Firm executives discuss effective supply chains at global forum

As tensions between economic superpowers China and the United States intensify, companies are ramping up efforts to secure stable supply networks. At an online Next-Generation Global Supply Chain Forum held on Friday, corporate representatives and a researcher exchanged views on challenges and countermeasures. Panasonic Connect Co. President Yasu Higuchi emphasized that effective management during normal times is fundamentally crucial.

Amid deepening tensions between China and the United States, and rising concerns over supply chain instability, companies are intensifying efforts to build resilient networks. The online Next-Generation Global Supply Chain Forum on Friday featured discussions among executives and experts on these issues and potential solutions.

Panasonic Connect Co. President Yasu Higuchi stressed that "fundamentally, supply chains being managed effectively even during normal times is far more crucial." He warned that poor management leads to operational inefficiencies with significant business impacts, urging executives to take proactive roles beyond delegating to departments.

Tadatsugu Konoike, director and senior managing executive officer for overseas business at Konoike Transport Co., shared insights from Germany, where he is currently stationed to study local practices. He highlighted how advanced German firms standardize product information, such as warehouse and factory inventory levels, and manage it efficiently with AI and other technologies. "Supply chain management must be implemented top-down," he stated.

Ayako Kawai, professor in the Faculty of Economics at Gakushuin University, critiqued Japanese companies' factory shifts from China to Southeast Asia as short-term responses lacking medium- to long-term vision. She argued, "It is time to consider the overall architecture [of supply chains]." Kawai also noted that data held by logistics firms could aid improvements and stressed their role in acting on it. Konoike replied that such data offers business opportunities for logistics providers.

The forum underscored the need for collaborative corporate strategies to enhance supply chain sustainability.

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Illustration of international experts at the Tokyo Economic Security Forum discussing supply chain security and strategic materials amid global trade tensions.
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Tokyo hosts inaugural economic security forum

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Japan's government is hosting the inaugural Tokyo Economic Security Forum on December 15 in Tokyo. Amid global uncertainties from the US-China trade war and high tariffs under the Trump administration, experts from around the world will discuss securing strategic materials and protecting supply chains. The importance of public-private collaboration is highlighted.

Finance ministers from G7 nations and allies met in Washington to agree on swift measures to diversify rare earth supply chains amid China's export restrictions to Japan. The discussions highlighted concerns over Beijing's dominance in critical minerals essential for technology and defense. Proposals included setting price floors and fostering new partnerships.

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Around 50 government officials, researchers, and others from Japan and India gathered in New Delhi for a meeting to discuss promoting economic security cooperation between the two countries. Participants confirmed the importance of establishing supply chains spanning both nations for strategic materials like semiconductors and rare earth minerals. Both countries face the shared challenge of diversifying supply chains amid China's export restrictions on rare earths and the protectionist high-tariff policies of U.S. President Donald Trump's administration.

In a sign of deepening China-South Korea business ties amid the state visit of President Lee Jae-myung starting Sunday, South Korean executives are set to engage with Beijing, while Japanese firms have postponed trips due to fallout from Tokyo's Taiwan remarks.

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An editorial calls for Japan to lead in preventing the free trade system from drifting as the United States appears set to relinquish its post-World War II role after 80 years. It warns of risks to financial markets from the Trump administration's aggressive tariffs and advocates expanding the CPTPP.

Amid ongoing China-Japan tensions sparked by Sanae Takaichi's prior Taiwan remarks, Japan is bolstering ties with South Korea while facing Beijing's new export curbs on rare earths and dual-use items, prompting stockpiling and G7 coordination.

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Japan and the South American trade bloc Mercosur launched a strategic partnership framework on Saturday to bolster economic and trade ties. The announcement coincided with the Mercosur summit, where both sides pledged to elevate their cooperation over the long term. They plan to start talks early next year on specific measures, potentially including an economic partnership agreement.

 

 

 

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