Posted on 04/20/2011 6:35:10 PM PDT by JerseyHighlander
Rebuilding Japan: Hitachis residents put faith in family company
The city of Hitachi, around 90 miles from Tokyo on Japans Pacific coast, has a name that roughly translates as prosperous wealth.
By Malcolm Moore and Julian Ryall 8:26PM BST 18 Apr 2011
And for the last 100 years, since the Hitachi company was founded as a division of the local copper mine, the citys workers have been well taken care of.
Today, Hitachi is Japans third-largest technology company, an enormous group that makes industrial machinery, consumer electronics and even nuclear power plants.
In the city where it was founded, around 70pc of the 190,000 locals still work for Hitachi and have come to depend on the firm as a family.
But like single-industry cities the world over, Hitachi has been left vulnerable, especially in the wake of Marchs earthquake. Some of the Hitachi factories are still closed from the earthquake, others are back to normal, said Tsuyoshi Kanazawa, 50, a former Hitachi supplier.
At the citys large port, a vital entry-point for the machine parts being passed to the citys factories, operations have been destroyed by the earthquake and tsunami, which collapse loading jetties and made the bottom of the harbour unpassable.
Until last week, we didnt even have a single berth where we could dock a ship, said a spokesman for Hitachi Ports. Everyone is doing their best to get things operational, but it is very difficult, he added.
The closure of the port, and the mothballing of the factories has left a large slice of the town currently unemployed.
Now there are worries about being a one-company town. Like the rest of the country, we also have a falling birthrate. We cannot provide as many workers to Hitachi as we could before and it is difficult to attract young people to come and live here, said Mr Kanazawa.
Neither Mr Kanazawa or other locals could contemplate the idea that Hitachi might decide, in the wake of the damage, to relocate its operations to somewhere more efficient. Japanese companies feel responsibility to the towns where they operate and would never abandon their children, they said.
Further up the coast at Iwaki, Nissan has already pledged never to leave its workers, even though their plant sits in the shadow of the Fukushima nuclear power plant. Carlos Ghosn, the chief executive, instead urged his workers to show fighting spirit. Observers noted warmly that Mr Ghosn has learned the importance of putting society above corporate profits in Japan.
However, the fragility of single-company towns was underlined two years ago in Toyota City, near Nagoya, where the car company was founded. In the wake of Toyotas problems after the economic crisis, Toyota City found itself with the highest unemployment rate in Japan.
More than 9,000 contract workers were fired, and the city saw its corporation tax haul fall by 96pc. In response, it changed its name from Toyota back to Koromo.
Oh dear. While The Telegraph, back in the days when it was known as The Daily Telegraph, was famously crusty and a holder of unsound political views, it could have been relied upon to get a simple post-disaster human interest story right. No longer, it seems, as almost every checkable fact in this article of under 500 words is wrong. On with the accounting of dismal error.
The city of Hitachi, around 90 miles from Tokyo on Japans Pacific coast, has a name that roughly translates as prosperous wealth.
No it doesnt. The Hitachi of Hitachi City is written like this: 日立. Beautifully simple. The first character means sun, the second stand, and together they mean sunrise, although this is not the usual word for sunrise. In the region, Hitachi is also written like this: 常陸, which roughly means permanent land. No hint of prosperous wealth (as opposed to prosperous poverty or indigent wealth?) anywhere.
In the city where it was founded, around 70pc of the 190,000 locals still work for Hitachi and have come to depend on the firm as a family.
Remarkable. As back in 2005 the under 15s and over 65s accounted for 70,000 of the (then) close to 200,000 locals, leaving 130,000 people, that must mean, at 70% of 190,000 (133,000), absolutely everyone of working age in Hitachi works for Hitachi, including a few kids yanked from high school and sent down the mines. Cruel place, Hitachi.
Or is it more likely, as the Japanese Wikipedia page on Hitachi says, that:
市の人口のおよそ40%は日立製作所及びグループ会社の社員かその家族である。
Of the citys population, about 40% are employees of Hitachi group companies or members of their families.
The closure of the port, and the mothballing of the factories has left a large slice of the town currently unemployed.
Unemployed? Really? Theyve been pink-slipped? I dont think so. And the factories havent been mothballed, either, theyre awaiting reconstruction.
However, the fragility of single-company towns was underlined two years ago in Toyota City, near Nagoya, where the car company was founded. In the wake of Toyotas problems after the economic crisis, Toyota City found itself with the highest unemployment rate in Japan. More than 9,000 contract workers were fired, and the city saw its corporation tax haul fall by 96pc.
Now, Ive searched and searched for years and years, and I cant find any data on unemployment rates at the city level. You can see the prefectural unemployment rates for 2007-2009 here, though. The unemployment rate for Aichi, the prefecture in which Toyota lies, spikes to a horrific 4.5% in 2009, versus the rates in Osaka of 6.6%, Aomori of 6.9%, and Okinawa of 7.5%. Are we really supposed to believe that the firing of 9,000 contract workers in Toyota City (if accurate), catapulted the unemployment rate there to the highest of any municipality in the nation in this, the home of Toyota? Or is it more plausible, much as I regret to write, that this is a textbook example of what is known in the hackery trade as making shit up and hoping no one will notice?
In response, it [Toyota City] changed its name from Toyota back to Koromo.
Extraordinary. I must have missed this in the deluge of news recently. It seems as though Toyota City has also missed out on the news, too, as it steadfastly clings to its name on its website.
This should be a career-ending article for both hacks involved, but sadly, such is the corrupt state of contemporary journalism, it wont be. But as Ive said before, if the great unwashed is no longer prepared to pay for its journalism, this is what it gets.
Long and short of this story: everything in the article is a lie.
“Long and short of this story: everything in the article is a lie.”
Dog bites man. The lamestream misleadia, world wide, are a pack of lying libtards.
Chicken or egg?
If people had more confidence in what they were paying for, they might be willing to pay more. Journalists today have made a mockery of their profession. They are not unbiased reporters of fact. They all have agendas and slant their coverage to promote those agendas.
When they do not lie outright.
ping
ping
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Haven’t seen a good Fisking in a while,
thought it might be of passing interest.
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