Showing posts with label made in China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label made in China. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Made in China compass?

Pascal Lamy, head of the WTO recently commented on the need for a good compass for Europe to sail through the crisis.
"To conclude, the best way to sail through the crisis is to use a good compass."
A "Made in China" compass perhaps? 

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Made in Japan

Globalization and integrated supply chains has promoted what is called "Made in the World" products - a phenomenon that challenges the traditional "Made in a country" concept and points to the reality of international trade. However, the sentiment attached to being made in a country is still very strong as many instances in recent times, including the Olympic national dress controversy, has shown.


A Tokyo Times piece on the reality that Japanese producers are increasingly outsourcing production reiterates the point. Titled '"Made in Japan" prove eroded by globalization' it points to the fact that major Japanese producers are increasingly making products outside Japan, which were a few years ago unthinkable to be made outside Japan.


A new trend in the Japanese commercial style is changing a centuries-long tradition which says that what is sold in Japan should be produced there. 
Nissan Motor is one of the first companies that makes products abroad and ships them to Japan, to protect itself from the effects of a strong yen and aging workforce. In the last decade, shipments home from Japanese producers have more than doubled to a record, including a 31 percent rise in the last two years, official data shows."
 While the "Made in Japan" label does not invoke strong reactions like the "Made in China" one does, the realities of international trade and the maturing of the Japanese economy do indicate the justification for the nostalgic yearning for the "Made in Japan" label.Whether it erodes "national pride" is an entirely different debate.


Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Made in China - Earphones, laptop and an aircraft


IMG00372.jpg














I was on a flight yesterday. Took this picture. 

The earphones provided on the flight above had this characteristic - "Made in China". It was placed on a laptop that had a similar characteristic. I wondered that in a few years if the Airbus-Boeing dispute reached an impasse, the aircraft I would be travelling in would probably also have the same characteristic.Whether that is a positive development is an entirely different debate.

Things may be increasingly "Made in the World" but "Made in China" is still evident.