James Abegglen

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
James Abegglen
Born1926
Michigan
Died2007
Tokyo
NationalityJapanese
Academic career
InstitutionSophia University
FieldBusiness theory
Alma materUniversity of Chicago (Ph.D.) [1]

James Christian Abegglen (1926–2007) was a Japanese

representative director
of its Tokyo branch, founded in 1966.

Biography

Abegglen was born in

Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS). He visited Japan again in 1955 as a researcher of the Ford Foundation
, to study Japanese industrial organization and personnel practices.

Abegglen lived permanently in Japan with his Japanese wife after 1982 and took Japanese nationality in 1997.[2][3]

Abegglen served successively as professor and director of the Graduate School of Comparative Culture at

Globis University
in 2006. He taught "Management of Japanese Enterprises" at that school until his death from cancer on May 2, 2007.

Work

Abegglen's academic interests centered on Japanese enterprises and economic systems and their priority to western capitalism.

The Japanese Factory

The Japanese Factory, published in 1958, pointed out the following features of employment and the strength of their mechanism in Japanese corporations:

  • Lifetime employment
    : Employment extends over the whole working life of the employee
  • Seniority-based wages: Compensation is determined by the number of years of employment in the company
  • Periodic hiring: Employing young people fresh out of school
  • In-company training: Employing workers based on personal qualities rather than job suitability, providing on-the-job training after hire
  • Enterprise union: one labour union for each enterprise

Those employment practices, in strong contrast with the West, often at first startled and intrigued people in the United States, thus his book became a best-seller.

Criticism

Abegglen was widely regarded as a reliable guide to Japan by Western business interests in the post-war era. Critics like Eamonn Fingleton argue, however, that he "regarded his principal function as doing public relations on behalf of the Japanese establishment," that he misled Western leaders and the Western public about the openness of Japanese markets, and that he kept his change of nationality secret.[4]

Publications

Abegglen authored and co-authored ten books on Japan. A selection:

  • The Japanese Factory (1958)
  • Big Business in America (1955)
  • Kaisha, the Japanese Corporation (1985)
  • Sea Change: Pacific Asia as the New World Industrial Center (Free Press: 1994)
  • 21st Century Japanese Management: New Systems, Lasting Values (Palgrave Macmillan: 2006)

References

  1. ^ "James Abegglen, 81; management consultant wrote 9 books on Japan". Los Angeles Times. 2007-05-15. Retrieved 2022-08-20.
  2. ^ "MA Appeals Court rules obligation to ex-wife not breached by move to Japan". Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly. 2005-10-03. Retrieved 2013-03-21.
  3. .
  4. ^ Eamonn Fingleton, In the Jaws of the Dragon: America's Fate in the Coming Era of Chinese Hegemony (New York: Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Press, 2008), 313.