The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Japan’s office device manufactur­ers paying heavy price 20 years later

- By Fukutaro Yamashita

BEIJING — e multifunct­ion machine looked just like any other found in an o ce except that this device, which can photocopy and fax among its other functions, was painted like a piece of military equipment in distinctiv­e olive drab adorned with a red star.

Like many such items found in the o ces of some military organizati­ons in China, one might think it was made by a Chinese company, but a Japanese enterprise was apparently involved in its design and manufactur­e.

A source who revealed the existence of these devices to

e Yomiuri Shimbun said Japanese companies have such a high reputation for their technologi­cal standards in the business machine sector that China even adopted these products for use in military o ces, where military secrets are sent and received and high-level informatio­n security is required.

is spring, the Chinese government started considerin­g a system that would prompt domestic production of the entire manufactur­ing process for these devices, including the research, developmen­t and design stages and even their components and assembly. If companies from Japan and other nations fail to comply, they will not meet China’s national standards and become unable to provide items for government procuremen­t.

e question facing Japanese enterprise­s is whether to transfer their technologi­es or withdraw from the market in China. Beijing has been pushing this test of allegiance.

e Japan-China relationsh­ip has been “politicall­y cool, but economical­ly hot” for years. Even when political tensions rattle bilateral ties, the economies remain closely linked.

With China now locked in a struggle for technologi­cal supremacy with the United States, Beijing is hungrily absorbing the technologi­es of foreign countries as it seeks to become a more powerful nation.

e Chinese government’s actions have rammed that reality home to Japanese economic circles.

In the autumn of 2002, the Japan Business Machine and Informatio­n System Industries Associatio­n dispatched a delegation of senior company executives on a visit to China. During an exchange of views, a senior o cial of China’s then Informatio­n Industry Ministry (replaced in 2008 by the Industry and Informatio­n Technology Ministry) declared, “Government procuremen­t will give priority to products that have been manufactur­ed in China.”

e delegation’s report from the trip mentioned the concerns of one participan­t who felt that China “was trying to move Japan’s entire multifunct­ion o ce machine industry to China as a national policy.”

Despite this, the business machine industry took no action because the rapid growth of China’s huge market was a certainty. But as a result of China continuing to manufactur­e 70-80% of its multifunct­ion o ce devices domestical­ly, the Japanese industry is now facing a bill that has been running up for more than 20 years.

Since Tokyo and Beijing normalized diplomatic relations in 1972, Japan has generously shared its advanced technologi­es, starting with automobile­s and steel, through joint ventures in China and other channels. China has exported technologi­es it gained through these partnershi­ps as its own and boosted its in uence in other nations.

In October 2021, the Chinese government announced the China Standards 2035 strategy that aims to make China even more economical­ly powerful. One main objective of this strategy has been to align at least 85% of China’s national standards set for products and technologi­es with those of the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Standardiz­ation (ISO). Having China’s own technologi­es adopted by the ISO could be advantageo­us in the global market for the respective sectors.

Japan’s government passed legislatio­n that promotes economic security this May. It has

promoted ISO standards and sought to reduce the nation’s dependence on supply chains involving China.

In September, Daikin Industries, Ltd., a major air conditione­r manufactur­er that earns about one-sixth of its sales in China, began to review its reliance on China in its supply chains. Daikin is looking to develop motors that do not use rare earths, many of which come from China. ese motors will start being tted into air conditione­rs from the scal year beginning April 2023, and Daikin plans to eventually have them in half of all units it makes.

e motivation for these changes has been the lingering di culty in predicting what might happen in China, as was shown by lockdowns imposed in cities such as Shanghai due

to COVID-19 outbreaks.

Even so, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang held an online dialogue with Keidanren (Japan Business Federation) executives and other business leaders on Sept. 22, the rst such high-level meeting in three years. Both sides con rmed they would continue their cooperatio­n.

“Our economies are strongly tied together and inextricab­ly linked to the world,” Keidanren Chairman Masakazu Tokura said.

Li replied that the mutual bene ts of the relationsh­ip had huge momentum that was unchangeab­le.

How will Japan manage and confront the risks that come with this powerful neighbor? Japan’s choices and its readiness for the next 50 years will be put to the test. (Oct. 3)

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? Chinese Premier Li Keqiang is seen on a screen holding a videoconfe­rence with key figures in Japanese economic circles in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo, on Sept. 22.
The Yomiuri Shimbun Chinese Premier Li Keqiang is seen on a screen holding a videoconfe­rence with key figures in Japanese economic circles in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo, on Sept. 22.

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