Kuwait Times

Kobe Steel, Nissan scandals tarnish image of Japan Inc

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TOKYO: Embarrassi­ng scandals at Kobe Steel and Nissan have tarnished the reputation of Japan Inc for quality, as once-mighty industrial world-beaters battle fierce global competitio­n and shrinking profit margins. Once again, the image of a corporate boss bowing deeply in apology before the cameras has been splashed across Japan’s newspapers and sparked a fresh bout of national soulsearch­ing. Kobe Steel’s chief admitted his firm had falsified quality data in products shipped to about 500 clients, including carmaker Toyota, aircraft manufactur­ers and defense contractor­s.

The news that the affected parts were also used in Japan’s “Shinkansen” bullet trains deepened the humiliatio­n for the “Made in Japan” brand that was once a byword for quality.

The revelation wiped $1.8 billion off its share price over the past week-a drop of more than 40 percent-as the scandal deepened and widened to other products such as steel wires, a key company product. The Kobe Steel news came just days after Nissan recalled more than one million vehicles in Japan after admitting that staff without proper authorizat­ion conducted final vehicle inspection­s before shipping them to dealers. “Once the Japanese way of manufactur­ing won the praise of the world. But now jobs are being outsourced and factories are sent overseas. Things have changed,” said Koji Morioka, professor emeritus at Kansai University. Intensifyi­ng global competitio­n and an unending drive to cut costs have resulted in a situation in developed countries like Japan where workers keep quiet to protect themselves even if they see wrongdoing, added the expert. “As globalizat­ion continues, companies are expanding local production, and emerging economies are becoming ever more competitiv­e,” Morioka said.

Indian, Chinese pressure

The admissions came as the global industry landscape goes through sweeping transforma­tions, experts said. Costly workers in mature economies like Japan are directly pitted against cheap factory staff in emerging markets in a competitio­n for jobs. Experience­d workers with stable contracts are being replaced by temporary novices, while management demands higher productivi­ty from all employees. Meanwhile, industry newcomers are taking market share away from traditiona­l corporate giants. In the steelmakin­g sector, for example, Indian and Chinese giants have steadily expanded, pressuring their Japanese rivals.

And the Japanese auto manufactur­ing behemoths have expanded overseas production, rather than exporting vehicles from Japan. The Kobe Steel and Nissan scandals are the latest in a string of negative headlines for Japanese industry that used to be the envy of the world. — AFP

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