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Japanese ****box cars, electronics cursed with recent flood of recalls



 
 
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Old October 30th 06, 04:19 PM posted to alt.collecting.8-track-tapes
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Default Japanese ****box cars, electronics cursed with recent flood of recalls

http://www.timesleader.com/mld/times...s/15877907.htm

Recalls vex Japan
By YURI KAGEYAMA AP Business Writer
KAWASAKI, Japan - Yasuhisa Konno is so proud of the fine-tuned skills
required to make metal parts at his greasy yet humming shop that he and
several like-minded neighborhood factory owners have formed a social
club called Republic of Manufacturing.

The club, which meets regularly over beer to trade notes, has one key
message: Japan Inc. was built on quality manufacturing delivered by
dedicated workers like the club members, and they deserve social
respect.

Konno, 40, isn't alone in fretting about the possible unraveling of
mighty manufacturing, long credited with helping modernize this nation
to become the world's second biggest economy.

Although such concerns have been around for some years, the recent
spate of recalls at top names in Japanese manufacturing - Sony Corp.,
Toyota Motor Corp., Canon Inc., to name a few - is serving as an all
too painful reminder that the fears are looming ever larger.

The concerns are especially relevant coming amid intensifying
competition from nearby China. A rapidly declining birth rate is
threatening Japan with a worker shortage that could chip away at its
craftsmanship tradition.

Konno is adamant the recent surge in recalls has nothing to do with
people like him who're trying to uphold pride in manufacturing.

"Those recalls aren't about true Japanese production," he said.

But even Konno acknowledged his company, which boasts some 200
corporate customers, has serious trouble attracting younger Japanese,
who look down on production work as dirty, dangerous and tough.

The number of people employed in manufacturing has gradually dwindled
to about 12 million, down 20 percent from about 15 million in 1990, as
jobs grew in retail and services, according to the government
Statistics Bureau.

The sense of crisis is great.

Tokyo has adopted as its buzzword for a national vision
"monozukuri," which means "making things," including not only
industrial production but also arts and crafts and other activities
that involve working with your hands. A declining birth rate is seen as
a threat to ensuring an adequate work force for monozukuri as the
Boomer generation approaches retirement age.

The government started a monozukuri campaign last year, earmarking
funds to dozens of robotics, nanotechnology, genome and other
technology projects, to survive global competition.

Many Japanese feel that much of this nation's economic success was
won through workaholic labor-intensive values.

Politicians, intellectuals and educators alike are engaging in
hand-wringing about how such qualities are dwindling among younger
Japanese, who are growing more like their Western counterparts in
job-hopping and seeking dot-com riches.

Workmanship that comes from years of on-the-job experience is getting
lost as more youngsters opt for white-collar work, said Seiichi Osawa,
an official at the Nagano Prefectural Institute of Technology, a
government training program set up especially to produce quality
workers in manufacturing.

"What's important is learning by getting your hands covered with
grease," he said. "But kids these days think everything can be done
by just sitting in front of a computer."

Japanese workers in manufacturing have been aging at a faster pace than
white-collar workers, according to a government "white paper" on
monozukuri released earlier this year.

In 1990, workers ages 15 to 29 made up 23 percent of the manufacturing
work force, but just 17.5 percent in 2005. School graduates who chose
jobs in manufacturing were about a third of the total in 1990, but have
shrunk to less than one-fifth in recent years, according to the white
paper.

Eighteen-year-old Chihiro Kawata is typical in looking for a clerical
job after odd jobs at fast-food chains and convenience stores. She is
considering work in elder care and nursery schools for the future.

"I never thought about it," she said of a manufacturing job. "My
parents recommend I get a basic office job."

No one is suggesting that respected names in Japanese manufacturing are
about to sink into oblivion. But the tales of trouble strike a sharp
contrast from the historical success stories of Japanese companies,
which depended more on fortitude, self-effacing team work and attention
to detail, rather than individualism and innovative breakthroughs.

Katsuaki Nagaike, professor of business and technology management at
Kyushu University, said the recalls highlight the adjustment problems
encountered by Japanese companies amid globalization.

Japanese strengths were based on developing core technology in-house
over a long period. But the recent price drops in electronics pitted
the old-style business model against a cost-cutting commodity model,
seen in companies like Dell, he said.

"The recalls are like mistakes in fielding during a baseball game
even for a good team," Nagaike said. "Chinese companies still have
a long way to go before they can catch up in design, engineering and
technology with Japanese companies."

Recent recalls

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

Among the embarrassing list of Japan's recent recalls:

· Sony's massive recall of faulty lithium-ion batteries for laptop
computers numbering 9.6 million worldwide, affecting laptops from
practically every major maker in the world.

· Toyota has been tarnished by auto recalls in Japan, the U.S. and
China. President Katsuaki Watanabe has vowed to beef up quality control
by reviewing quality in every stage of development and production.

· Last month, digital camera and copy machine maker Canon said it
will inspect and provide free parts replacements for 1.87 million
copiers worldwide because some may catch fire.

· Matsu****a Electric Industrial Co., which makes Panasonic brand
products, has recently recalled 6,000 batteries used in its laptops
that may overheat. But the company was plagued last year by a more
serious problem of thousands of heaters sold in Japan, suspected in two
deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning.

· Mitsubishi Motors Corp. is still struggling to regain public trust
after a scandal first surfaced in 2000, in which the manufacturer
acknowledged it had systematically hid auto defects for more than 20
years.

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