Product description ※Please note that product information is not in full comprehensive meaning because of the machine translation.
Industry
It is organized into a corporate castle town centered around the Hitachi District in Ibaraki Prefecture and Hitachi, Ltd.. It is quite different from the Hitachi District, which is a corporate castle town located around the country in the fields of steel, shipbuilding, chemistry, etc. Hitachi, Ltd., which was derived from the Hitachi Mine repair shop, has become one of the leading companies in Japan. It has also become a global general electronics manufacturer. It has expanded into various fields such as heavy and electric machinery, home appliances, electric tools, construction machinery, elevators, railway vehicles, audio equipment, measuring instruments, automobile parts, nuclear power, semiconductors, etc. All of these have been evaluated as world-class businesses. Around the 1980 s, it was ranked eighth among the world's major businesses excluding US companies in the 『 Fortune 』 magazine.
Naturally, each division had a large number of SMEs in elemental technology, and they were organized by a unique vertical integration. This point was not a group of businesses like shipbuilding and steel, but it formed a distinctive vertical integration by each division. Even within the same Hitachi, Ltd., by division.
However, since the collapse of the bubble economy in the early 1990 s, as if symbolizing the "lost 30 years" of Japan as a whole, Hitachi itself seems to be struggling with the direction of industrialization and commercialization in the next generation. The core Hitachi Factory was acquired by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and the logo of "Mitsubishi Heavy Industries" was posted on the wall of the Hitachi Factory in front of JR Hitachi Station. It is said that the citizens were shocked.
Now, how the Hitachi District prospered by the corporate castle town of Hitachi, Ltd. will be the next generation. This book regards the industrial cluster in the Hitachi District as an aggregate of elemental technology based on the historical structural viewpoint. The "Mitsubishi Heavy Industries" logo was posted on the wall of the Hitachi Factory in front of JR Hitachi Station. It is said that the citizens were shocked.
Now, this book describes how the Hitachi District prospered by the corporate castle town of Hitachi, Ltd. as an aggregate of elemental technology. Based on the historical structural