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Toyota weighs options to deal with anti-Japan sentiment in China

Firm may shift focus of sales effort to south of nation, where bitterness is historically weaker

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Chinese protestors targeted Japanese products, particularly cars, during protests last year. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Toyota and its dealers are quietly manoeuvring to allay risks from periodic eruptions of anti-Japan sentiment in China, even as recent sales data suggest a slow but steady recovery for Japanese automakers since the latest flare-up last year.

China sales for Toyota and other Japanese car makers tumbled after a territorial dispute between Beijing and Tokyo sparked an outbreak of anti-Japanese protests in September last year.

Trade and diplomatic ties between Asia’s two biggest economies are prone to sporadic disruptions, a legacy of the lingering bitterness from Japan’s wartime occupation of large parts of northeastern China.

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Consumers in southern China take cues from Hongkongers, who like Japanese brands. Photo: Xinhua
Consumers in southern China take cues from Hongkongers, who like Japanese brands. Photo: Xinhua
As a result, some executives at Toyota’s China unit are considering the merit of focusing its sales effort, at least in the shorter term, on southern China, where anti-Japanese sentiment is historically weaker.

In the south, sales of Japanese cars have all but recovered to pre-September levels “as if nothing happened”, a senior Toyota executive in Beijing said.

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“Our feeling is why spend money to overcome the bias against Japanese products in northern China?” the executive said.

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