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‘Unprecedented’ South Korean boycott damaging Japan’s retailers, manufacturers

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‘Unprecedented’ South Korean boycott damaging Japan’s retailers, manufacturers
October 15, 2019
Inside Retail Asia
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Having now run for more than 100 days, the scale and impact of the South Korean boycott movement against Japanese products is unprecedented.

It is costing retailers, importers, airlines and travel companies millions of dollars as a largely voluntary group of consumers rally citizens to their cause, popularised by its slogan ‘I Will Not Buy, I Will Not Go, and I Will Not Wear”.

The South Korean boycott is rooted in discord between the two countries dating back to Japan’s colonial occupation of the Korean Peninsula before and during the Second World War and controversy over forced labour and sexual slavery. It expanded into a diplomatic crisis in July after Japan threatened to throttle exports of materials essential to South Korean industries.

Prior to July, Japan was South Korea’s largest source of imports by value. Shortly after the boycott began, its ranking fell to third in July and to 13th in August. Last month it fell to 28th.

Emforce, a South Korean digital marketing firm, has reported that the word ‘boycott’ appeared 1.18 million times on social-media networks this year, which was 10 times the size of the previous boycott movement following Japan’s celebration of Takeshima Day in 2013.

Japanese retailer Uniqlo is a prime example of the impact of the ‘I Will Not Wear’ boycott movement. Uniqlo has closed four Uniqlo stores since July and the number of people visiting stores which remained open has plummeted.

According to records from eight credit-card companies, Uniqlo sales plunged by 70.1 per cent to 1.77 billion won (US$1.49 million) in the fourth week of July from 5.94 billion won ($5 million) in the last week of June.

However, amid the decrease in brick-and-mortar store sales, there is a sign of consumption picking up at Uniqlo’s online mall, with its popular winter products, heat-retaining underwear called Heattech and light-weight padded jackets selling out.

Uniqlo is still expected to experience mixed fortunes in Korea this winter, as social media is still awash with messages urging users not to buy Japanese products and support the boycott.

According to the Emforce analysis, among some 1.28 million posts on Twitter related to the boycott movement between July and August, 93.3 per cent were retweets, and 6.7 per cent were new posts. While retweets still account for the majority, there were 85,000 new posts about the boycott movement between July and August, which was eight times more than the total number of relevant tweets posted in the entire year of 2013.

“It shows the scale of the movement and how each participant is taking deep interest in the matter from various standpoints,” said the report.

“Netizens retweeted posts made not by the media or civil groups, but by other netizens advancing their own opinions and sharing the boycott list of Japanese products.”

Data Lab, Line parent Naver Corp’s big-data platform, reported a decrease in the number of clicks on Japanese products throughout almost all sectors at online shopping malls.

“The initial drive that’s been leading the movement is weakening. Nevertheless, it is now being replaced with a collective habit of rejecting Japanese products since more consumers are less inclined to buy due to the bad economy,” Data Lab said.

“The aftereffects of the movement are expected to continue.”

While some South Koreans are still purchasing Japanese products, the voluntary participation of the public still leaves little room for Japanese companies, according to Korea Bizwire.

Japanese beer has all but disappeared from store shelves, with the Korea Customs Service, reporting just $6000 worth of Japanese beer crossed the border in September.

The South Korean boycott of travel to Japan has also sent shockwaves through the Japanese economy. Passengers on flights bound for Japan dropped 30 per cent in September from a year earlier during the Chuseok holiday season, the peak travel season.

According to the Korea Economic Research Institute, there was a 27.6-per-cent drop in the number of South Korean tourists visiting Japan in July-August which cost the Japanese economy an estimated US$292 million.

The October reservation rate also dropped and despite a reduction in the number of flights, occupancy was just 60 per cent on those still scheduled.

https://insideretail.asia/2019/10/1...cott-damaging-japans-retailers-manufacturers/
 
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Japanese car sale in S.Korea more than halves in October amid boycott campaign
2019-11-05 15:02:08|
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SEOUL, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- Japanese car sale in South Korea more than halved in October, keeping a downward trend for the fourth consecutive month amid the ongoing campaign to boycott Japanese products, industry data showed Tuesday.

The number of Japanese vehicles sold here was 1,977 in October, down 58.4 percent from a year earlier, according to the Korea Automobile Importers & Distributors Association (KAIDA).

The Japanese brand sale continued to decline since the trade spat between South Korea and Japan started in July.

The Japanese vehicle sale shrank 17.2 percent in July, tumbling 56.9 percent in August and 59.8 percent in September each.

Japan tightened control in July over its export to South Korea of three materials, vital to manufacture memory chips and display panels that are the mainstay of the South Korean export.

In August, Japan dropped South Korea off its whitelist of trusted trading partners that are given preferential export treatment. In response, Seoul removed Tokyo from its whitelist of trusted export partners.

Japan's export curbs came in an apparent protest against the South Korean top court's ruling that ordered some of Japanese companies to pay reparation to the South Korean victims who were forced into heavy labor without pay during the 1910-45 Japanese colonization of the Korean Peninsula.

Meanwhile, the number of foreign luxury vehicles sold here totaled 22,101 in October, up 6.2 percent from a year earlier.

For the first 10 months of this year, the foreign car sale reached 189,194 units, down 13.2 percent compared with the same period of last year.

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-11/05/c_138530197.htm
 
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Japan beer exports to South Korea down 99.9% over boycott
30 Oct 2019 01:51PM
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This picture taken on July 17, 2019 shows a sign reading "We do not sell Japanese products!" as cans of South Korean beer are displayed on shelves at a grocery shop in Seoul. (Photo: AFP/Jung Yeon-je)

TOKYO: Exports of beer from Japan to South Korea fell 99.9 percent year-on-year in September, Japan's finance ministry said Wednesday (Oct 30), as a boycott spurred by a bilateral dispute drags on.

Relations between South Korea and Japan have fallen to new lows in recent months over long-running tensions on the issue of wartime forced labour.

The countries have implemented retaliatory trade restrictions, and in South Korea citizens have called for a boycott of Japanese goods.

Japanese beer had long been a local favourite, topping the import tables since 2010. But in August it fell to 13th place.

Exports to South Korea have slumped significantly in recent months, but the September figures show the trade has now dried up almost entirely.

Just US$5,400 worth of beer was shipped to South Korea in September, the finance ministry said, compared to US$7.2 million worth in September 2018.

South Korea and Japan are both democracies and US allies, but their relations are heavily affected by Japan's expansionism in the first half of the 20th century.

The recent deterioration was sparked by several South Korean court rulings demanding Japanese firms pay compensation over the use of forced labour in World War Two.

Japan says all claims related to wartime issues were resolved in an agreement signed when the countries normalised ties.

The dispute has affected other sectors, including tourism, with South Korean visitors to Japan dropping sharply.

But the effect is expected to be balanced at least in part by an influx of tourists visiting Japan for the Rugby World Cup.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...o-south-korea-down-99-9-over-boycott-12046996
 
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such boycotts are usually driven by retailer unions and pressurize by countries .
this is a good example here .
whole nation cannot be on one single point
 
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such boycotts are usually driven by retailer unions and pressurize by countries .
this is a good example here .
whole nation cannot be on one single point
Koreans are a different bunch of people, we know them so well, they are ultra nationalists, small countries tend to be like that in East Asia.

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Number of S. Koreans staying at Japanese hotels halves in Aug. amid travel boycott
All Headlines 19:01 October 31, 2019

SEOUL, Oct. 31 (Yonhap) -- The number of South Koreans staying at hotels and tourist inns in Japan halved in August from a year earlier, data showed Thursday, amid boycott campaign against Japanese products stemming from bitter feuds over trade and history.

The Japan Tourism Agency said the number of South Koreans at such accommodations decreased 49.2 percent in August year-on-year, according to Japan's Kyodo news agency.

Among Japan's 47 prefectures, 44 recorded decreases in the number of South Korean hotel guests. Nagasaki suffered the largest decrease of 77.5 percent during the period.

The tourism agency earlier said the number of South Korean travelers to Japan decreased 58.1 percent in September on-year.

South Korea and Japan have been locked in an unprecedented trade dispute since Tokyo tightened its control on exports of three industrial materials to Asia's No.-4 economy in July, citing security issues.

Japan's export restriction is widely seen as retaliation against a Seoul court's ruling last year that ordered Japanese firms to compensate victims of their wartime forced labor, during Japan's 1910-1945 brutal colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula.

South Koreans have been staging a boycott against Japanese products, calling for Tokyo to make a sincere move toward settling the historical issues.

https://en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20191031012400320
 
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What I don't understand is why it is only down by half.

Those lines of fcuker going to Japan from mainland China buying up over priced cosmetics and singing toilet seats while the Japanese take their money and talk shit about them behind their backs.

Sigh.
 
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