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Also new is the impact of deregulation. With Japan's recent dismantling of barriers to petroleum imports, for instance, the country's inefficient oil industry is closing refineries, merging subsidiaries, shutting nearly half of all filling stations and, most happily, reducing gasoline prices by a third. And for the first time in 35years, new airlines are allowed to spring up--and airfares to Hokkaido are down by more than half.

But the most dramatic deregulation has accompanied Japan's Big Bang, the opening of the financial sector. It's no secret that Japanese banks, brokerages and insurance companies are inefficient and in need of restructuring. Bank mergers have a long history in Japan, but the current crisis will bring many more. Some of the failures are being bought by foreign companies, led by GE Capital. Can they turn the sick institutions around? Certainly the foreign share of the finance sector is increasing and will add to the cost pressures driving the entire industry to restructure. It's likely that, as with autos, the survivors will emerge as world-class competitors.

Restructuring affects people. Here too change is underway, as performance replaces seniority in determining pay and promotion. Many companies are shrinking their swollen boards of directors and reducing personnel costs by slashing overtime, cutting part-time workers and forcing full-timers to take early retirement--though this has long been the practice in declining industries and companies, even in Japan.

Despite all this change, the social contract between company and employee endures. The Japanese corporation is not simply a collection of physical and financial assets but also a social organization. The company belongs to its employees and the community, and its workers are its primary concern. Directors tend to come from management ranks, within the company community, and outside directors are a rarity. The peculiar Anglo-American notion that a firm is the exclusive property of its shareholders still has little currency in Japan. The shareholder as investor is entitled to a return on investment, but the company operates primarily for the well-being and security of its employees. There are no "Neutron Jacks" or "Chainsaw Als" among Japan's business heroes. Despite all the current problems, there have been no mass layoffs.

This is a testing time for Japan. Its competitive strength remains, as exports to the world's most demanding markets continue to increase. Japanese industry has been challenged before and has restructured before--in the mid '70s after the oil crisis, for instance. As they did then, the best of Japan's companies will emerge from all these problems and changes with values intact and competitive strength increased.

James C. Abegglen is chairman of the consulting firm Asia Advisory Service in Tokyo

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Daily

March 8, 1999

Out of the Race
The crash of once-proud Nissan is a tale of how Japan Inc. went from fearless competitor to target for Western takeovers

Merger Mania
The deals will keep on coming


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