Interferometric radio observations together with soft X-ray observations are presented here to show that during the growth phase of soft X-ray flares, a large mass increase occurs simultaneously with the creation of an X-ray hot region in the corona. The lack of an increase of radio flux from pre-flare active regions absolutely excludes the possibility of the coronal accumulation of low-temperature matter just prior to flare onset. Therefore we suggest a hypothesis that a large amount of hot matter, which contains almost the entire energy in the flare, is supplied from the chromosphere into the corona during each flare. Since even small flares produce coronal hot regions radiating thermal soft X-rays and microwaves, the formation of the hot region may be a basic process in most flares. Energy, created by some instability in the corona, travels by thermal conduction to the chromosphere where the dense matter is heated and subsequently expands into the corona, producing the observed hot region. Impulsive heating of the chromosphere by nonthermal electrons which simultaneously emit hard X-rays is not sufficient to be the energy source in our model. Slower heating, which supplies the flare more energy than that supplied in the impulsive phase, is required. If the temperature of the energy source in the corona exceeds 2 × 107 K, the conductive energy flux becomes sufficient to exceed the radiation loss from the chromosphere-corona transition region. This excess energy may cause the chromospheric gas expansion.