or employees of one
or more other investment companies covered by other codes.

     Each Covered Officer must not:

     o    use his personal  influence or personal  relationships  improperly  to
          influence  investment  decisions  or  financial  reporting  by a  Fund
          whereby the Covered Officer would benefit  personally to the detriment
          of a Fund;

     o    cause  a Fund  to  take  action,  or  fail  to  take  action,  for the
          individual  personal  benefit of the Covered  Officer  rather than the
          benefit of the Fund; and

     o    use material  non-public  knowledge of portfolio  transactions made or
          contemplated  for, or actions proposed to be taken by, a Fund to trade
          personally or cause others to trade personally in contemplation of the
          market effect of such transactions.

     Each Covered  Officer  must,  at the time of signing this Code,  report all
material  business  affiliations  outside  a Fund and  must  update  the  report
annually.

     Covered  Officers should avoid  situations which involve the appearance of,
or potential for, conflicts of interest. Examples of these situations include:

     o    accepting directly or indirectly,  anything of value,  including gifts
          and  gratuities  in excess of $100 per year from any  person or entity
          with which a Fund has current or prospective  business  dealings,  not
          including occasional meals or tickets to theatre or sporting events or
          other  similar   entertainment,   provided  it  is   business-related,
          reasonable  in  cost,  appropriate  as to time  and  place  and not so
          frequent as to raise any question of impropriety;

     o    any   ownership   interest  in,  or  any   consulting   or  employment
          relationship with, any of a Fund's service  providers,  other than its
          Investment  Adviser or  Investment  Manager or any  affiliated  person
          thereof; and

     o    a direct or indirect  financial  interest in commissions,  transaction
          charges or spreads paid by a Fund for effecting portfolio transactions
          or for selling or redeeming shares other than an interest arising from
          the  Covered  Officer's  employment,  such as  compensation  or equity
          ownership.

     In situations  involving a Covered Officer which involve the appearance of,
or the  potential  for,  conflicts  of interest,  but where the Covered  Officer
believes that no significant  conflict of interest  exist,  the Covered  Officer
must obtain prior written  approval  from the Audit  Committee  before  becoming
involved in that  situation.  No such  approval  shall be considered a waiver of
this Code.

III. Disclosure and Compliance

     o    Each Covered  Officer should  familiarize  himself with the disclosure
          and compliance requirements generally applicable to a Fund;

     o    Each  Covered  Officer  should not  knowingly  misrepresent,  or cause
          others to misrepresent,  facts about a Fund to others,  whether within
          or outside a Fund, including to a Fund's directors and auditors, or to
          governmental regulators and self-regulatory organizations;

     o    Each Covered Officer should, to the extent appropriate within his area
          of responsibility, consult with other officers and employees of a Fund
          and its  Investment  Adviser or  Investment  Manager  with the goal of
          promoting full, fair, accurate,  timely and understandable  disclosure
          in the reports and documents a Fund files with, or submits to, the SEC
          and in other public communications made by a Fund; and

     o    It is the responsibility of each Covered Officer to promote compliance
          with the standards and restrictions  imposed by applicable laws, rules
          and regulations.

IV.  Reporting and Accountability

     Each Covered Officer must:

     o    upon adoption of the Code or (thereafter as applicable,  upon becoming
          a  Covered  Officer),  affirm  in  writing  to the  Board  that he has
          received, read and understands the Code;

     o    annually  thereafter affirm to the Board that he has complied with the
          requirements of the Code;

     o    not retaliate  against any other Covered  Officer or any employee of a
          Fund or their affiliated  persons for reports of potential  violations
          that are made in good faith; and

     o    notify the Audit  Committee  promptly if he knows of any  violation of
          this Code. Failure to do so is itself a violation of this Code.

     The Audit  Committee  is  responsible  for  applying  this Code to specific
situations in which  questions  are presented  under it and has the authority to
interpret this Code in any particular situation. Any waivers sought by a Covered
Officer must be considered by the Audit Committee.

     A copy of this Code shall be delivered to each  employee of a Fund and each
employee of its Investment Adviser and Investment Manager annually together with
a  memorandum  requesting  that  any  violations  of the  Code  be  communicated
immediately to the Audit Committee.

     Each Fund will follow these procedures in investigating  and enforcing this
Code:

     o    the Audit  Committee will take all  appropriate  action to investigate
          any potential violations reported to it;

     o    if, after such  investigation,  the Audit  Committee  believes that no
          violation  has occurred,  the Audit  Committee is not required to take
          any further action;

     o    if the Audit Committee  determines  that a violation has occurred,  it
          will consider  appropriate  action,  which may include  review of, and
          appropriate  modifications  to,  applicable  policies and  procedures;
          notification to appropriate personnel of the Investment Adviser or its
          board; or a recommendation to dismiss the Covered Officer;

     o    the Audit Committee will be responsible  for granting  waivers of this
          Code, as appropriate; and

     o    any changes to or waivers of this Code will,  to the extent  required,
          be disclosed as provided by SEC rules.

V.   Changes To or Waivers of the Code

     No  change to or waiver  of any  provision  of this Code will be  effective
until a Fund  discloses  the  nature of any  amendment  to, or  waiver  from,  a
provision of the Code in its Form N-CSR,  or on its website within five business
days  following the date of the amendment or waiver if this method of disclosure
has been  established  in its Form N-CSR and made  available  on its website for
twelve months. Any waiver of provisions of this Code will be reported in filings
with the SEC and otherwise reported to a Fund's  stockholders to the full extent
required by the rules of the SEC and by any  applicable  rules of any securities
exchange on which a Fund's securities are listed.

VI.  Other Policies and Procedures

     This  Code  shall be the  sole  code of  ethics  adopted  by each  Fund for
purposes  of  Section  406 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of 2002 and the rules and
forms applicable to registered investment companies thereunder. Insofar as other
policies or procedures of a Fund or its Investment  Adviser,  Investment Manager
or other  service  providers  govern  or  purport  to  govern  the  behavior  or
activities  of the  Covered  Officers  who are  subject to this  Code,  they are
superseded by this Code to the extent that they conflict with the  provisions of
this Code.

VII. Amendments

     Any amendments to this Code must be approved or ratified by a majority vote
of the Audit Committee and the Board,  including a majority of directors who are
not interested persons as defined in the Investment Company Act.

VIII. Confidentiality

     All reports and records  prepared or maintained  pursuant to this Code will
be considered  confidential  and shall be maintained and protected  accordingly.
Except as  otherwise  required by law or this Code,  such  matters  shall not be
disclosed to anyone other than the Audit Committee,  the Board, the Fund and its
counsel and its Investment  Adviser and Investment  Manager and their respective
counsel.

IX.  Internal Use

     The Code is  intended  solely for the  internal  use by a Fund and does not
constitute an admission, by or on behalf of a Fund, as to any fact, circumstance
or legal conclusion.

     I have  read  and  understand  the  terms  of the  Code.  I  recognize  the
responsibilities  and obligations incurred by me as a result of my being subject
to the Code. I hereby agree to abide by the Code.

-------------------------

Date:_____________________









                                                                   EXHIBIT 12(b)

                                  CERTIFICATION
            PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002


     I, John J. O'Keefe, certify that:

     1.   I have  reviewed  this report on Form N-CSR of The Japan  Equity Fund,
          Inc.;

     2.   Based on my  knowledge,  this  report  does  not  contain  any  untrue
          statement  of a  material  fact  or  omit to  state  a  material  fact
          necessary to make the statements  made, in light of the  circumstances
          under which such  statements were made, not misleading with respect to
          the period covered by this report;

     3.   Based on my knowledge,  the financial statements,  and other financial
          information  included in this report,  fairly  present in all material
          respects the financial  condition,  results of operations,  changes in
          net assets,  and cash flows (if the financial  statements are required
          to include a  statement  of cash flows) of the  registrant  as of, and
          for, the periods presented in this report;

     4.   The registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I are responsible for
          establishing  and maintaining  disclosure  controls and procedures (as
          defined in Rule 30a-2(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and
          internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d)
          under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the registrant and have:

          (a)  designed such disclosure controls and procedures,  or caused such
               disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to be  designed  under our
               supervision,  to ensure that material information relating to the
               registrant,  including  its  consolidated  subsidiaries,  is made
               known to us by others within those entities,  particularly during
               the period in which this report is being prepared;

          (b)  Designed  such  internal  control over  financial  reporting,  or
               caused such  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  to be
               designed under our supervision,  to provide reasonable  assurance
               regarding  the   reliability  of  financial   reporting  and  the
               preparation  of financial  statements  for  external  purposes in
               accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

          (c)  Evaluated  the  effectiveness  of  the  registrant's   disclosure
               controls  and   procedures  and  presented  in  this  report  our
               conclusions  about the  effectiveness of the disclosure  controls
               and  procedures,  as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing
               date of this report based on such evaluation; and

          (d)  Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's  internal
               control over financial  reporting that occurred during the second
               fiscal  quarter of the period  covered  by this  report  that has
               materially  affected,  or  is  reasonably  likely  to  materially
               affect,   the   registrant's   internal  control  over  financial
               reporting; and

5.   The  registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I have disclosed,  to the
     registrant's  auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of
     directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

          (a)  all  significant  deficiencies  and  material  weaknesses  in the
               design or  operation  of internal  control  which are  reasonably
               likely to adversely  affect the  registrant's  ability to record,
               process, summarize, and report financial information; and

          (b)  any fraud,  whether or not material,  that involves management or
               other employees who have a significant  role in the  registrant's
               internal controls over financial reporting.

                             Date: December 28, 2005


                            \s\John J. O'Keefe
                            ---------------------------------------
                            John J. O'Keefe, Vice President & Treasurer







                                                                                
                                  CERTIFICATION
            PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002


     I, Hiroshi Kimura, certify that:

     1.   I have  reviewed  this report on Form N-CSR of The Japan  Equity Fund,
          Inc.;

     2.   Based on my  knowledge,  this  report  does  not  contain  any  untrue
          statement  of a  material  fact  or  omit to  state  a  material  fact
          necessary to make the statements  made, in light of the  circumstances
          under which such  statements were made, not misleading with respect to
          the period covered by this report;

     3.   Based on my knowledge,  the financial statements,  and other financial
          information  included in this report,  fairly  present in all material
          respects the financial  condition,  results of operations,  changes in
          net assets,  and cash flows (if the financial  statements are required
          to include a  statement  of cash flows) of the  registrant  as of, and
          for, the periods presented in this report;

     4.   The registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I are responsible for
          establishing  and maintaining  disclosure  controls and procedures (as
          defined in Rule 30a-2(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and
          internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d)
          under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the registrant and have:

          (a)  designed such disclosure controls and procedures,  or caused such
               disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to be  designed  under our
               supervision,  to ensure that material information relating to the
               registrant,  including  its  consolidated  subsidiaries,  is made
               known to us by others within those entities,  particularly during
               the period in which this report is being prepared;

          (b)  Designed  such  internal  control over  financial  reporting,  or
               caused such  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  to be
               designed under our supervision,  to provide reasonable  assurance
               regarding  the   reliability  of  financial   reporting  and  the
               preparation  of financial  statements  for  external  purposes in
               accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

          (c)  Evaluated  the  effectiveness  of  the  registrant's   disclosure
               controls  and   procedures  and  presented  in  this  report  our
               conclusions  about the  effectiveness of the disclosure  controls
               and  procedures,  as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing
               date of this report based on such evaluation; and

          (d)  Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's  internal
               control over financial  reporting that occurred during the second
               fiscal  quarter of the period  covered  by this  report  that has
               materially  affected,  or  is  reasonably  likely  to  materially
               affect,   the   registrant's   internal  control  over  financial
               reporting; and

5.   The  registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I have disclosed,  to the
     registrant's  auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of
     directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

     (a)  all significant  deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or
          operation of internal control which are reasonably likely to adversely
          affect the registrant's  ability to record,  process,  summarize,  and
          report financial information; and

     (b)  any fraud, whether or not material,  that involves management or other
          employees who have a  significant  role in the  registrant's  internal
          controls over financial reporting.

                             Date: December 28, 2005


                             \s\ Hiroshi Kimura
                             ---------------------------------------
                             Hiroshi Kimura, Chairman








                                  CERTIFICATION
                             PURSUANT TO SECTION 906
                        OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002


     The  undersigned,  the Vice President & Treasurer of The Japan Equity Fund,
Inc. (the  "Fund"),  with respect to the Form N-CSR for the period ended October
31, 2005 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, hereby certifies,
pursuant to 18 U.S.C.  Section 1350,  as adopted  pursuant to Section 906 of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that:

     1.   such Form N-CSR fully complies with the  requirements of section 13(a)
          or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of
                  1934; and

     2.   the information  contained in such Form N-CSR fairly presents,  in all
          material respects,  the financial  condition and results of operations
          of the Funds.

                            Dated: December 28, 2005


                            /s/ John J. O'Keefe
                            ----------------------------------
                            John J. O'Keefe, Vice President & Treasurer


     This certification is being furnished solely pursuant to 18 U.S.C.  Section
1350 and is not being  filed as part of the Report or as a  separate  disclosure
document.






                                  CERTIFICATION
                             PURSUANT TO SECTION 906
                        OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002


     The undersigned,  the Chairman of The Japan Equity Fund, Inc. (the "Fund"),
with respect to the Form N-CSR for the period ended April 30, 2005 as filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission,  hereby certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
Section 1350, as adopted  pursuant to Section 906 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of
2002, that:

     1.   such Form N-CSR fully complies with the  requirements of section 13(a)
          or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

     2.   the information  contained in such Form N-CSR fairly presents,  in all
          material respects,  the financial  condition and results of operations
          of the Funds.

                            Dated: December 28, 2005


                            /s/ Hiroshi Kimura
                            ----------------------------------
                            Hiroshi Kimura, Chairman


     This certification is being furnished solely pursuant to 18 U.S.C.  Section
1350 and is not being  filed as part of the Report or as a  separate  disclosure
document.






                                                                   EXHIBIT 12(c)


                           The Japan Equity Fund, Inc.
                       Proxy Voting Policy and Procedures


     The Board of Directors of The Japan Equity Fund,  Inc. (the "Fund")  hereby
adopts  the  following  policy and  procedures  with  respect to voting  proxies
relating to Fund  securities  managed by Daiwa SB  Investments  (USA) Ltd.  (the
"Investment Manager").

I.   Policy

     It is the policy of the Board of  Directors  of the Fund (the  "Board")  to
delegate the  responsibility  for voting proxies  relating to securities held by
the Fund to the Investment  Manager as part of the Manager's general  management
of the Fund's assets, subject to the Board's continuing oversight.  The Board of
Directors of the Fund hereby  delegates  such  responsibility  to the Investment
Manager,  and directs the  Investment  Manager to vote proxies  relating to Fund
portfolio  securities  managed by the  Investment  Manager  consistent  with the
duties and procedures set forth below. The Investment  Manager may retain one or
more vendors to review,  monitor and  recommend  how to vote proxies in a manner
consistent  with the duties  and  procedures  set forth  below,  to ensure  such
proxies  are voted on a timely  basis and to  provide  reporting  and/or  record
retention services in connection with proxy voting for the Fund.

II.  Fiduciary Duty

     The right to vote a proxy with respect to securities held by the Fund is an
asset of the Fund. The Investment  Manager, to which authority to vote on behalf
of the Fund is delegated,  acts as a fiduciary of the Fund and must vote proxies
in a manner  consistent with the best interest of the Fund and its shareholders.
In  discharging  this fiduciary  duty, the Investment  Manager must maintain and
adhere to its policies and procedures  for addressing  conflicts of interest and
must vote in a manner substantially consistent with its policies, procedures and
guidelines, as presented to the Board.

III. Procedures

     The   following   are  the   procedures   adopted  by  the  Board  for  the
administration of this policy.

     A.   Review of Investment Manager's Proxy Voting Procedures. The Investment
          Manager  shall  present to the Board their  policies,  procedures  and
          other guidelines for voting proxies at least annually, and must notify
          the Board  promptly  of  material  changes to any of these  documents,
          including changes to policies addressing conflicts of interest.

     B.   Voting  Record  Reporting.  The  Investment  Manager shall provide the
          voting record  information  necessary for the completion and filing of
          Form-NPX to the Fund at least annually. Such voting record information
          shall be in a form  acceptable  to the Fund and shall be  provided  at
          such time(s) as are required for the timely  filing of Form-NPX and at
          such  additional  time(s) as the Fund and the  Investment  Manager may
          agree  from  time to time.  With  respect  to those  proxies  that the
          Investment   Manager  has   identified  as  involving  a  conflict  of
          interest1,  the  Investment  Manager  shall  submit a separate  report
          indicating  the  nature  of the  conflict  of  interest  and how  that
          conflict was resolved with respect to the voting of the proxy.

     C.   Record Retention.  The Investment  Manager shall maintain such records
          with  respect  to the  voting of  proxies  as may be  required  by the
          Investment  Advisers Act of 1940 and the rules promulgated  thereunder
          or by the  Investment  Company  Act of 1940 and the rules  promulgated
          thereunder.

     D.   Conflicts of Interest.  Any actual or potential  conflicts of interest
          between the  Investment  Manager and the Fund's  shareholders  arising
          from the proxy voting  process  will be  addressed  by the  Investment
          Manager and the Investment  Manager's  application of its proxy voting
          procedures pursuant to the delegation of proxy voting responsibilities
          to the Investment  Manager.  In the event that the Investment  Manager
          notifies the officer(s) of the Fund that a conflict of interest cannot
          be resolved under the Investment  Manager's  Proxy Voting  Procedures,
          such  officer(s)  are  responsible  for  notifying the Chairman of the
          Board of the  Fund of the  irreconcilable  conflict  of  interest  and
          assisting the Chairman with any actions he determines are necessary.

IV.  Revocation

     The  delegation by the Board of the  authority to vote proxies  relating to
securities of the Fund is entirely voluntary and may be revoked by the Board, in
whole or in part, at any time.

V.   Annual Filing

     The Fund shall file an annual  report of each proxy  voted with  respect to
securities of the Fund during the twelve-month period ended June 30 on Form N-PX
not later than August 31 of each year.2

VI.  Disclosures

     A. The Fund shall include in its annual report filed on Form N-CSR:

     1.   a description of this policy and of the policies and  procedures  used
          by the  Fund  and the  Investment  Manager  to  determine  how to vote
          proxies  relating to portfolio  securities  or copies of such policies
          and procedures; and

     2.   a  statement  disclosing  that  a  description  of  the  policies  and
          procedures  used by or on behalf of the Fund to determine  how to vote
          proxies  relating  to  securities  of the  Fund is  available  without
          charge,  upon  request,  by  calling  the Fund's  toll-free  telephone
          number;  through a specified Internet address,  if applicable;  and on
          the SEC's website; and

     3.   a statement  disclosing that information  regarding how the Fund voted
          proxies  relating to Fund  securities  during the most recent 12-month
          period ended June 30 is available  without  charge,  upon request,  by
          calling the Fund's toll-free  telephone number; or through a specified
          Internet address; or both; and on the SEC's website.

VII. Review of Policy

     The Board  shall  review  from time to time this  policy to  determine  its
sufficiency  and shall make and approve any changes that it deems necessary from
time to time.

Adopted:   November 25, 2003








                        Proxy voting policy for Daiwa SB
                             Investments (USA) Ltd.


                    Statement of Policies and Procedures for
                                 Voting Proxies


Introduction

     As a  registered  investment  adviser,  Daiwa  SB  Investments  (USA)  Ltd.
("Daiwa," "we" or "us") has a fiduciary duty to act solely in the best interests
of our clients.  As part of this duty, we recognize that we must exercise voting
rights in the best interests of our clients.

     Daiwa  recognizes the  importance of good corporate  governance in ensuring
that   management  and  boards  of  directors   fulfill  their   obligations  to
shareholders.  As part of our  investment  process,  we take  into  account  the
attitudes of management and boards of directors on corporate  governance  issues
when deciding whether to invest in a company.

     Daiwa is a global investment manager, and invests significantly in emerging
markets.   It  should  be  noted  that  protection  for  shareholders  may  vary
significantly  from  jurisdiction  to  jurisdiction,  and in some  cases  may be
substantially less than in the U.S. or developed countries.

     This  statement is intended to comply with Rule 206(4)-6 of the  Investment
Advisers  Act of 1940.  It sets  forth the policy  and  procedures  of Daiwa for
voting proxies for our clients,  including investment companies registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940.

PROXY VOTING POLICIES

     It is the general policy of Daiwa to support management of the companies in
which it invests and will cast votes in accordance with management's  proposals.
However,  Daiwa  reserves the right to depart from this policy in order to avoid
voting decisions that we believe may be contrary to our clients' best interests.

     Elections  of  Directors:  In many  instances,  election of  directors is a
routine voting issue. Unless there is a proxy fight for seats on the Board or we
determine  that there are other  compelling  reasons for  withholding  votes for
directors,  we will vote in favor of the management proposed slate of directors.
That  said,  we believe  that  directors  have a duty to respond to  shareholder
actions that have  received  significant  shareholder  support.  We may withhold
votes for directors  that fail to act on key issues such as failure to implement
proposals  to   declassify   boards,   failure  to  implement  a  majority  vote
requirement,  failure to submit a rights plan to a shareholder  vote and failure
to act on tender offers where a majority of  shareholders  have  tendered  their
shares.

     Appointment  of Auditors:  The  selection of an  independent  accountant to
audit a company's  financial  statements is generally a routine business matter.
Daiwa  believes  that  management  remains  in the best  position  to choose the
accounting firm and will generally support management's recommendation.

     Changes in Capital Structure:  Changes in a company's charter,  articles of
incorporation  or by-laws  are often  technical  and  administrative  in nature.
Absent a  compelling  reason  to the  contrary,  Daiwa  will  cast its  votes in
accordance  with the company's  management on such proposals.  However,  we will
review and analyze on a case-by-case  basis any  non-routine  proposals that are
likely to affect the  structure  and operation of the company or have a material
economic effect on the company.

     Corporate  Restructurings,  Mergers and Acquisitions:  Daiwa believes proxy
votes dealing with corporate  reorganizations are an extension of the investment
decision and will take account of our investment  process policy in deciding how
to vote.

     Corporate  Governance:  Daiwa  recognizes  the importance of good corporate
governance in ensuring that management and the board of directors  fulfill their
obligations  to  the  shareholders.   We  generally  favor  proposals  promoting
transparency and accountability within a company.

     Social and Corporate  Responsibility:  Daiwa  recognizes  the importance of
supporting sound and responsible  policies in relation to social,  political and
environmental issues. However, in the interests of shareholders,  we reserve the
right to vote  against  proposals  that  are  unduly  burdensome  or  result  in
unnecessary  and excessive  costs to the company.  We may abstain from voting on
social  proposals that do not have a readily  determinable  financial  impact on
shareholder value.

     Executive  Compensation:  Daiwa  believes that company  management  and the
compensation committee of the board of directors should, within reason, be given
latitude to  determine  the types and mix of  compensation  and  benefit  awards
offered.  Whether  proposed  by a  shareholder  or  management,  we will  review
proposals relating to executive compensation plans and, if deemed excessive, may
vote against the proposals.

PROXY VOTING PROCEDURES

Proxy voting

     Our  portfolio  management  team is  responsible  for the  coordination  of
Daiwa's proxy  voting.  They liaise with the Product  managers  and/or the Proxy
voting  committee to ascertain how Daiwa will vote.  They will then instruct the
relevant  Custodians.  The portfolio  management  team is also  responsible  for
ensuring that full and adequate records of proxy voting are kept.

     The  Product   managers  will  implement  the  Proxy  voting   policies  by
instructing  proxy voting in accordance  with the general  principles  contained
herein.

Proxy Voting Committee

     We have formed a Proxy Voting  Committee  to  regularly  review our general
proxy  policies and consider  specific  proxy voting  matters as and when deemed
necessary.  Members of the committees  include senior  investment  personnel and
representatives  of the Legal & Compliance  Department.  The  committee may also
evaluate  proxies  where we face a material  conflict of interest (as  discussed
below).

Conflicts of Interest

     Daiwarecognizes that there is a potential conflict of interest when we vote
a proxy  solicited  by an issuer  with  whom we have any  material  business  or
personal  relationship  that may affect how we vote on the  issuer's  proxy.  We
believe that  oversight by the proxy voting  committee  ensures that proxies are
voted  with only our  clients'  best  interests  in mind.  In order to avoid any
perceived conflict of interests,  the following procedures have been established
for use when we encounter a potential conflict.

     The portfolio  management  team will refer to the Legal and compliance team
any proxy  votes that are issued by  existing  clients  or where  Daiwa  holds a
significant voting percentage of the company. The Legal and compliance team will
make the initial  determination  about  whether a material  conflict of interest
exists based on the facts and circumstances of each particular situation.

     If our proposed vote is consistent with our stated proxy voting policy,  no
further review is necessary.

     If our proposed  vote is contrary to our stated proxy voting  policy but is
also contrary to management's recommendation, no further review is necessary.

     If our proposed  vote is contrary to our stated proxy voting  policy and is
consistent with  management's  recommendation,  the proposal is escalated to the
proxy committee for final review and determination.

Proxies of Certain Non-U.S. Issuers

     Proxy  voting in certain  countries  requires  "share  blocking."  That is,
shareholders  wishing to vote their  proxies must deposit  their shares  shortly
before the date of the meeting (usually one-week) with a designated  depositary.
During this blocking period,  shares that will be voted at the meeting cannot be
sold  until the  meeting  has taken  place and the shares  are  returned  to the
clients'  custodian banks.  Daiwa may determine that the value of exercising the
vote does not outweigh the detriment of not being able to transact in the shares
during this period.  Accordingly,  if share  blocking is required we may abstain
from voting those shares.  In such a situation we would have determined that the
cost of voting exceeds the expected benefit to the client.

Proxy Voting Record

     Clients may obtain  information  on how Daiwa  voted with  respect to their
proxies by contacting  our Client  services team at Daiwa SB  Investments  (USA)
Ltd.. 32 Old Slip, 11th Floor, New York, New York, Tel No. 212-612-8500, Fax No.
212-612-8518/8519 or email a_baksi@dsbiusa.net / m_gugliotta@dsbiusa.net.




-------

1    As it is used in this document, the term "conflict of interest" refers to a
     situation  in which the  Investment  Manager or  affiliated  persons of the
     Investment  Manager  have a financial  interest in a matter  presented by a
     proxy other than the  obligation  they incur as  Investment  Manager to the
     Fund  which  could   potentially   compromise  the   Investment   Manager's
     independence  of  judgment  and  action  with  respect to the voting of the
     proxy.

2    The Fund must file its first  report on Form N-PX not later than August 31,
     2005, for the  twelve-month  period beginning July 1, 2003, and ending June
     30, 2005.