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The Japanese Auto Industry A Window on Japan's Economy. Michael Smitka Professor of Economics Washington and Lee Alumni College July 20, 2000. Japan's Car Market…?!. Enjoy the strong yen!. Big Sale Now … !. Price -- a mere ¥ 16,800,000. Exchange rate: ¥ 108 per US$ (Wednesday's rate)
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The Japanese Auto IndustryA Window on Japan's Economy Michael Smitka Professor of Economics Washington and Lee Alumni College July 20, 2000
Japan's Car Market…?! Enjoy the strong yen!
Price -- a mere ¥16,800,000 • Exchange rate: ¥108 per US$(Wednesday's rate) • Price in dollars: $155,555.55 • And this isafter the 10% "strong yen" sale discount!!
Luxury Cars aren't Representative • Mercedes will sell 50,000 cars in 2000 • 2.8 million -- regular cars • 2.0 million -- minicars • 1.0 million -- light trucks • 0.3 million -- imports
Japanese Auto Firms • Toyota Daihatsu • Nissan Hino • Honda Nissan Diesel • Mitsubishi Motors Suzuki • Mazda Isuzu • Fuji Heavy Industries (Subaru) • Defunct: Prince .. Ohta .. Kurogane .. Several others
Firm All Cars Regular Minicars • Toyota 917,120 917,120 • Daihatsu 286,555 286,555 • Nissan 388,548 388,548 • Honda 375,725 223,506 152,219 • Mitsubishi 307,949 161,815 146,134 • Mazda 165,613 142,436 23,177 • Suzuki 324,059 324,059 • Fuji (Subaru) 151,100 64,799 86,301 • Isuzu 35,529 35,529 • Cars 3.061 mil 2.043 mil 1.018 m • Trucks & Buses 0.051 mil
Import Brands • VW 33,078 • D/C 28,248 • BMW 20,110 • GM 14,217 • Ford 13,511 • All less than 1% share in a 3 million car market….
Definitions • Production inside Japan versus global production • Honda is almost as much American as Japanese! • Toyota is rapidly internationalizing
Missing from List?! • Nissan is owned by Renault • Mazda is owned by Ford • Isuzu is owned by GM • Suzuki, Fuji are partly owned by GM • Mitsubishi will be owned by DaimlerChrysler • Hino & Daihatsu are now owned by Toyota • Nissan Diesel is (?) Volvo
Definitions (ii) • Production by Japanese firms • Mazda, Isuzu and Nissan are all controlled by non-Japanese companies • Suzuki, Fuji Heavy Industries (Subaru) and Mitsubishi have foreign firms as major if not dominant shareholders • Only Honda and Toyota are "Japanese"
Production outside of Japan NAFTA EU
"The" Auto Industry • 888,000 Manufacturing (1.3% of labor force) • 262,000 assembly • 626,000 parts and body • 1,280,000 Sales & Repair (2.0% " " ") • 957,000 Materials (Steel, rubber, paint…) • 1,106,000 Ancillary (Gas Stations, Insurance….) • 3,033,000 Transport services (Truck drivers….) • 7,260,000 Total -- 11% of Labor Force • 13% of mfg shipments, 20% of exports
Definitions (iii) • Parts versus Assembly • Employment is in parts, not assembly • Dealerships and repair shops, too • Dealerships in Japan are unprofitable! • Gas stations, too? • Deregulation has overturned the industry!
Peak 13.5 mil Now < 10 mil
Historical Development • Typical LDC Pattern of Industrialization • Initial domination by foreign producers • Excess entry by "national" firms and extreme inefficiency under subsequent protectionism • Industrial consolidation - the Year 2000 theme! • Assemblers going or gone • Now it's the parts sector's turn
Auto sales • The Japanese market was for trucks until 1968 - • businesses were the predominant customer • many vehicles were 3-wheelers! • Japan was advanced in the late 1920s and 1930s • Ford from 1925, GM from 1927 • Military halted construction of a new, state-of-the-art integrated Ford plant in 1936 • Took 45 years to catch up again!
Turning points • 1961 cars surpass 3-wheelers • 1968 cars surpass trucks Trucks Cars 3-Wheelers
Distinctive Features • Competitiveness • Success in American market from late 1970s • But in the 1990s poor profitability on a global basis, so-so success in the EU
Managementdetails for Q&A?! • Just-in-time kanban methods of production control • Rapid product development cycle • Quality control techniques • Supplier management / purchasing strategy • Labor relations patterns distinctive from those of the US. "Lifetime" employment system, annual wage hikes, biannual bonuses
US-Japan Topics (I)Japanese success was due to US! • Japanese entry rode a small car wave • We paid Japan off!! • VER - voluntary export restraint - cum - cartel • Our subsidies financed • Japan's mid-sized cars • Japan's overseas plants • Absent US policy . . . . no Japan??
US-Japan Topics (II)American revitalization was due to Japan • Until Japanese entry in the 1980s, the Big Three formed a tight cartel • Competition forced a reformation the last 15 years • Japanese inroads are almost exactly matched by GM's decline • US firms' superior financial controls helped offset poor manufacturing
The "Bubble" • Japan would rule the world in autos… • Exports, domestic market boomed in mid-1980s • Low interest rates fed the boom • So what do you do? -- add capacity! • 1.5 million units in a shrinking market • Now 15 mil units capacity, 10 mil units output • Toyota alone has 1 mil units excess capacity
The "Bubble"Denouement • Plaza Accord of September 1985 • yen appreciated • exports fell • Domestic asset bubble broke • home demand fell • Foreign producers recovered • skills improved • light truck / minivan boom favored them
Today’s status • Huge excess capacity within Japan • 10 years of delay while hoping for recover (cf. GM) • Little restructuring until 2000, and then only at a few assemblers • Aging labor force & population • costs will rise • demand won't • Debt, poor profitability • can Japanese firms invest abroad profitably??
Looking Forward • Improved efficiency in Japan?? • continued exit / restructuring esp. at parts firms • Maturation in other markets • international expansion will slow, firms will see occasional sales downturns • How to manage a global firm? • few precedents in Japan • US firms don't always do well, either! (in 2000, Ford in EU) • Firms with high export shares (Honda, Mazda) remain vulnerable to exchange rate swings
Summary & Lessons • Many features of Japan reflect its economic transition from a developing country • The "bubble" legacy is still present 10 years later • Maturation will not proceed smoothly • How similar are the US? Korea? China?
Addenda • GDP growth chart • GDP • Unemployment • Big 3 cartel (oligopoly) era • Today's structure -- competition galore! • Major parts suppliers • Sales size • Nationality (by headquarters location)
Old Vs New: the Old GM Ford Chrysler AMC (imports < 10% of market) VW (Briefly in Pennsylvania) ====== Big 3 (+ 1-2 little firms)
Old vs. New: the NewNAFTA Producers • GM Subaru BMW • Ford Isuzu VW (Mexico) • Toyota Mitsubishi Saturn (GM) • Honda Mazda (AutoAlliance)(Hyundai*) • Chrysler Suzuki (CAMI)(VW - US*) • Nissan Mercedes-Benz (Volvo*) • Big 6plusThe Little 9 firms(plus 13% imports!)
Top Suppliers - A MultinationalBase (1998 OEM sales; *Subsequent M&A) • Delphi $26 bil Dana $7 bil • Bosch $18 bil Aisin Seiki $7 bil • Visteon $18 bil Valeo $7 bil • Denso $12 bil Yazaki $6 bil • Lear* $9 bil Magna $6 bil • JCI $9 bil Mannesmann $6 • TRW* $7 bil LucasVarity* $5 • US German Japanese Other
Bibliography • David Halberstam, The Reckoning. 1986. • A good read, and a good depiction. • Maryann Keller, Rude awakening : the rise, fall, & struggle for recovery of General Motors. 1989. • Another good read. See also her Collision: GM, Toyota, Volkswagen and the Race for the 21st Century, 1993. • Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association: http://www.jama.or.jp • Includes auto industry overview .pdf file and current statistics
Mike Smitka, Competitive Ties. Columbia University Press, 1989. • The parts sector in Japan • Department of Commerce, Office of Automotive Affairs: http://www.ita.doc.gov/td/auto/ • US data, links, trade data • Keizai Koho Center Japan: An International Comparison (Annual, 1998-2000 available online)www.kkc.or.jp/english/activities/publications/aic2000.pdf • Handbook of statistics on social / political / economic facets of Japan. 100 pages of downloadable tables & graphs, most with comparative data for the US and EU.