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Some Famously Efficient Japanese Manufacturers Are Now Lying to Compete

antonius123

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Some Famously Efficient Japanese Manufacturers Are Now Lying to Compete
It’s the latest sign of how desperate these companies have become to stay ahead of Chinese and other foreign competitors.
By
Stephen Stapczynski
,
Nao Sano
, and
Kevin Buckland
October 20, 2017, 4:00 AM GMT+7
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Steel pipes sit on a truck as it leaves a Kobe Steel plant in Kobe, Japan, on Oct. 13, 2017.

Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
Japanese manufacturers were once held in awe for their mastery of flexible manufacturing and a continuous improvement mantra that revolutionized business practices the world over. Even now, for example, Fanuc remains the preeminent maker of sophisticated robots, sought by manufacturers from China to the U.S. But an increasing number of companies in China, South Korea, and elsewhere have found success emulating—and often besting—Japan’s long-established enterprises, forcing them to scramble.

The latest sign of just how desperate many Japanese companies have become to stay ahead of foreign rivals: Kobe Steel Ltd.’s admission this month that for years it has faked data on the quality of its aluminum, copper, and steel products. Those metals have been used in high-precision products made by hundreds of Kobe’s customers, including cars from Toyota Motor Corp. and bullet trains from Hitachi Ltd. Now Kobe Chief Executive Officer Hiroya Kawasaki is leading an internal committee to probe quality issues. And the U.S. Department of Justice has requested that Kobe Steel submit documents related to the fake data, the company said, adding that it will cooperate.

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Unfortunately for Japan Inc.’s reputation as a trusted supplier, such revelations have repeatedly commanded headlines, from Takata’s long-ignored exploding air bags to Nissan Motor’s fake safety inspectors to Mitsubishi Motors’ fudged fuel efficiency data. Japan obviously doesn’t have a monopoly on corporate shenanigans, but fraud is particularly costly for the nation because its flagship manufacturers have banked for years on a reputation for quality, says Nicholas Benes, a representative director of the Board Director Training Institute of Japan, which offers courses on corporate governance for executives. “Japanese manufacturers are very aware that their brand, their reputation, the sustainability of their businesses rest on quality,” he says.

Two overarching factors seem to be pushing the nation’s manufacturers to cross the line. First, Japanese companies face unrelenting pressure from upstart Chinese rivals. Second, a whistleblower protection law passed in Japan in 2006 has increased the odds of wrongdoing coming to light—and the digitization of records and internal conversations has made it easier for incriminating data to be passed along to regulators or authorities.

Kobe faces a double whammy from China churning out cheaper commodity steel and big automotive customers demanding products that weigh less yet retain strength and versatility. Whether a car has a 300-kilogram gasoline engine under the hood or a 300kg lithium ion battery, about two-thirds of the weight of most vehicles is still steel. So many metal makers continually look for an edge against one another, and a growing number of outsiders pitch lighter-weight plastics as alternatives. “The steelmakers are really trying to protect their turf, because this is a life-and-death situation for them,” says Thanh Ha Pham, an analyst at Jefferies Japan Ltd. “It’s improve or die.”

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A Kobe Steel plant, center, in Kobe on Oct. 14.
Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
Since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe took over in 2012, there’s been a concerted push to improve corporate governance in Japan. But rather than stepping up policing of bad behavior, the focus has mainly been on bolstering financial accountability to stockholders. That’s one reason share buybacks and dividends have surged.

So have scandals. Since a $1.7 billion accounting fraud was uncovered at medical equipment maker Olympus Corp. in 2011, the number of improper accounting cases unearthed each year at publicly traded companies has almost doubled.

Japan became famous for breakthroughs in manufacturing, where its factories continually cut costs—even by a few cents—through advances in production, automation, and supply chain management. But with competition from lower-cost rivals, those companies are under pressure to supply more, better, and faster parts.

“The world is now far more competitive … and the Japanese have lost many opportunities and contracts just based on being too expensive,” says Landry Guesdon, an attorney at Tokyo-based Iwata Godo. “So quality has come down for certain products. You try to cut corners, cut costs.”

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Hiroya Kawasaki, president and chief executive officer of Kobe Steel, bows as he leaves a news conference in Tokyo on Oct. 13.
Photographer: Shiho Fukada/Bloomberg
The spotlight has taken a toll on Kobe Steel, Japan’s third-largest steelmaker, whose customers include Ford Motor Co. and Boeing Co. Its market value of $2.7 billion is about $1.7 billion less than before it admitted to the fake data. It’s not alone in feeling financial pain from corporate malfeasance: The share price of Mitsubishi Motors Corp., which came under fire in 2015 after it was revealed that it manipulated fuel economy data for its vehicles, only recently surpassed its prescandal level. And Takata Corp. filed for bankruptcy in June, succumbing to the fallout from more than a dozen deaths linked to its faulty air bags.

But as the flak over Kobe’s behavior expands, Japan’s reputation for excellence may be the bigger loser. Japan Credit Rating Agency Ltd., which has an A grade for Kobe Steel, five levels above junk, said on Oct. 13 that risks are growing and that it’s watching whether customers will move to recall products containing the company’s materials and demand compensation.

The scandal “at the very least removes some of the ability of Japanese companies to have premium pricing,” says Alexander Robert Medd, managing director at Bucephalus Research Partnership Ltd. “You don’t buy Japanese goods because they are cheap. The whole thing is because of quality.” —With Masumi Suga and Ichiro Suzuki

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...panese-manufacturers-are-now-lying-to-compete
 
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The latest sign of just how desperate many Japanese companies have become to stay ahead of foreign rivals: Kobe Steel Ltd.’s admission this month that for years it has faked data on the quality of its aluminum, copper, and steel products.


The spotlight has taken a toll on Kobe Steel, Japan’s third-largest steelmaker, whose customers include Ford Motor Co. and Boeing Co. Its market value of $2.7 billion is about $1.7 billion less than before it admitted to the fake data.


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https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...panese-manufacturers-are-now-lying-to-compete



Damn !
The Effect will be Huge, because this definetly will have Very Bad Impact to their Customers, who buy their Poor Quality Steel with fake data :sick:


@antonius123
 
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Japanese companies are dying dinosaurs.

Japan has a serious problem.

Japan does not have the scale to compete against rival huge Chinese companies. Chinese companies benefit from having a massive domestic market to achieve enormous economies of scale.

Chinese companies earn huge industrial profits to pay for the most modern equipment. Japanese competitors cannot keep up with Chinese quality.

Japanese companies have resorted to outright lying to counter China's massive-scale quantitative advantage and superior Chinese qualitative manufacturing equipment.

How do you solve this long-term problem where China has all of the manufacturing advantages? The most logical response is to emulate Taiwan. Taiwan has adopted a strategy of economic synergy with mainland China.

Simply move high-cost production from Taiwan to mainland China. This way, Taiwanese companies still reap the profits of manufacturing on the mainland. Taiwan retains the design and sales jobs. A partial Taiwanese win is better than outright Japanese lying, which leads to Japanese bankruptcy.

So, why haven't Japanese companies adopted the Taiwanese model? Japan has an ossified cultural system. The Japanese seem incapable of adapting. Like dinosaurs, Japanese companies are dying one by one. The other reason is probably pride. The Japanese would rather go out of business than depend on mainland China for manufacturing survival.
 
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Japanese companies are dying dinosaurs.

Japan has a serious problem.

Japan does not have the scale to compete against rival huge Chinese companies. Chinese companies benefit from having a massive domestic market to achieve enormous economies of scale.

Chinese companies earn huge industrial profits to pay for the most modern equipment. Japanese competitors cannot keep up with Chinese quality.

Japanese companies have resorted to outright lying to counter China's massive-scale quantitative advantage and superior Chinese qualitative manufacturing equipment.

How do you solve this long-term problem where China has all of the manufacturing advantages? The most logical response is to emulate Taiwan. Taiwan has adopted a strategy of economic synergy with mainland China.

Simply move high-cost production from Taiwan to mainland China. This way, Taiwanese companies still reap the profits of manufacturing on the mainland. Taiwan retains the design and sales jobs. A partial Taiwanese win is better than outright Japanese lying, which leads to Japanese bankruptcy.

So, why haven't Japanese companies adopted the Taiwanese model? Japan has an ossified cultural system. The Japanese seem incapable of adapting. Like dinosaurs, Japanese companies are dying one by one. The other reason is probably pride. The Japanese would rather go out of business than depend on mainland China for manufacturing survival.

Yes, Taiwan already did a Great job for their economic synergy with mainland China.
We can see their companies growing and getting bigger, especially from their counterparts in japan.

Like we can see, japanese companies dying one by one or get troubled with fake data Finance and fake quality products is become Trend in recent years, and only will growing in the next years.
It's show us, how bad economic japan forecast in the future.

Even IMF, World bank, OECD all Predicted that Japan economic in the 2050 will keep Stagnan in the range 5 to 6 trillion dollar.
Meanwhile their counterparts will growing Significantly in this period,
China will reach 50 Trillion USD Nominal GDP in 2050.
U.S also reach 30 Trillion USD Nominal GDP in the same time.
And Germany, Russia, Brazil, Mexico, UK will reach their 5 to 6 trillion usd nominal gdp also.

It's mean China's Economy will be 10x times Japan economy in 2050 from Nominal GDP and will be much more if we use PPP GDP.


Even Stupid people can realise, How Bad Japan economic forecast in the future.
Only Ignorant will not say that. :coffee:

@Martian2 @GS Zhou @Mista @katarabhumi
 
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Japan's Kobe Steel rocked by a Quality Scandal

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TOKYO - The Japanese government urged steelmaker Kobe Steel on Wednesday to clarify the extent of manipulation of inspection data on steel, aluminum and other metals used in a wide range of products, reportedly including rockets, aircraft and cars. It's the latest quality scandal to rock Japanese manufacturing.

Kobe Steel, Japan's third-largest steelmaker, has announced that between Sept. 1, 2016, and Aug. 31 of this year it sold aluminum and copper materials using falsified data on such things as the products' strength.

Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Kotaro Nogami told reporters the government was seeking more information about the problem and trying to determine its possible impact on product safety. He criticized the apparently widespread falsification of data as "inappropriate."

About 200 of Kobe Steel's customers, including some makers of defense equipment, were affected, Nogami said. He would not identify the companies by name. Kobe Steel has also not announced which customers were affected, but Japanese media reports have said they included Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, a major aircraft maker and defense contractor, and several automakers.

Kobe Steel said in a release that the materials included aluminum flat-rolled products, aluminum extrusions, copper strips, copper tubes and aluminum castings and forgings.

It was unclear if the total of 40,900 tons of products involved included shipments to other countries.

"Data in inspection certificates had been improperly rewritten etc., and the products were shipped as having met the specifications concerned," the company said, describing the actions as "improper conduct."
Takata pleads guilty to U.S. fraud charges over defective airbags
The problem was discovered during internal inspections and "emergency quality audits," it said. Kobe Steel's share price has taken a beating, falling 17.8 percent Wednesday in Tokyo trading.

Product quality scandals have surfaced in Japan with increasing frequency in recent years.

In one of the largest, auto-parts maker Takata has paid $1 billion in penalties for concealing an air bag defect blamed for at least 19 deaths worldwide. Major automakers are also engaged in massive recalls and facing criticism for allegedly continuing to use the defective air bags despite knowing of the problem.


Last year, Mitsubishi Motors acknowledged it had systematically falsified mileage data on some of its vehicles. That company's reputation was hammered earlier by a massive, systematic and decades-long coverup of defects that surfaced in the early 2000s.

In another major case, materials and chemicals maker Asahi Kasei found data had been manipulated in 360 projects out of 3,052, casting doubts on the strength of construction pilings.

A report on its investigation into the problem cited a slew of abuses, including outright swapping and falsification of data.

Kobe Steel said it was contacting its customers and working to verify the safety of the products it supplied.

"Verification and inspection to date have not recognized specific problems casting doubts on the safety of the nonconforming products," it said.

The company said it has set up a committee headed by its president to investigate quality issues and hired an outside law firm to conduct a probe into the misconduct.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/japans-kobe-steel-rocked-by-a-quality-scandal/

Damn !
This only a tip of Iceberg :hitwall:

@lcloo @GS Zhou @cirr @initial_d_mk2
 
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Quality of the Japan-made ship.

Container ship MOL Comfort, made by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Nagasaki shipyard, broken to two parts and sunk.
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The Japan-made train in UK. The first day of operation. Shower service inside the train cabin. Impressive!
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Stellar Daisy, the cargo ship made by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Nagasaki Shipyard, sinks in in South Atlantic in early this year.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-39467269
 
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The Japan-made Type 90 MBT, in paved road, a sudden oil leakage .
I guess the tank must be a “she”.
View attachment 433209 View attachment 433210 View attachment 433211

In paved road? OMG


That's why you better not ask girl date, when she mens.

or this will happen... :coffee:

Thanks for pictures, really interesting :enjoy:
@GS Zhou





Home Aviation

Japanese F-15DJ Eagle fighter jet loses wheel on Okinawa runway
By Dylan Malyasov -
Feb 1, 2017 | Japan
n-f15-a-20170131-870x649-696x519.jpg

Photo by ASDF/ VIA KYODO

The Japan Self-Defense Forces F-15DJ Eagle fighter jet lost a front wheel at about 1:20 p.m. on January 30, shortly before a planned takeoff.

The fighter was unable to take off after its front-wheel tire became detached before it was due to depart together with three other fighters at around 1:20 p.m., according to the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism and the airport operator.

The Eagle stuck on the south part of the runway, and the sole runway was closed for 2 hours. No injuries were reported. Many commercial flights were affected by this accident.

The Japanese Air Self-Defense Force operates over 150 F-15 fighter jets which are manufactured by the Mitsubishi heavy industries.

http://defence-blog.com/news/japanese-f-15dj-eagle-fighter-jet-loses-wheel-on-okinawa-runway.html

If that happen in Landing, Okay.
But this is happen before Take-off :hitwall:

Maybe they also using japan Fake quality steel for this one.
 
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I think a lot of the lack in quality is down to overworked people (the Japanese have a SERIOUS problem with this) and a lack of ingenuity (which isn't helped by overworking your creative minds).
 
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Japanese companies are dying dinosaurs.

Japan has a serious problem.

Japan does not have the scale to compete against rival huge Chinese companies. Chinese companies benefit from having a massive domestic market to achieve enormous economies of scale.

Chinese companies earn huge industrial profits to pay for the most modern equipment. Japanese competitors cannot keep up with Chinese quality.

Japanese companies have resorted to outright lying to counter China's massive-scale quantitative advantage and superior Chinese qualitative manufacturing equipment.

How do you solve this long-term problem where China has all of the manufacturing advantages? The most logical response is to emulate Taiwan. Taiwan has adopted a strategy of economic synergy with mainland China.

Simply move high-cost production from Taiwan to mainland China. This way, Taiwanese companies still reap the profits of manufacturing on the mainland. Taiwan retains the design and sales jobs. A partial Taiwanese win is better than outright Japanese lying, which leads to Japanese bankruptcy.

So, why haven't Japanese companies adopted the Taiwanese model? Japan has an ossified cultural system. The Japanese seem incapable of adapting. Like dinosaurs, Japanese companies are dying one by one. The other reason is probably pride. The Japanese would rather go out of business than depend on mainland China for manufacturing survival.

I wonder if you wrote this article by yourself? It's a very well written. I can say I 100% agree.

Actually South Korea and Japan have a huge advantage as being China neighbor and have the same culture.

I think a lot of the lack in quality is down to overworked people (the Japanese have a SERIOUS problem with this) and a lack of ingenuity (which isn't helped by overworking your creative minds).

Today Japan is similar to China during Qing dynasty 18th century.

It's a basically a perfect society, but lack of future dream.

Despite I highly look over Confucianism, but Confucianism have a great disadvantaged. And it's awaken China eyes by European advancement.

Although I'm not sure too whatever China will overcome Japan current problem, which is China will be in the near future. After China reach the level of a perfect society, Chinese people need another dream and a kind of futuristic fantasy like USA with tommorowland and star wars.

Whatever happened to the rest of the world, China will keep advancing and focus and keep aiming higher.
 
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