WASHINGTON (AP) — Corporate leaders in Japan are affable
cheerleaders who solicit everyone’s views and avoid confrontation
at almost any cost. It’s called “nemawashi.” U.S. lawmakers are
cutthroat partisans who clamor for the spotlight, especially in an
election year. It’s called politics.
These cultures collided Wednesday in the appearance of a polite man
from a distant land before a congressional committee stocked with
angry men and women with axes to grind.
Toyota President Akio Toyoda’s moment was one brought to us by
globalization, the integration of economies and societies through a
worldwide network of trade and communications. Toyoda’s appearance
illustrated two stark realities: Nations are more knitted together
than ever, and still oh-so far apart.
A generation ago, it was good politics in Congress to bash Japan
and buy American. Now U.S. lawmakers grab campaign money from
Toyota executives and scramble to save Toyota jobs in their
districts.
Auto workers used to take sledgehammers to foreign cars. Now
thousands of them work for foreign companies, and U.S. car dealers
wear “I am Toyota in America” buttons to Capitol Hill.
And consider the hearing itself, where American directness
confronted Japanese subtlety as Toyoda apologized for
life-threatening safety lapses and for a corporate culture that may
have made things worse.
The grandson of the company’s founder noted that the vehicles bear
his name. “For me,” Toyoda said in a thin, reedy voice, “when the
cars are damaged, it is as though I am as well.”
It was a uniquely Japanese way to lead in crisis. How often do
troubled U.S. leaders call themselves damaged goods?
Unlike in the United States, where self-promoting corporate leaders
cast themselves as buck-stops-here demigods, the heads of Japanese
companies are chosen for their skills at team decision-making. Most
climbed the corporate ladder without rocking the boat, and humility
is prized.
Their job is to ensure stability and harmony.
Harmony? Not a word usually associated with the U.S. corporate
culture. Or Congress.
“This is appalling, sir,” said Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., waving
copies of a July 2009 presentation at Toyota’s Washington office.
The confidential document bragged of saving $100 million or more by
negotiating an “equipment recall” of floor mats involving 55,000
Toyota vehicles in September 2007.
“I’m embarrassed for you, sir,” Mica said.
Toyoda, who earned a business degree in Massachusetts, is no
stranger to the United States. But he’s probably unaccustomed to
the impatience — and at times the impertinence — of U.S.
lawmakers.
Their questions came “with all due respect,” a caveat that paves
the way for countless slights on Capitol Hill.
Rep. Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., pressed Toyoda about whether the
company could correct the acceleration problem. Toyoda gave a long,
indirect answer — establishing a pattern for the hearing.
“I’m trying to find out,” an exasperated Towns said, “is that a yes
or a no?”
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who received a $1,000 campaign
contribution in December from the president of a Toyota dealership
in California, jumped to Toyoda’s defense. He explained that a
complicated problem required complicated answers.
Toyoda gave his opening statement in heavily accented English. He
fielded questions through a translator, but clearly had command of
the situation — and used the extra time to consider his
answers.
Early on, the company president reached across the table to pull a
microphone closer to his translator, and when asked a question, he
nodded to her and said, “Will translate.”
And so it went, this lively blend of business and political
cultures played out before the cameras — globalization in a box,
the 21st century condensed into a single Capitol Hill committee
room.
But it wasn’t pretty. Not with so many lives at risk or already
wasted by mechanical defects. Not with so many lawmakers and Obama
administration officials hoping the accountability stops with
Toyoda and Toyota, sparing them.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration received more
than 2,500 consumer complaints about Toyota before aggressively
dogging the company in late 2009. Congress, which has oversight
authority on NHTSA, is only now asking tough questions.
“NHTSA failed the taxpayers,” Towns, the committee chairman, said
before swearing in Toyoda. “Toyota failed their customers.”
Still, after two days of hearings, there is too much we don’t
know.
Why did some cars accelerate out of control? Why did others not
stop? What else might go wrong?
Is my car safe?
At the end of the day, Congress and Toyota delivered more theater
than answers. Cultures collide. Globalization enters the so-what
phase. Political and business leaders struggle to lead. All
true.
But whether in Japan or on Capitol Hill, in a car accident you’re
just as dead.