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3 - The recovery of European and US auto makers, and relocating and changing lean production

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

Koichi Shimokawa
Affiliation:
Hosei University, Japan
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Summary

Introduction

As we have witnessed, the competitive relationship between the Japanese and Western automobile industries has experienced a dramatic transformation in the age of globalization and worldwide restructuring. In the 1980s, the Japanese automobile industry led the world with its lean production system, which was implemented at local plants in Europe as well as in the United States. All three major differentiating factors – just-in-time production systems and total quality control (TQC) activities, the keiretsu supplier system, and a product development system based on simultaneous engineering with a short lead time – functioned together to create the Japanese automobile industry's competitive strength. While Japanese companies introduced these systems in their overseas plants, Western auto manufacturers applied themselves to learning the system. This chapter investigates the transformation that took place, and considers the lessons to be learned in the context of a new management paradigm for the automobile industry in a global era.

Rapid learning of lean production by European and US automobile makers

The basic Japanese production system

European and US automobile makers recovered their competitiveness and learned the Japanese production system extremely quickly, partly because they conducted a thorough systematic analysis of the Japanese systems and shared information. Though some of the reforms to their factories were not satisfactory, various, more successful reforms were conducted in other areas.

The US auto makers were already looking at the structural factors for Japan's competitiveness in the mid 1980s, and began working toward improvement at the public and private levels.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Shimokawa, K., “Kigyo no kaigaisenryaku to kaigai chokusetutoushi/beikoku jidousha kigyou no jirei: 1980 nendai no fushinnkara 90nenndai no saisei e,” (The overseas strategies and direct investment – the example of US automobile companies), Journal of Investment, July 2002, p. 26.Google Scholar

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