Mitsubishi Materials Corp said on Thursday that a push to expand market share had driven a subsidiary to fake product specification, one of several compliance scandals that have come to light this year in a blow to the reputation of Japan Inc.
Mitsubishi Materials Corp. President Akira Takeuchi, Executive Vice President Naoki Ono, Mitsubishi Shindoh Co. President Kazumasa Hori and Mitsubishi Cable Industries Ltd. President Nobuhiro Takayanagi attend a news conference in Tokyo, Japan December 28, 2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
TOKYO: Mitsubishi Materials Corp said on Thursday that a push to expand market share had driven a subsidiary to fake product specification, one of several compliance scandals that have come to light this year in a blow to the reputation of Japan Inc.
Mitsubishi Materials said in November that its subsidiaries falsified data about products, including parts for aircraft and automobiles. Japan's Kansai Electric Power Co said earlier this month that two of its nuclear plants used parts with possibly falsified data supplied by Mitsubishi Cable Industries, one of the units.
Mitsubishi Materials said a committee looking into the case had found that Mitsubishi Shindoh, which was late to enter the market for metal products used in device connectors for cars, had taken orders even when they could not meet customers' product specification.
It also cited an urge to approve products to prevent losses, and a lack of awareness about compliance and quality assurance among its staff.
Other companies that have admitted to product data falsification including Kobe Steel and Toray Industries have also blamed a focus on profit, lax quality controls and staffing shortages.
Source: Reuters
It sure ain't the Japan Inc we used to know in the 90s and early 2000s anymore.