The 2011 Import and Export Market for Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking Appliances and Heaters in Japan

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The 2011 Import and Export Market for Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking Appliances and Heaters in Japan
The 2011 Import and Export

Market for Iron or Steel Parts

of Domestic Non-Electric

Cooking Appliances and

Heaters in Japan









By

Professor Philip M. Parker, Ph. D.

Chaired Professor of Management Science

INSEAD (Singapore & Fontainebleau, France)





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About the Author

Dr. Philip M. Parker is the Eli Lilly Chaired Professor of Innovation, Business and Society at

INSEAD where he has taught courses on multivariate statistics and global competitive strategy

since 1988. He has also taught courses at MIT, Stanford University, Harvard University, UCLA,

UCSD, and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. He is the author of six books

on the economic convergence of nations. These books introduce the notion of “physioeconomics”

which foresees a lack of global convergence in economic behaviors due to physiological and

physiographic forces. His latest book is "Physioeconomics: The Basis for Long-Run Economic

Growth" (MIT Press 2000). He has also published numerous articles in academic journals,

including The Rand Journal of Economics, Marketing Science, the Journal of International

Business Studies, Technological Forecasting and Social Change, International Journal of

Forecasting, the European Management Journal, the European Journal of Operational

Research, Journal of Marketing, International Journal of Research in Marketing, and Journal of

Marketing Research. He is also on the editorial boards of several academic journals.



Dr. Parker received his Ph.D. in Business Economics from the Wharton School of the University

of Pennsylvania and has Masters degrees in Finance and Banking (University of Aix-Marseille)

and Managerial Economics (Wharton). His undergraduate degrees are in mathematics, biology

and economics (minor in aeronautical engineering). He has consulted and/or taught courses in

Africa, the Middle East, Asia, Latin America, North America and Europe.







About this Series

This series was created for international firms who rely on foreign export markets for a

substantial portion of their business or who might be threatened by foreign trade competition.

The estimates given in this report were created using a methodology developed by and under the

direct supervision of Professor Philip M. Parker, the Eli Lilly Chaired Professor of Innovation,

Business and Society, at INSEAD. The methodology, relying on historical figures of economic

growth and trade flows, estimates the market shares of some 150 countries for over 500 industrial

or product categories. The figures should be seen as market estimates, as opposed to historical

records, as these are projected for the current year of trade.







Acknowledgements

Some of the methodologies and research approaches used in this report have benefited from the

R&D Committee at INSEAD, whose research support is gratefully acknowledged. Additional

editorial assistance from Tiffany LaRochelle, ICON Group International, Inc., is also

acknowledged.







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Contents v





Table of Contents

1 INTRODUCTION AND METHODOLOGY 7

2 JAPAN AND THE WORLD MARKET 9

2.1 Imports in Japan in 2011 9

2.2 Exports from Japan in 2011 10

3 IMPORTS IN JAPAN 11

3.1 Asia 11

3.1.1 China 11

3.1.2 Indonesia 12

3.1.3 South Korea 12

3.1.4 Taiwan 13

3.1.5 Thailand 14

3.1.6 Vietnam 14

3.2 Europe 15

3.2.1 Denmark 15

3.2.2 Germany 16

3.2.3 Norway 17

3.3 North America & the Caribbean 17

3.3.1 Canada 17

3.3.2 the United States 18

3.4 Oceana 19

3.4.1 Australia 19

4 EXPORTS FROM JAPAN 20

4.1 Africa 20

4.1.1 Tunisia 20

4.2 Asia 21

4.2.1 China 21

4.2.2 Hong Kong 22

4.2.3 Indonesia 22

4.2.4 Malaysia 23

4.2.5 Singapore 24

4.2.6 South Korea 24

4.2.7 Thailand 25

4.3 Europe 26

4.3.1 Belgium 26

4.3.2 France 27

4.3.3 Norway 28

4.3.4 the Netherlands 29

4.4 Latin America 30

4.4.1 Mexico 30

4.5 North America & the Caribbean 31

4.5.1 Canada 31

4.5.2 the United States 32

4.6 Oceana 33

4.6.1 Australia 33

4.6.2 New Zealand 34

4.7 the Middle East 35

4.7.1 Saudi Arabia 35







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Contents vi



5 DISCLAIMERS, WARRANTEES, AND USER AGREEMENT PROVISIONS 36

5.1 Disclaimers & Safe Harbor 36

5.2 ICON Group Ltd. User Agreement Provisions 37









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Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking Appliances and Heaters in Japan 7





1 INTRODUCTION AND METHODOLOGY

On the demand side, exporters and strategic planners focusing on iron or steel parts of domestic

non-electric cooking appliances and heaters in Japan face a number of questions. Which

countries are supplying iron or steel parts of domestic non-electric cooking appliances and heaters

to Japan? How important is Japan compared to others in terms of the entire global and regional

market? How much do the imports of iron or steel parts of domestic non-electric cooking

appliances and heaters vary from one country of origin to another in Japan? On the supply side,

Japan also exports iron or steel parts of domestic non-electric cooking appliances and heaters.

Which countries receive the most exports from Japan? How are these exports concentrated

across buyers? What is the value of these exports and which countries are the largest buyers?



This report was created for strategic planners, international marketing executives and

import/export managers who are concerned with the market for iron or steel parts of domestic

non-electric cooking appliances and heaters in Japan. With the globalization of this market,

managers can no longer be contented with a local view. Nor can managers be contented with out-

of-date statistics which appear several years after the fact. I have developed a methodology,

based on macroeconomic and trade models, to estimate the market for iron or steel parts of

domestic non-electric cooking appliances and heaters for those countries serving Japan via

exports, or supplying from Japan via imports. It does so for the current year based on a variety of

key historical indicators and econometric models.



In what follows, Chapter 2 begins by summarizing where Japan fits into the world market for

imported and exported iron or steel parts of domestic non-electric cooking appliances and heaters.

The total level of imports and exports on a worldwide basis, and those for Japan in particular, is

estimated using a model which aggregates across over 150 key country markets and projects

these to the current year. From there, each country represents a percent of the world market.

This market is served from a number of competitive countries of origin. Based on both demand-

and supply-side dynamics, market shares by country of origin are then calculated across each

country market destination. These shares lead to a volume of import and export values for each

country and are aggregated to regional and world totals. In doing so, we are able to obtain

maximum likelihood estimates of both the value of each market and the share that Japan is likely

to receive this year. From these figures, rankings are calculated to allow managers to prioritize

Japan compared to other major country markets. In this way, all the figures provided in this

report are forecasts that can be combined with internal information sources for strategic planning

purposes.



After the worldwide summary in Chapter 2 of both imports and exports of iron or steel parts of

domestic non-electric cooking appliances and heaters, Chapter 3 goes into detail on imports, but

for each major country of origin serving Japan. A “major” market is defined as a country where

Japan represents a substantially large share of either imports or exports. For each major country

exporting to Japan, one can thus observe how important Japan is to that exporting country

compared to other countries of the world. Chapter 4 does the same, but for exports of iron or





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Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking Appliances and Heaters in Japan 8



steel parts of domestic non-electric cooking appliances and heaters originating from Japan, for

each major country of destination. In doing so, one can discover the share that Japan has in each

major market; this share value is often used as a measure of competitiveness for Japan. In all

cases, the total dollar volume and percentage share values by major trading partner are provided.

Combined, Chapters 3 and 4 present a the total picture for imports and exports of iron or steel

parts of domestic non-electric cooking appliances and heaters to and from Japan to and from all

other major countries in the world. "Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking

Appliances and Heaters" as a category is defined in this report following the definition given by

the United Nations Statistics Division Classification Registry using the Standard International

Trade Classification, Revision 3 (SITC, Rev. 3). The SITC code that defined "iron or steel parts

of domestic non-electric cooking appliances and heaters" is 69733 . For more information on this

definition, please refer to the following web site:

http://unstats.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcs.asp?Cl=14&Lg=1&Co=697 .



This report is updated on an annual basis. To ensure that you have the most current version,

please check the web site of ICON Group at www.icongrouponline.com.



Important Caveat. The figures should be seen as market estimates, as opposed to historical

records, as these are forecasted for the current year of trade. More importantly, in light of the fact

that unforeseeable factors might interrupt markets in achieving their reported levels, the figures

should be seen as estimates of potential. For example, "mad cow" disease, foot-and-mouth

disease, trade embargoes, military conflicts, acts of terrorism and other events will certainly

affect the actual trade flows recorded for a variety of industry or product categories. In such

cases, the difference between the numbers given in this report and the numbers actually observed

might be interpreted as the "net loss" or "net gain" due to these exogenous events affecting

regular trade flows that would have occurred had these events not have taken place.









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Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking Appliances and Heaters in Japan 9





2 JAPAN AND THE WORLD MARKET

2.1 IMPORTS IN JAPAN IN 2011

Imported Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking Appliances and

Heaters in Japan, 2011

(Structure of Foreign Import Competition)



Country of Origin Rank Value (000 US$) % Share Cumulative %

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________

China 1 20,419 67.31 67.31

Vietnam 2 5,798 19.11 86.42

Denmark 3 1,213 4.00 90.42

Taiwan 4 909 3.00 93.41

the United States 5 728 2.40 95.81

South Korea 6 615 2.03 97.84

Thailand 7 246 0.81 98.65

Canada 8 116 0.38 99.03

Indonesia 9 89 0.29 99.33

Norway 10 76 0.25 99.58

Italy 11 76 0.25 99.83

Germany 12 39 0.13 99.96

Australia 13 13 0.04 100.00

Total 30,337 100.00 100.00

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Source: Philip M. PARKER, Professor, INSEAD, copyright 2011, www.icongrouponline.com









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Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking Appliances and Heaters in Japan 10





2.2 EXPORTS FROM JAPAN IN 2011

Iron or Steel Parts of Domestic Non-Electric Cooking Appliances and Heaters

Exports from Japan, 2011

Country of Destination Rank Value (000 US$) % Share Cumulative %

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________

South Korea 1 7,858 34.26 34.26

the United States 2 6,463 28.18 62.44

Hong Kong 3 3,050 13.30 75.74

China 4 2,137 9.32 85.06

France 5 620 2.70 87.76

the Netherlands 6 586 2.56

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