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Tag Archives: Japan
Japanese Industry and TPP
An opinion piece on August 7, 2015 in the Japan Times ( http://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion/2015/08/07/editorials/setback-tpp-talks/#.VeNfiPlVikp) describes Japanese worries about the TPP pact. The Trans-Pacific Partnership, involving 12 countries with $ 28 trillion in GDP, will involve changes to how Japan assists some … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged agriculture, beef, Consumers, global supply chain, Japan, pork, prices, rice, tariffs, TPP
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Panasonic’s plans to move production back to Japan
An article in the Financial Times (http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/b22e772a-e1a2-11e3-9999-00144feabdc0.html?siteedition=intl#axzz32YPzdZCV) titled “Panasonic considers bringing production back to Japan) describes the weak Japanese yen (which has fallen 20% since 2012 against other currencies) improving the economics of production of rice cookers, washing machines and … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Capacity, Cost, Currency, Design, Japan, Panasonic, regulation, Risk, Supply Chain
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Coffee fed cows producing milk for Starbucks in Japan
An article in Sustainable Brands (http://www.sustainablebrands.com/news_and_views/chemistry_materials/jennifer_elks/closed-loop_upcycling_its_finest_starbucks_sourcing?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=innovation&utm_campaign=may14&mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRoku6XMZKXonjHpfsX56eotX6SwlMI%2F0ER3fOvrPUfGjI4DRcFqI%2BSLDwEYGJlv6SgFTrTBMbVxyLgOXxk%3D) titled “Closed Loop Recycling at its Best”, describes the fermentation of used coffee grounds to create a cattle feed, with the milk from the cattle being used at Starbucks stores in Japan. The concentration … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues, Sustainability
Tagged closed-loop, coffee, Collaboration, Consumers, Cost, Japan, Starbucks, Supply Chain, Sustainable
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Japanese multinationals importing back into Japan
An article in Bloombergbusinessweek (September 17,2012) describes automobiles made in Thailand by Nissan but ported back for sales in Japan. At 1 million yen, it is 65% of the price of a Japanese made car and 34 % of the … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues, Sustainability
Tagged automobiles, Capacity, Consumers, Cost, Imports, Japan, manufacturing, Margins, Suppliers, Supply Chain
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Lending plants to get OEMs back on track after the Japanese earthquake
A report published by the Congressional Research Service (“The Motor Vehicle Supply Chain: Effects of the Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami” by Bill Canis, May 23, 2011) describes an example in which Denso, a Tier 1 supplier to Toyota, decided to … Continue reading
Posted in Collaboration, Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Capacity, Collaboration, Cost, disruption, Global, Japan, Supply Chain, Tsunami
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Toyota retools in Japan, plans for a weaker yen
A Wall Street Journal article (Oct 7, 2011) describes efforts by Toyota to retool, reduce production batch size and plan to be competitive when the yen gets weaker. This strategy is counter to efforts by other automakers to move production … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged automobiles, Capacity, competition, Cost, exchange rate, Global, Japan, Supply Chain
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Japan’s Tsunami and global supply chain resilience
An article in the International Herald Tribune (May 30, 2011) describes the resilience of companies like STM Microelectronics, that has managed to maintain their global supply chain smoother than expected. A survey of supply chain managers analyzed by the Gartner … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged global supply chain, Japan, resilience, Suppliers, Tsunami
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Japanese Tiers 2 and 3 supplier impact of the tsunami
A Wall Street Journal story (March 26, 2011) describes production shortages at Renesas Electronics, a divison of NEC, and a supplier of chips to intermediates like Hitachi , Bosch and Siemens, who in turn create auto components to control engines, … Continue reading
Posted in Collaboration, Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Cost, Dual Sourcing, Global, Inventory, Japan, Suppliers, Supply Chain, Tsunami
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