DPR,
Points taken well. I have to say, we've found ourselves on a tangent far from "Anybody take delivery of a 4010 yet?" Mostly my fault....
I'll get to your your enumerated points, but I must first reassert a point, or rather a discalimer, I might have made earlier had I expected such a deep discourse. TQM and W. Edwards' premises are singularly removed from a point of success for an organization, and singularly *far* removed from the global dominance or collapse of a country's economy. They are what they are: an organizational philosophy and long-term strategy that makes continuous improvement a responsibility of all employees. TQM is dedication to meeting customers' needs and expectations which includes (1) designing quality into products and services; (2) preventing defects but correcting those that do appear; and (3) continuously improving the quality of goods and services to the fullest profitable extent. It truly is a micro concept that *will* have macro effects for productivity at the gross domestic level for an economy if universally and socially adopted, as seems to be the case for Japan between 1951 and 1997. However, macroeconomic principles weigh far greater on the destiny of a country or economy, while such quality practices weigh heavily on the destiny of segements, industries, companies, andultimately, employees. As you know, some companies can "stink on ice" and roll in the green exccrement. Others may operate under best practices under best practical economic conditions, and the economic septic tank flows in reverse.
Alright, so there's a connection between "national' quality practices and gross domestic product performance. At what altitude must you fly to make the correlation, however? Do all japanese companies produce a product as comprehensibly bullet proof as Toyota? Honda? Mitsibishi? Sony? Kubota? I think not. We desire that level of quality and, therefore, that's what we see.
To your points:
1) i see no negative correlation between Demming's Japanese quality movement and the collapse of the japanese banking system, and subsequent Asian banking collapse, other than the possibility that the incredible (amazing) growth rate of the Japanese economy was 8-10% for several years running in the 90's. Japanes corporate equity (obligations to stockholders) was based in an astounding investment rate of almost 40% of Japan's GDP during those times. The proverbial ballon going up, then coming.... Competitive currency conditions in Asia (other Asian countries trying to attract global investment by undercutting the J-Yen) cause overvaluation of the Yen, and the banks go under....'nuff said. An industrial culture of quality attracts feverish global investment of overconfident investors--that's the only connection I make between the Japanese economic condition and quality.
2) Demming said that poor qulaity is 85% management; 15% worker. Even before Demming arrived, the cultural environment, based in Shinto and Buddhist influences, lent itself to individual sacrifice based in loyalty. Respect for elders and ancestor worship are strong cultural identifiers for Japanese men. While those do exist in the culture of the American male (not a sexist comment ladies), the influence of these supporting notions means less in the U.S. company structure. My counterpoint is that U.S. corporate execs don't think as much of their company as Japanes execs, and their expertise must be bought, not anticipated.
3) Don't really know what to say to that, but I'll just disregard/disagree with the "steal" comment. Business is business and, while Japanese steel dumping back in the early 70's and 80's destroyed the steel industry, the U.S. is hardly innocent and beyond inethical practices abroad. Don't read a moral statement here, please, but I will disagree with your statement that Japan is following anyone, at least in an industrial sense. You are on target if you mean their economic woes are a result of a failure to use their banking system to stabilize their economy.
So here I am, typing on my made-in-the-U.S.A.-sort-of computer; thinking about getting the oil changed on my Toyota Avalon next week; wondering when my wife's Honda Odysse will be in (demand sure is outpacing supply...)
Maybe I'll have a cold beer and start a thread on Demming's five recommendations for improving quality.
Nah.... /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif