The Japan Threat: Japanese Giant Crush Chinese Export Entrepreneur
posted Saturday, 4 November 2006
While the Japanese government long ago swore to uphold a policy of pacifism, and has made no aggressive moves against China for some 60 years, it would appear that the same cannot also be said for Japanese businesses, who appear to be gunning for their Chinese rivals with the same aggressive spirit that saw Japanese troops on Chinese streets during the last century.
According to a notices on its website, the Japanese electronics giant Sony has made a final push against Hong Kong based electronics exporter 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang) (A child company of Kwai Chung based Pacific Game Technology), demanding $188,000 in costs from an outstanding legal battle; a move which has effectively forced it out of business.
The Dispute
力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang)'s forced closure comes at the end legal dispute between the small Chinese exporter and the Japanese entertainment giant that began when Sony executives discovered that 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang) was acting as a European distributor for products produced by Sony-Asia; with 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang) supplying Sony games consoles, software and assessor's to customers in the EU without Sony's knowledge. Allowing Western consumers to bypass artificial restrictions that Sony had placed on its products outside of Japan.
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"Hong Kong, October 24th of 2006 - Lik-Sang.com, the popular gaming retailer from Hong Kong, has today announced that it is forced to close down due to multiple legal actions brought against it by Sony Computer Entertainment Europe Limited and Sony Computer Entertainment Inc."
Lik-Sang |
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Second Strike
This is not the first time that a Japanese mega cooperation has targeted the Chinese retailer.
In 2002, 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang) was similarly targeted by Japanese entertainment giant Nintendo who, in conjunction with Sony, took legal action against after 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang) began providing consumers with the means to circumvent failsafe devices installed in their games consoles which prevented consumers from playing cheaper games purchased in countries where prices were lower, or games which where published at an earlier date in a different country. Both of which practices violate the spirit of the WTO; of which Japan is a member.
Protectionism?
According to officials at Sony, the case against 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang) was initiated in order to protect the health and safety of European consumers; which might be endangered due to electrical differences between Japanese and European electrical systems, and to prevent consumers from purchasing console which were not optimized for their language and media in their country.
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"ultimately, we're trying to protect consumers from being sold hardware that does not conform to strict EU or UK consumer safety standards, due to voltage supply differences et cetera"
Spokesperson, Sony, (Speaking to Gamesindustry.biz) |
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However, China watchers have voiced that Sony's desiccation to pursue legal action may have a lot more more to do with trade protectionism than consumer safety, particularly as 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang) supplied all of its EU based consumers with official Sony electricity adapters that were certified as meeting European safety standards, and because consumers could easily purchase optimized media from 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang).
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"Lik Sang strongly disagrees with Sony's opinion that their customers need this kind of protection and pointed out that PSP consoles shipped from Lik-Sang contained genuine Sony 100V-240V AC Adapters that carry CE and other safety marks and are compatible world wide. All PSP consoles were in conformity with all EU and UK consumer safety regulations."
Lik-Sang |
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Supply, Demand and Unscrupulous Trade Practices
Although a comparatively small service when compared to the rest of the games retail sector, websites like 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang) serve a strong niche market with a loyal customer base in the West, which has been generated by protectionist policies put in place by companies such as Sony.
Under current trading practices, Sony-Japan purposefully restricts the supply of most of its headline products to markets outside of Japan, and employs a multi tier trading system in which 'preferred customers' come higher up the tier structure, and other customers fall beneath them.
Commonly, this system leads to products being released in second tier countries, such as the US weeks or months after their release in Japan, and then being released to third and fourth tier countries, such as those in he EU, after a further delay.
This artificial delay, and the practice of releasing products in third tier countries at a higher price than in second and primary tier countries, has created a lucrative market for companies such as 力生 (Li-Sheng/Lik-Sang). Who supply Japanese (Primary Tier) or American (Secondary Tier) products to customers in third tier countries at near standard market prices.
This practice of circumventing tiering, and other restrictive market practices, by purchasing in one market and supplying to another is known as 'Parallel importing' and provides a strong market segment and a source of foreign currency for China's latest generation of entrepreneurs; whose geographic location allows them to act as middlemen - supplying Japanese technology to Western consumers in second and third tier countries.
Although parallel importing is a protected form of trade, multi-nationals commonly use copyright legislation in destination countries in order to start legal action. Arguing that products imported/exported by third parties should be treated as counterfeits, even if they were legally produced and purchased, because there bare corporate logos in markets where said corporation wishes them to be restricted.
Under Hong-Kong law, a company is entitled to import/export/reexport or parallel import any product to/from any location in the world once it has gone on sale in any other location in the world, so long as that product is not restricted on security or safety grounds.
In 2005, Sony won a similar cases against home entertainment import/export groups Nuplayer Ltd and ElectricBirdLand, who Sony claimed were infringing its copyright and damaging its European marketing campaign by supplying Sony products to customers before Sony had officially sanctioned them for EU release. Controversially, in the case of Nuplayer Ltd, Mr Justice Lawrence Collins; the official trying the case, the company was also forced to turn over personal data on customer to Sony. However he stopped short of attempting to order customers to surrender their purchases.tags: china japan lik sang trade consumer protection
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