

Honda Supplier Government Relations Conference
[June 5, 1996]
Remarks by William C. Duncan
General Director, Washington Office
Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association
Good Morning
I have been asked to say a few words this morning
regarding opportunities and relationships in U.S.-Japan
automotive trade. Given that the Governments of Japan and
the United States have spent over three decades
discussing this subject I am not sure I can do it justice
in 10 to 15 minutes. However, I would like to make just a
few brief points and expand as I have time:
First
The U.S. Government in the Presidents April 12th
report has recognized the efforts and achievements of the
Japanese vehicle industry. The report indicates that
"a solid foundation of growth has been put in place
on which the U.S. auto parts industry can build a closer
relationship with, and increasing sales to their Japanese
customers."
Secondly
While the current level of activity clearly demonstrates
that relationships between the automotive industries of
the U.S. and Japan are strong and enduring, I would
caution against judging these relationships in terms of
simplistic numerical measurements and arbitrary
expectations. It may be unrealistic to expect production
and purchasing numbers to show the same steady geometric
rates of increase as we have seen in the developmental
years. Certainly, as these relationships mature
production and purchasing will be more vulnerable to
fluctuations in the business cycle, and other market
factors.
Thirdly
It is important to keep in mind that these relationships
with U.S. suppliers were not forged overnight or for that
matter in the last six months. They have been a result of
at least a decade and a half of patient and determined
effort on the part of both Americans and Japanese at the
industry, and even more important, at the company level.
This has been and remains a market-oriented development
driven by the pursuit of economic opportunity in which
customer requirements are paramount be they those of the
vehicle manufacturer or the vehicle consumer.
Fourthly
The Governments of both the U.S. and Japan have played a
role in encouraging this industry-to-industry process
through education as well as by identifying opportunities
and encouraging both sides to take advantage of them.
This also continues. And I trust we have moved well
beyond the tensions of last June.
Finally
I would like to point out that the recently concluded
Framework Agreement was not a negotiation over unfair
trade barriers. None of the matters discussed in the
Framework were violations of international trade law and
in most, if not all cases, were reflective of practices
in other countries. Rather the Japanese Government and
industry entered the Framework with a solid history of
identifying, creating, and pursuing opportunities with
overseas suppliers. They viewed and continue to view the
agreement as a Framework for opportunity to increase
mutual relationships and business and not as a set of
numerical measurements or specific expectations. Some
have put expectations on the agreement but that is not
what was agreed to. The criteria specifically excluded
numerical targets. Where the process leads is not a
matter of "results-oriented" expectations but
rather will depend on economics and continued competition
and cooperation within an increasingly global automotive
market place. JAMA and its member companies are
aggressively playing their part in this process. I would
like to illustrate these points with a little history and
a couple of charts.
First, the history
In 1980 the Japanese manufacturers sold 2.4 million cars
and trucks in the U.S. market, all of them imported.
Japans market share which had been about 11 percent
in 1978 had jumped to 22 percent largely as a result of
the huge demand for high quality small cars and trucks
resulting from the oil crisis of 1979. The slogan
directed at the Japanese at that time was simple and
direct: "invest where your market is."
In response the Carter Administration in May of 1980
signed an agreement with Japan, named the Yasukawa-Askew,
agreement that committed the Japanese government to
encourage "economically viable" investment in
the U.S. by Japans auto and auto parts companies.
Clearly the intent of this agreement has been
fulfilled. Since then Japanese vehicle manufacturers have
invested over 12 billion dollars in plant, equipment,
R&D facilities and design centers. These facilities
currently employ some 38,000 Americans. Japanese name
brand vehicles still take about 22 percent of the U.S.
vehicle market; yet, import share has fallen below the
1978 level. In 1995 import share of Japanese produced
vehicles was 9.2 percent. Through April of this year
import share of Japanese vehicles was only 7.2 percent.
Import sales fell 17 percent last year and 20 percent so
far this year.
The 1986/87 Moss Talks
As this process of localization began to take place in
the mid 1980s and as the scale of production in the
transplants increased, U.S. auto parts companies showed
greater interest in selling to Japanese manufacturers.
This led to the Market Oriented Sector Specific or (MOSS)
Talks, which began in 1986 and ended in August of 1987.
The focus here was on the ownership relationships between
Japanese manufacturers and their suppliers or the
so-called "Keiretsu" relationships. The MOSS
report concluded that "there is no evidence given
the severe competition among parts suppliers that
"affiliated suppliers" are being accorded a
special position over other suppliers by their parent
automaker." This was later reaffirmed in a 1990
report published by the U.S. Motor & Equipment
Manufacturers Association (MEMA). Subsequent
investigations by both the International Trade Commission
and the Federal Trade Commission into the so-called
Keiretsu relationships found no practices that
represented unfair trade barriers to U.S. auto parts
sales or anti-trust practice.
Throughout this period JAMA had been working with
APAA, MEMA, members of Congress, the Department of
Commerce and others to promote relationships with U.S.
suppliers. Shortly after the conclusion of the MOSS talks
JAMA and MEMA, I might add at the initiative of Bill
Raftery, began seeking ways to develop business between
the Japanese manufacturers and U.S. suppliers at the
industry level. This led to the JAMA/MEMA liaison
committee and the "One-on-One Conference" among
other activities. It was the success, not the failure, of
these private sector initiatives that led the Bush
Administration to reject trade action under section 301
of U.S. trade law and join with the Government of Japan
in the Market Oriented Cooperation Plan in June 1990. The
objective was to encourage and build on this
industry-to-industry and company-to-company inter-action.
It was on the basis of these accomplishments that the
Japanese companies in January 1992 were able to
individually and voluntarily estimate their 1994 fiscal
year purchases. When totalled this came to the now famous
19 million dollar number.
Now for the charts.
First Chart
- Across the bottom is the start up of production.
- You can see correlating with that the increase in production and the decline in exports starting about 1986.
- You can also see that domestic production was not affected by the 1991 recession. however, if you add both imports and domestic production you will see a decline of about 4 to 6 percent.
Second Chart
- This chart is the purchasing of U.S. parts by Jama members during the same period. you will note the steady increase correlated with domestic production. note: 1966 moss talks/ 1987 beginning of Jama/mema relationship/ 1989 the mocp/ 1992 the announcement of 19 billion/ 1993 the beginning of the framework and 1995 the agreement.
It should be clear from this chart that steady gains
were made in the relationship and business development
between U.S. suppliers and Japanese vehicle manufacturers
over the decade. During this period the number of U.S.
suppliers to Japanese industry grew from under 300 to
over 1200 today. This is indicative of the solid
foundation I referred to earlier.
The important point here, however, is not the numbers
but the process by which those relationships have
developed, i.e., the open and honest exchange of
information on corporate, industry practices, and market
practices on both sides of the Pacific. We have built, as
the Presidents report has recognized, a strong
foundation. Structural change has taken place within the
industry which has required adjustment; it has also
brought opportunities. It is up to both industries, now
as they have in the past, to take advantage of those
opportunities. Although come to think of it we are very
rapidly getting to the point where we are not talking
about the relationships between two industries, the
Japanese and the American, but rather relationships
within one global industry and between global
manufacturers and global suppliers.
Thank you very much.