The Kondo effect has been playing an important role in strongly correlated
electon systems. The important point is that the magnetic impurity in metals is
a typical example of the Fermi liquid. In the system the local spin is
conserved in the ground state and continuity with respect to Coulomb repulsion
U is satisfied. This nature is satisfied also in the periodic systems as far
as the systems remain as the Fermi liquid. This property of the Fermi liquid is
essential to understand the cuprate high-Tc superconductors (HTSC). On the
basis of the Fermi liquid theory we develop the transport theory such as the
resistivity and the Hall coefficient in strongly correlated electron systems,
such as HTSC, organic metals and heavy Fermion systems. The significant role of
the vertex corrections for total charge- and heat-currents on the transport
phenomena is explained. By taking the effect of the current vertex corrections
into account, various typical non-Fermi-liquid-like transport phenomena in
systems with strong magnetic and/or superconducting flucutations are explained
within the Fermi liquid theory.Comment: 14 pages, an article for the special edition of JPSJ "Kondo Effect --
40 Years after the Discovery