Chapter 2 Japan
Japan has been Australia’s closest and most consistent
partner in Asia for decades, and the relationship is of fundamental importance
to both countries’ strategic and economic interests.[1]
The trade and investment relationship
Background
2.1
Japan, with a population of 127 million, is the world’s third largest
economy in terms of GDP and, until 2009, Australia’s largest export destination
for over 40 years. As Australia’s second largest trading partner and third
largest source of foreign investment, Japan has made a significant contribution
to Australia’s prosperity.
2.2
The importance of the relationship was emphasised throughout this
inquiry. Australia is one of Japan’s most important suppliers of food, energy
and mineral resources and a world-class centre for financial and other
services. Japan is a major exporter of automobiles and manufactured products
and a reliable customer for Australian resources. Since the 1960s Japanese
investment has been instrumental to the development of the Australian economy.[2]
2.3
The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry characterised
Australia and Japan as:
… natural partners in the region, with shared democratic and
market economy ideals, but differing natural endowments including of land and
natural resources. … The agricultural relationship with Japan is part of a
broader partnership that has been beneficial to the economic and physical
security of both nations.[3]
2.4
Japan’s economic importance to Australia is not diminished by the rise
of countries such as China and India. Indeed, it is expected that Japan will
remain one of Australia’s most significant trading partners well into the
future.[4]
Development of the relationship
2.5
The current trading relationship originated with the 1957 Agreement
on Commerce between Japan and the Commonwealth of Australia (the Commerce
Agreement). Sir Rod Eddington, President of the Australia Japan Business
Cooperation Committee (AJBCC), described this agreement as a platform that:
… reflected real courage and leadership from the senior
politicians in both our countries, given that it was about 12 years after the
end of the Pacific war. That agreement underpins today’s trading relationship.[5]
2.6
The Commerce Agreement removed trade restrictions between Australia and
Japan, providing a more certain business environment. This led to increased
commercial links between the two countries.[6] The Commerce Agreement is
considered to have ‘formalised and entrenched the shift towards Japan as a key
export market and source for manufactured imports’ and in 1966, Japan overtook
the United Kingdom as Australia’s largest export market.[7]
2.7
In 1976, Australia and Japan concluded the Basic Treaty of Friendship
and Cooperation between Australia and Japan (the Nara Treaty), which
‘enshrined in formal and symbolic terms the friendship, community of interests
and interdependence that exist between Australia and Japan.’ [8]
2.8
The Nara Treaty established a broad framework for further cooperation
and recognised the two countries’ mutual interest in each being a stable and
reliable supplier to and market for the other.[9] It also strengthened the
political relationship and provided for cooperation in other areas. Notable
outcomes included growth in the investment relationship and the establishment of
the Working Holiday Program.[10]
2.9
In the ten years following the conclusion of this treaty, trade between
Australia and Japan increased almost four-fold.[11]
2.10
In the last decade, ‘a more fully rounded and diverse partnership
including on important political and security objectives’ has emerged,
resulting in a strong and broad-ranging relationship.[12]
2.11
The Government’s Australia in the Asian Century profile for Japan
summarised the relationship as follows:
Over more than 50 years, a shared commitment to democracy,
the rule of law and open-market economics, underpinned by striking economic
complementarity, have made the Australia-Japan partnership our closest and most
mature in the region and a template for our wider engagement with Asia.
Japan is currently the largest developed economy in the region.
It is a huge, sophisticated and reliable market for Australian exports, the
third largest source of foreign investment into Australia globally and a major
source of innovation. It is also Australia’s closest partner in efforts to
shape the global and regional strategic environment to ensure peace, security
and prosperity.[13]
2.12
In discussions with the Committee, Mr Tetsuro Amano of the Japanese
Embassy highlighted the longevity of the relationship, emphasising the mutual
confidence that has been established through longstanding relations.[14]
Mr Manuel Panagiotopoulos considered the established networks and trust that
has been built between Australia and Japan to be a key strength:
All Asian markets depend to a greater degree than Western
markets on well developed human capital networks. The 50 years of formal
Japan-Australia ties means these networks are into third and even further
generations.
Established networks are real assets, which provide the base
for new commercial linkages and are very hard to duplicate.[15]
2.13
Sir Rod Eddington made the point, however, that:
… we have such a strong relationship with Japan that we tend
to undervalue it and we do not recognise it for what it is.[16]
2.14
This was a recurring theme throughout the Committee’s inquiry.
Overview of goods and services trade
2.15
In 2011-12, Japan remained Australia’s second largest trading partner.
Two-way trade in goods and services was valued at $75.6 billion, an 11.7
percent increase on 2010-11.[17]
Exports
2.16
Australian exports to Japan in 2011-12 were valued at $53.1 billion,
representing approximately 16.8 percent of Australia’s total exports. This was
an 8.6 percent increase on 2010-11.[18]
2.17
Coal ($17 billion), iron ore ($10.8 billion), beef ($1.58 billion) and
copper ores and concentrates ($1.4 billion) were Australia’s major exports to
Japan in 2011. Japan was also Australia’s largest export market for beef, fish,
fruit juice, animal feed, copper ores and concentrates, coal, liquefied propane
and butane, aluminium, transmission shafts, dairy products and natural gas.[19]
2.18
Merchandise exports to Japan have more than doubled since 2000. In this
period, the composition of exports has changed significantly with fuels and
minerals exports increasing three and four fold respectively on 2000 levels.[20]
2.19
In 2010, resources and energy comprised 85 percent of the value of
Australia’s total exports to Japan.[21] Japan is Australia’s
principal export market for coal, aluminium and liquefied natural gas (LNG) and
second largest market for iron ore and concentrates and copper ore and concentrates.[22]
2.20
Agricultural trade is an important component of the trade relationship.
Japan is Australia’s second largest export market for food and agricultural
products. In 2010-11, agricultural, fish and forestry exports were worth about
$5.2 billion.[23] The composition of
agricultural trade with Japan has changed over time. Beef, cereals, dairy and
high quality seafood dominate current trade.[24]
2.21
Japan is a key market for the Australian beef industry. In 2011, exports
to Japan represented 36 percent of Australia’s global beef exports.[25]
2.22
Japan is Australia’s largest market for seafood exports and the
Committee received particular evidence about Australia’s seafood exports. Fish
and fish preparation items are Japan’s largest food and live animal imports,
valued at 1.35 trillion yen in 2011. The Japanese seafood market accounted for
23 percent of Australia’s total seafood exports in 2011, dominated by Southern
Bluefin Tuna, Atlantic Salmon, Worked Cultured Pearls, Shrimps and Prawns, and
Rocklobsters.[26]
2.23
In real terms, the value of Australia’s agricultural exports to Japan
has declined while exports to other Asian markets have increased. That said,
Australia makes an important contribution to Japan’s food security through the
safe and reliable supply of high quality food.[27]
Imports
2.24
Japan is Australia’s third largest source of imports, with passenger
vehicles ($7.1 billion), refined petroleum ($2.1 billion), goods vehicles ($1.5
billion), and civil engineering equipment and parts ($1 billion) comprising
major imports.[28]
2.25
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade stated that the
propensity of Australians to buy Japanese goods is high compared with Japan’s
other developed trading partners, particularly in the automotive sector, which
dominates Japanese exports to Australia.[29]
Services
2.26
Services trade with Japan was worth $4.2 billion in 2011, comprising
$2.0 billion in exports and $2.2 billion in imports.[30]
Japan is Australia’s seventh-largest two-way services trading partner, our
fifth-largest source of services imports and seventh-largest services export
destination. Services trade is focussed in the tourism, transport and education
sectors.[31]
2.27
Australia’s services exports to Japan have shown a steady downward trend
over the last ten years—a time when Australia’s services exports to other major
trade partners in Asia have grown significantly.[32]
This can be largely explained by the steady decline in Japanese tourism since
the mid-1990s. Japanese student numbers have also declined in recent years.[33]
Overview of investment
Japanese investment in Australia
2.28
Japan is Australia’s third largest foreign investor after the United
States and United Kingdom. At the end of 2010, the total stock of Japanese
investment in Australia was worth $117.6 billion, almost twice the sum of
investment from China (including Hong Kong) at $61 billion.[34]
2.29
Australia is the fifth largest destination for Japanese Foreign Direct
Investment (FDI) behind the United States, United Kingdom, China and Brazil and
one of Australia’s fastest-growing sources of foreign investment. Investment
has more than doubled since 2001.[35] Australia is seen as a
very safe, stable investment destination.[36]
2.30
Various contributors to the inquiry emphasised the significance of
Japanese investment. For example, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
and Austrade stated:
Japanese investment has been crucial in the development of
many of Australia’s key export industries and, consequently, central to
Australia’s own prosperity. Since the early 1960s, long-term contracts from
Japanese users of minerals and energy, and investment by Japanese trading
houses, have enabled the development of mines and gas fields for export
markets, both in Japan and third countries ... Over time, Japan’s FDI into
Australia has diversified beyond the traditional resources sector, making a
significant contribution to the development of Australia’s manufacturing,
agriculture and tourism sectors.[37]
2.31
This diversified investment includes:
- $800 million since
2004 by Toyota Australia in its Australian manufacturing facilities;
- acquisition of Paper
Australia by Nippon Paper Group in 2009 for $600 million;
- a $190 million joint
venture between Sekisui House, one of Japan’s largest homebuilders, with Payce
Consolidated to construct 4,500 sustainable homes in Homebush Bay, NSW and
Ripley Valley, Queensland;
- Asahi Group’s 2011
purchase of a $188 million stake in P & N Beverages Australia following its
earlier purchase of Schweppes Australia for $1.19 billion in April 2009; and
- acquisition of Dairy
Farmers by Japanese beverage maker Kirin for $910 million in December 2008, and
Lion Nathan for $3.5 billion in June 2009.[38]
2.32
Other investment includes Snow Brand’s investment in dairy ingredients
in Victoria and Nippon Meat Packers in cattle-raising, feed-lotting and
processing in Eastern Australia.[39]
2.33
Sir Rod Eddington characterised Japanese investment to the Committee:
They are long-term investors; they bring pools of patient
capital. They are strong customers as well. Because we enjoy a strategic
relationship with Japan as well, it has been our experience that Japanese
investment in Australia is not contentious. Although we understand and
recognise the important role Japanese investment has had—for instance in resources,
whether it is in coal or iron ore or LNG—there is actually a wide range of
Japanese investment in areas that perhaps we are not as familiar with.[40]
2.34
This includes infrastructure initiatives, food, tourism, financial
services, consumer products, and housing.[41]
2.35
Japan is a major investor in Australian agriculture, fisheries and
forestry and food, including dairy, livestock and beverages.[42]
In the ten years to 2009-10, Japan was Australia’s seventh largest source of
foreign investments in these sectors, totalling $489 million.[43]
Australian investment in Japan
2.36
Japan is Australia’s seventh largest destination for foreign investment
with stock of $29 billion at the end of 2010, representing an 80 percent growth
since 2000.[44] The Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade commented that:
The comparatively small stock of Australian FDI is consistent
with the low levels of direct investment from all sources into Japan. FDI into
Japan remains substantially lower than Japan’s outward FDI, and is low overall
compared with other developed economies.[45]
2.37
The limitations and barriers to investment for Australian businesses are
discussed later in the report.
Emerging trends
Japan in Asia
2.38
The Committee heard that Australian exports are increasingly going to
firms in regional countries where Japanese companies are prominent investors,
with their output being sold on to Japan and other countries.[46]
In its submission, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade
pointed out that:
Sophisticated economies such as Japan are increasingly
specialising in design, engineering, management and high value-added
components. Japanese corporations are seeking to take advantage of lower-cost
production in other Asian economies, particularly China—moving from a
made-in-Japan model to a made-by-Japan model.[47]
2.39
Japanese companies have created supply chains across the region,
resulting in extensive trade and investment flows ‘as semi-finished (or
intermediate) goods [are] exported and re-exported across borders’. In addition
to exporting energy and resources to Japan, therefore, ‘Australia is exporting
inputs directly into these supply chains, including in China.’[48]
2.40
The AJBCC stated that:
Japanese corporates [are] being forced to make acquisitions
offshore to compensate for the declining population and growth potential of the
domestic market. Australia is an attractive base for procurement of clean green
inputs and exports to third markets in Asia, where increasing middle-class
numbers are purchasing more western style and processed foods.[49]
Resources and energy
2.41
With few natural resources, Japan is only four percent energy
self-sufficient and the largest importer of coal and LNG in the world.[50]
Resources and energy have been immensely important to Australia’s relationship
with Japan, both in terms of Australia’s significant contribution to Japan’s
energy and resource needs and Japanese investment in Australian projects. As
the AJBCC stated:
It was Japanese investment from the 1960s in the mining and
resources sectors that underpinned the development of Australia’s mining
industry, currently the single biggest contributor to Australia’s economic
vitality.[51]
2.42
The Great East Japan Earthquake caused significant damage to Japan’s
energy infrastructure and led to new energy priorities for Japan. The Japanese
Government responded to the disaster by announcing construction of new
non-nuclear power stations and greater use of gas. The Japanese Government also
initiated a review of Japan’s Basic Energy Plan, signalling an increased role
for renewable energy with a target of 20 percent by 2020.[52]
2.43
Japan’s ongoing need for Australian resources was a theme throughout the
Committee’s visit to Japan, particularly in the context of its nuclear policy.
The delegation heard that the Japanese Government is currently considering what
proportion of its energy will be obtained from nuclear sources in the future,
with three options—0, 15 or 25 percent, under consideration.
2.44
Prior to the Great East Japan Earthquake, nuclear energy generated 30
percent of Japan’s electricity. However, all reactors were gradually taken
offline for safety checks in the wake of the earthquake. The delegation heard
there is a growing anti-nuclear sentiment within Japan and that only two
reactors had been restarted (in early July 2012) to ease energy shortfalls over
that summer. It was suggested to the delegation that as Japan moves away from
nuclear energy, it will have an increasing need for Australian resources.
2.45
With only two of Japan’s nuclear reactors functioning, Sir Rod Eddington
of the AJBCC commented on the impact of reducing nuclear energy supply. While
the short term solution has been greater use of coal and gas, Sir Rod argued
there is concern amongst Japanese business about security of energy supply,
which is in turn impacting upon investment decisions.[53]
2.46
In November 2012, Mr Tetsuro Amano of the Japanese Embassy outlined to
the Committee key priority areas adopted by the Japanese Cabinet in July 2012
for the ‘rebirth’ of Japan. Energy and the environment is the first priority,
‘realising innovative energy as an element of society—we symbolise that as
‘green’.[54]
2.47
Japan’s decisions on energy will have implications for Australia in a
number of areas, including exports, future Japanese investment in Australia,
and Australia’s partnership with Japan on low-emission and renewable-energy
technologies.[55]
2.48
The Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism stated in its submission
that while traditional exports are fundamentally important, potential new
opportunities exist in:
- resource and energy
related expertise, such as the mining equipment, technology and services
sector; and
- renewable energy,
energy efficiency and low-emission technologies and related services.[56]
2.49
The Department also highlighted Australia’s strong position to meet
future growth in demand for LNG in the Asia-Pacific region. Although Australia
has just under two percent of world gas reserves, it is the world’s fourth
largest LNG exporter with the potential to become the second largest exporter
when projects currently under construction become operational. The Department
considered that Australian production could potentially triple by 2020.[57]
2.50
Factors that could affect future LNG supply to Japan include:
- a shift away from
nuclear power that results in an increased percentage of Japan’s energy needs
being met by gas; and
- declining production
and rapidly growing domestic demand in Malaysia and Indonesia, from which Japan
currently sources 40 percent of its LNG imports.[58]
Resources investment
2.51
Since the 1980s, the pattern of Japanese investment in the Australian
resources sector has changed with investors increasingly taking a direct stake
in projects through equity partnerships and minority shareholdings.[59]
Examples include the Ichthys gas and condensate project, where Japanese firm
INPEX is the operator for the first time of a major LNG project in Australia;
direct equity holdings by Japanese companies in the North West Shelf Venture
and Darwin LNG; as well as the Pluto, Gorgon and Queensland Curtis LNG projects
that are currently under construction.[60]
Trade liberalisation and agricultural reform
2.52
Another emerging trend is Japan’s changing approach to engagement with
its key trading partners, which is influenced by a number of factors,
including:
- the impact of
demographic change on economic growth;
- the need to improve
Japan’s competitiveness; and
- the need to respond
to growing global competition for resources and energy.[61]
2.53
Recent Japanese Government policies have addressed trade liberalisation
and agricultural reform, and are examined further in the context of the free
trade agreement negotiations later in the report.
Defence materiel cooperation
2.54
The Committee notes that although Japan is a ‘critical regional
strategic partner’, Australia has no formal defence materiel cooperation with
Japan.[62]
2.55
Cooperation is ‘impeded by Japanese Government policy restrictions
placed on defence arms, technology and industry cooperation.’ The Department of
Defence (Defence) told the Committee that:
Japanese policy restrictions include a prohibition on the
exportation of arms and other military technologies to countries other than the
United States.[63]
2.56
This prohibition stems from the Three Principles on Arms Exports.
Defence elaborated on this:
The Three Principles are not law and are not embedded in
Japan’s constitution. Introduced in 1967, the Three Principles prohibit weapon
exports to communist bloc countries, countries which under United Nations
resolutions arms exports are prohibited, and countries involved or likely to be
involved in conflict. In 1976 these restrictions were expanded to include all
nations, and the arms export restrictions are now a long-standing contention of
Japanese defence policy. The restrictions were modified in 1983 to allow for
defence technology exports to the United States, and Japan has made some
exemptions to the restrictions, including the transfer of patrol boats to
Indonesia for counter-piracy purposes in 2006.[64]
2.57
Defence stated that Japan had recently been considering further
exemptions to these restrictions, noting:
… the June 2011 announcement by the Government of Japan that
it may ease some of these restrictions around the export of the SM-3 Block IIA
missile, components of which have been co-developed between the United States
and Japan.[65]
2.58
Defence indicated that it would welcome the opportunity to commence
formal materiel cooperation with Japan. Defence also noted that Australia has a
strong institutional framework in place to ensure that defence technology is
not exported to third parties without the originating country’s approval, one
of the reasons behind Japan’s policy restrictions.[66]
Multilateral cooperation
2.59
Australia engages with Japan in a range of multilateral institutions.
Australia and Japan share an interest in liberalising global trade and often
work together in the World Trade Organisation in areas such as liberalisation
of trade in agricultural products and services, and intellectual property. The
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade stated:
In April 2011, the prime ministers of Australia and Japan
released a joint statement which called for ‘a successful conclusion of the WTO
Doha Round negotiations as promptly as possible’. Such a result would create a
new wave of global trade liberalisation, which would also produce new trade
opportunities for Japan and Australia…[67]
2.60
Along with Australia, Japan is a founding member of the Asia Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC), the ‘preeminent trade and economic forum in the
Asia-Pacific region.’ Australia and Japan have actively pursued mutual
interests in APEC:
Australia and Japan work together across a broad spectrum of
APEC issues, including trade and investment facilitation, structural reform and
emergency preparedness. Australia played a major role in assisting Japan to
deliver progress on several key APEC issues during its host year in 2010. At
Japan’s invitation, we collaborated closely on the drafting of the Bogor Goals
assessment report, a key document mapping APEC’s progress towards free and open
trade and investment by 2020.[68]
2.61
Other areas of collaboration in APEC, include:
- APEC’s structural
reform agenda;
- developing APEC’s
Supply-Chain Connectivity Framework;
- supporting the Policy
Support Unit, APEC’s analytical arm; and
- emergency
preparedness.[69]
2.62
Australia and Japan also work together in both the East Asia Summit and
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Plus Working Groups.
2.63
Australia and Japan are also both active in the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD). The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry noted
that Australia and Japan do not generally hold the same views on agricultural
trade issues, particularly agriculture support and increased market access, but
are more aligned on services and industrial products.[70]
2.64
Both countries are also participants in the Regional Comprehensive
Economic Partnership (RCEP) negotiations, which were launched during the East
Asia Summit in Cambodia on 20 November 2012. These negotiations are intended to
create a regional free trade area through a comprehensive and mutually
beneficial agreement. RCEP will initially include the ten ASEAN member states
and those countries that have an existing free trade agreement with ASEAN,
including Australia, Japan and the Republic of Korea.[71]
2.65
Mr Tetsuro Amano of the Japanese Embassy provided the following
perspective on cooperation:
Both countries, Japan and Australia, share the great vision
of promoting trade liberalisation and investment in the Asia-Pacific region.
Both countries have worked together towards this vision under APEC, which was
established by the co-initiative of the two countries. In particular, it is
important to achieve the common goal of establishing the FTAAP, the Free Trade
Area of the Asia-Pacific. This is a final goal of free-trade negotiations in
the Asia-Pacific region.
As a step towards this final goal, Japan would like to
promote the negotiations of the RCEP, the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership—of course, the Australian government also participates in the
forum—which was launched during the occasion of the ASEAN leaders meeting recently.[72]
2.66
Mr Amano went on to state that Japan intends to continue close
communication with Australia on Japan’s participation in the Trans Pacific
Partnership (TPP) negotiations.[73] The TPP was one area of
focus in the Committee delegation’s discussions in Japan with the Senior Vice
Minister for Economy, Trade and Industry, Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs,
and the Chair and Senior Members of the Upper and Lower House Trade and
Agriculture Committees. The Committee notes that Japan has expressed formal interest
in joining the TPP negotiations.[74]
2.67
The Australian Government’s Trade Policy Statement indicates that the
TPP is the Government’s highest regional trade negotiation priority and that:
The Australian Government will pursue a TPP outcome that
eliminates or at least substantially reduces barriers to trade and investment.[75]
2.68
The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry noted that the decision
to admit new members to the negotiations is taken jointly by TPP members on a
consensus basis. Any country that seeks to join the negotiations must
demonstrate a willingness to commit to a high-quality and comprehensive
agreement.[76]
Barriers and impediments for Australian businesses
Background
2.69
This section outlines the various barriers and impediments to trade and investment
faced by Australian businesses. The general introductory statements apply to
both Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK). Specific barriers faced in Korea
will be addressed later in the report.
2.70
The nature of the barriers faced by Australian businesses include
tariffs; duties; domestic laws, regulations and policies; domestic resistance;
and limited market information.
2.71
While barriers and impediments do not prohibit trade and investment,
they do limit opportunities for Australian businesses. The Australian Chamber
of Commerce in Korea stated that barriers increase the cost of doing business,
reduce confidence and create uncertainty.[77] Barriers also limit
competition, productivity, market forces and market access, effectively
preventing free trade.
2.72
Both Japan and the ROK apply tariffs to goods. The most significant
tariffs in both countries apply to the agricultural sector, although these
markets still offer significant opportunities for Australian exports.[78]
The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry pointed out that because
Japan’s dependency on imported food is higher than that for many other
countries, post-war experiences of famine and concerns about the possible
impact of food shortages and food embargoes have been used to justify policies
that aim to attain a high level of food self sufficiency. These policies
include the full range of interventions seen in Japanese agriculture, including
tariffs, non-tariff measures, statutory import and marketing arrangements,
subsidies and more.[79]
2.73
Japan uses an array of policies to support agriculture, including high
tariffs, quota restrictions, subsidies, import tenders and elaborate marketing
schemes often involving state owned enterprises. Most of this support is
considered by the OECD to be distortionary.[80]
2.74
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade considered
Japanese policies to promote food self-sufficiency have done little to improve
domestic productivity. Such policies can therefore be seen as indirect
non-tariff barriers, as they limit the importation of goods that might have
otherwise occurred in a free market.[81]
2.75
The trade relationships with Japan and the ROK also involve technical
market access issues, such as ensuring paperwork is completed and systems are
in place prior to exports arriving. A smooth trade relationship and ongoing
perseverance is required to maintain and improve these processes.[82]
2.76
Australian businesses providing services or investing also face barriers
concerning nationality and language.
2.77
Other barriers to exports come from within Australia. Domestic barriers
include long lead times, limited infrastructure and a lack of skilled labour. It
was submitted that the Australian Government has developed policies to address
these issues.[83] Other domestic
challenges for all of Australia’s trade and investment relationships include
increasing innovation, skills and productivity within Australian firms.[84]
2.78
Other factors affecting the ability of Australian businesses to engage
include currency fluctuations,[85] free trade agreements
that the trade partner may have with other countries[86]
and the competitiveness and uncertainties of global markets.[87]
2.79
As noted earlier, in the defence sector, barriers include policy (not
legal or constitutional) restrictions that prohibit defence arms, technology
and industry cooperation with Australia.[88]
Goods barriers
2.80
Australian businesses face various barriers and impediments to exporting
goods to Japan. These fall into two categories: tariff barriers and non-tariff
barriers.
Tariff barriers
2.81
Japan applies tariffs to approximately 59 percent of its 8,826 tariff
lines, with 14 per cent of tariff lines having rates above 10 percent.[89]
Japan’s average most-favoured-nation (MFN) applied tariff[90]
is 5.8 per cent. In 2009, approximately eight per cent of Australia’s exports
to Japan (by value) were subject to tariffs.[91]
Agricultural barriers
2.82
In the agricultural sector, the average MFN-applied tariff is 15.7 per
cent with over three-quarters of agriculture tariff lines subject to a tariff
rate. Rates for specific agricultural goods range from zero for cut flowers to
over 450 per cent for some vegetables. Tariffs can be specific (based on a
unit) or ad valorem (based on a percentage). The use of specific tariffs can
hide tariff ‘peaks’ that would stand out in ad valorem tariffs.[92]
2.83
For Australia, tariffs apply to 54 per cent of the value of Australia’s
agricultural exports to Japan. This ranges from 15 per cent for wine to up to
218.6 per cent for raw sugar. Other items within this range include oranges (16
per cent), cheese (up to 40 per cent), beef (up to 50 per cent), milk powders
(up to 66.1 per cent), and wheat (up to 78.7 per cent).[93]
Non-agricultural tariffs
2.84
Outside the agricultural sector, 99 per cent of exports in 2009 were
subject to a tariff rate of zero, with an average MFN-applied tariff of 3.5 per
cent. Tariff rates include 11.7 per cent for nickel, 6.3 per cent for
ferro-manganese, 3.2 per cent for coke and semi-coke of coal, and 3.3 per cent
for aluminium hydroxide. The leather, rubber, footwear and travel goods sector
has an average applied tariff of 14.5 per cent.[94]
Non-tariff barriers
2.85
In addition to Japan’s tariff barriers, many of Australia’s agricultural
exports must be traded through Japan’s state trading system. This means that
they attract duties other than tariffs, including mark-ups, surcharges and
levies.[95] Other non-tariff
barriers include import quotas and safeguards.
2.86
Duties other than tariffs apply to many of Australia’s agricultural
exports, such as wheat, barley, sugar and some dairy products. These items are
classified as state-traded items and must be sold to the Japanese Government or
selected agencies. The exporter must pay a duty before the goods are sold on to
Japanese traders. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade
argued that this limits free trade by allowing the Japanese government to
‘strictly control import volumes while extracting a rent (or revenue) from the
transaction process.’[96]
2.87
Non-tariff duties can be significantly higher than applied tariffs,
which means that ‘while some trade might appear tariff free, it is not
necessarily duty free.’[97] This is the case for
most state-traded wheat, barley and sugar products. Other products, such as
butter and milk powders are subject to both a tariff (of 35 per cent and 25 per
cent respectively) and a mark-up (of up to 164.2 per cent and up to 160 per
cent respectively).[98]
2.88
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade stated that the
state trading system results in a lack of transparency in goods trade and
distorts market forces. State trading enterprises also create a barrier to
Australian businesses trying to form and develop commercial relationships with
Japanese customers.[99]
2.89
Trade barriers also include the promotion of domestic food
self-sufficiency and various means of direct government support to Japanese
farmers, including subsidies, income support and price support through direct
market intervention.[100]
2.90
Japan operates tariff-rate quotas (where a specified quantity of imports
may occur in quota at a reduced or zero tariff) for 175 tariff lines, mostly
for dairy products and cereals. There are various methods for quota
administration, and the quotas often involve:
… inter alia a combination of tariffs, additional
duties collected by state-trading enterprises, import licensing, end-use
restrictions, and restrictive-eligibility criteria for quota applicants.[101]
2.91
This leads to a system that is ‘rigid, highly complex and opaque’ to
Australian exporters.[102] Quota systems for wheat
and dairy are particularly complex. There are two import systems for wheat, and
restrictions on how dairy products can be used.[103]
2.92
Fisheries imports are controlled through import quotas and licences.
In-quota tariffs range from 3.5 to 15 per cent and apply to items including
yellowtail, herring, cod, mackerel, sardines, horse mackerel, cod roes,
scallops, cuttlefish and squid. Trade outside the quota is strictly prohibited
to protect domestic production, and the quota is divided into sub-quotas.
Limited allocation of sub-quotas on a first-come-first-served basis creates a
barrier to new exporters.[104]
2.93
Pork is subject to a gate-price system, which is similar to a variable
levy. Pork and beef can be subject to safeguards, and other agricultural
products may be subject to special safeguards if imports may harm or are
harming the domestic industry.[105] Japan has reserved the
right to use special safeguards on 119 agricultural products.[106]
2.94
Other barriers include:
- Japan’s sanitary and
phytosanitary regime, which includes some regulations that are more stringent
than international guidelines and procedures;
- Japan’s lengthy
approval system for food additives—a process that can take up to five years; and
- Negotiations on
phytosanitary market-access requests for the export of horticultural goods.[107]
2.95
ANZ identified quotas, ‘excessive product testing’, particularly for
dairy, rice and grain, and ‘inconsistent interpretation of legislation’ as key
barriers for Australian businesses.[108]
2.96
The Australian Industry Group (Ai Group) also identified barriers within
Japan, including: standards unique to Japan (formal and informal); official
regulations skewed towards Japanese items; licensing powers that limit
membership and market access; lack of transparency surrounding import
insurance; airport clearance fees; and complex customs clearance procedures.[109]
Ai Group told the Committee that these represent a very high barrier for
Australian food manufacturers accessing the Japanese market. Further:
We see this as straightforward agricultural protection within
the Japanese market. We represent a lot of food processors and the food
processing industry and they made the point to us, when we sought their input
into the submission, that the Japanese agriculture sector routinely applied
standards or requirements that are unique to Japan and that apply nowhere else
in the world. They will come up with rationales and explanations for this but
they are still on their own. When our food processing industry is trying to
compete in the market, it is basically blocked at the door…[110]
2.97
Ai Group also explained its concerns about airport clearance processes:
We have been told of numerous examples of goods being left on
docks or in airports for a very long time seeking clearance, getting spoiled.
This came up several times when we were seeking input. They are goods that just
happen to be left on the docks awaiting clearance. When you are dealing with
food product you cannot wait long. It was a back door de facto way of keeping
them out of the market essentially.[111]
Services barriers
2.98
There are a number of barriers to services in Japan for Australian
businesses, despite Japan’s commitments to market access in the World Trade
Organization.[112] These barriers limit
Australia’s involvement in Japan’s legal, financial, education,
telecommunications and infrastructure services sectors.
Legal services
2.99
Barriers to the legal sector include restrictions on the ability of
foreign lawyers to provide international legal services inside Japan. To
practise Japanese law, lawyers must pass the Japanese Bar Examination and be
qualified as a Japanese lawyer. Qualified foreign lawyers may provide legal
advice on international law issues but are restricted in that they are only
able to set up joint enterprises with Japanese lawyers.[113]
The AJBCC described these domestic registration requirements as ‘artificial and
restrictive.’[114]
2.100
Registration processes for foreign lawyers can be cumbersome, and to
maintain their registration they must be resident in Japan for 180 days per
year. Registered foreign lawyers can only provide legal advisory services on
their home jurisdiction, cannot form a legal professional corporation in the
way that Japanese lawyers can, and are prevented from opening branch offices in
Japan.[115]
Financial services
2.101
The financial services sector has fewer barriers to Australian
businesses, with competition encouraged and the regulatory environment eased.
Remaining barriers include licensing requirements and restrictions on foreign
investment, and Japan’s banking law means that deposit insurance does not apply
to branches of foreign banks that are incorporated outside of Japan.[116]
2.102
Additionally, companies without a commercial presence in Japan cannot in
most circumstances access Japan’s Government Pension Investment Funds market,
which was valued at approximately $1.4 trillion in 2010.[117]
Education services
2.103
Although foreign education institutions are able to open and provide
education services, they are discouraged by strict regulation and
administrative requirements, exclusion from benefits available to Japanese
educational institutions (including tax concessions), and limitations on the
recognition of foreign academic qualifications which reduce the movement of
students.[118]
Telecommunications
2.104
Japan’s telecommunications sector has been deregulated significantly
since 1985, however a number of restrictions on communications and broadcasting
services remain. Telecommunications policy and regulation are managed by the
Japanese government, rather than by an independent regulator, and competition
is limited as the dominant, government-owned carrier, NTT, fixes
interconnection rates.[119]
Infrastructure
2.105
Although Japan’s Public Finance Initiative Law has been amended to
provide greater private sector involvement, barriers to participation in public
infrastructure projects in Japan include preventing private enterprises from
participating in certain sectors such as toll roads and hospitals, and
difficulty in accessing information for upcoming projects, which is generally
held by prefectural (state) governments and available only in Japanese.
Australian businesses can also find it difficult to access distribution
networks, as relationships between businesses in the supply chain can be interconnected.[120]
Investment barriers
2.106
Japan’s inward stock of FDI is the lowest in the OECD, representing only
three percent of GDP in 2007.[121] Deterrents to
investment include language barriers, the high cost of doing business in Japan,
and a restrictive foreign investment regime. Japan has the strongest
restrictions on foreign equity investments in the OECD. In contrast, other
restrictions are lower. Foreign investment restrictions are highest in the
agriculture, forestry, fisheries and mining sectors, and lowest in the
electricity, construction, retail and wholesale distribution sectors.[122]
The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry argued that Japan’s
agricultural, fisheries and forestry sectors are substantially off-limits for
foreign direct investment.[123]
2.107
The Committee sought particular information about the foreign investment
regime in Japan from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade.
An outline of the regime, provided by the Department, is included in full at
Appendix E.
2.108
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade noted that the
Japanese Government has acknowledged many of the restrictions facing foreign
investors, which include:
- regulatory and
administrative procedures;
- strong resistance to
FDI from the corporate sector;
- high corporate tax
rates;
- lack of transparency
on tax treatment for complex transactions;
- limited information
on regional markets in Japan;
- insufficient capacity
in regional areas of Japan to deal with FDI; and
- language barriers.[124]
2.109
Although the Japanese Government implemented the Inward Investment
Promotion Program in 2010 to address regulatory and administrative barriers
and adversarial attitudes to foreign investors, many measures are yet to come
into effect.[125]
2.110
Japan’s legal framework for foreign investment ‘does not have a
screening process for inward FDI per se, requiring in most cases only notification
after the fact.’ However, ‘pre-transaction notification filing’ is required in
some circumstances. This depends on the nationality of the investor and the
sensitivity of the industry involved, that is, whether it may impair national
security, disturb public order, hinder public safety or cause ‘significant harm
to the smooth management of the Japanese economy.’[126]
2.111
Sectors requiring pre-transaction notification filing include
agriculture, forestry, fisheries, petroleum, leather and leather products and
air and maritime transport. Sectors requiring prior notification ‘on the
grounds of public order and national security’ include aircraft, arms,
explosives, nuclear power, electric utilities, gas, water, heat generation,
space, security, biological preparations, rail transport, passenger transport,
telecommunications, television, cable television and broadcasting.[127]
2.112
Land ownership eligibility and processes in the agricultural sector are
the same for foreigners and nationals.[128]
2.113
The AJBCC identified various barriers for Australian businesses to
undertake infrastructure development in Japan: legal restrictions on private
businesses undertaking roads, ports and airports projects; the present
tendering system; the restriction on toll roads that prohibits private
enterprises from profiting from toll roads; shares transfer restrictions; the
inability to engage public officials in secondments; and an inefficient and
inflexible tax structure that restricts investment in infrastructure.[129]
2.114
The Committee supports the Government’s efforts to address both tariff
and non-tariff barriers through the FTA process, which will be discussed in the
next section.
Free trade agreement
Background
2.115
Negotiations for a FTA with Japan have been underway since 2007.
Understandably delayed following the Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011,
negotiations resumed in December 2011. Since then, four rounds of negotiations
have been undertaken with the most recent, the sixteenth, taking place in June
2012.[130]
2.116
Japan has concluded FTAs with Peru, India, Thailand, Singapore,
Philippines, Malaysia, Mexico, Chile, Indonesia, Vietnam, ASEAN, Switzerland
and Brunei. It also has a number of agreements under negotiation or at the
point of a feasibility study.[131]
2.117
Australia is currently involved in bilateral FTA negotiations with
China, Japan, South Korea, India and Indonesia as well as several plurilateral
negotiations.[132]
Benefits of the agreement
2.118
A FTA with Japan is identified as a priority in the Government’s Trade
Policy Statement Trading our way to more jobs and prosperity. As an
important market for Australia, reduction and elimination of Japan’s
substantial tariff and non-tariff barriers would bring considerable benefits to
Australian business.[133]
2.119
Participants in the inquiry considered that the agreement would open
opportunities for business in both countries. For example, Sir Rod Eddington of
the AJBCC stated:
It is our view that if we are able to successfully conclude a
FTA with the Japanese … that will open the door to further opportunities in
areas like resources and agriculture but also in areas like services.[134]
2.120
Similarly, as Australia’s largest market for food and agricultural
exports:
Australian agriculture stands to benefit greatly from a
comprehensive FTA that includes reductions in tariffs affecting Australia’s key
rural exports. Australia’s producers face some steep tariff barriers along with
tariff-like arrangements, and for some commodities must navigate complex
statutory marketing systems, all of which combine to stand between them and
Japanese consumers.[135]
2.121
The Ai Group argued that a FTA would provide consistency and address
some of the difficulties experienced by Australian businesses in accessing the
Japanese market:
A free-trade agreement would help, we believe, because it
would set out very clear parameters for access. … It gives you a basis from
which to operate. At the moment there is no clear delineation, no broad
overarching framework that you can revert back to so it is almost done on a
sector-by-sector basis. … When you get below that, a deal-by-deal basis or a
transaction-by-transaction basis. You do not have that consistency, that broad
framework in the relationship.[136]
2.122
Sir Rod Eddington of the AJBCC considered the FTA would ‘open the door’
to greater Japanese investment in Australia.[137] ANZ similarly argued
that a comprehensive FTA would lead to increased investment and trade. ANZ saw
particular opportunities for Australia’s financial services sector:
… more transparent, liberalised regulatory processes and
rules would strengthen the relationship between Korean and Japanese regulators
and Australian financial service providers. This would also generate increased
certainty for Australian investors more broadly.[138]
2.123
The AJBCC also argued that there would be a real and symbolic impact if
the preferential treatment provided to the United States through the foreign
investment regime and taxation regimes (such as double taxation treaties) was
addressed.[139]
2.124
Meat and Livestock Australia told the Committee of its strong support
for the FTA:
In Japan, bilateral trade reform via the removal of the 38
per cent tariff, and the safeguard that sits above that, presents a unique
opportunity for our sector, particularly in terms of future commercial gains.
Not only will it deliver a more stable trade platform for our sector but the
real beneficiaries are going to be Japanese consumers who at the moment pay an
inflated price for beef at that retail and food service. There is an
opportunity there for consumers, who are already predisposed to Australian beef
to potentially consume more.[140]
2.125
The joint Australia-Japan feasibility study completed in 2006 identified
significant benefits to Australia and Japan from the proposed free trade
agreement. The study concluded that a FTA would:
- deliver major
economic gains for both countries;
- address
discrimination resulting from each country’s FTAs with others;
- promote ongoing
economic reform and increase productivity in both countries;
- create new
opportunities in respective services sectors, including by improving business
mobility;
- tie Japan more
closely to the largest contributor to Japan’s energy supply and its
third-largest supplier of minerals and resources;
- ensure Japan has
reliable supplies of key minerals and energy into the future;
- help Japan realise
its food security objectives;
- provide Australia
with enhanced export opportunities to the world’s third largest economy and its
largest market for minerals, energy and food; and
- promote greater
Japanese investment in Australia which would integrate Australia more closely
with the Japanese market.[141]
Scope of the agreement
2.126
The Committee was informed that Japan’s existing agreements, with a
small number of exceptions, have contained no substantial concessions on
agriculture.[142] Products such as rice,
wheat and barley, sugar, dairy products, fish and fish products, petroleum
oils, leather, leather products and footwear, and laminated wood have been
consistently excluded.[143]
2.127
Representatives of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
commented:
… the agreements that Japan has concluded thus far are not
comprehensive in their agricultural outcomes; they have excluded a lot of
products and their agreements, by and large, are not with major agricultural
exporting countries.[144]
2.128
In contrast to Japan’s existing agreements:
Australia is seeking a comprehensive, high-quality agreement
covering trade in goods (agricultural and non-agricultural), services and
investment. Such an agreement would have a real impact in expanding trade and
investment between Australia and Japan.[145]
2.129
Significantly:
We are breaking new ground. There is no good precedent to
follow from our perspective, unlike in the Korean situation, where Korea has
concluded agreements with the US and EU.[146]
2.130
The Committee supports the Government’s approach to FTA negotiations and
its efforts to obtain significant agricultural and non-agricultural outcomes.
Japanese policy
2.131
The Japanese Government addressed trade liberalisation and domestic
economic reform in its Basic Policy on Comprehensive Economic Partnerships
released in November 2010. The policy formed part of the Japanese Government’s
efforts to revitalise the Japanese economy.[147]
2.132
The policy states that Japan will ‘take major steps forward from its
present posture and promote high-level economic partnerships with major trading
powers’. Specifically, the policy recognises Australia, stating that: ‘Japan
will increase its efforts to conclude the ongoing EPA [FTA] negotiations with
Peru and Australia...’[148]
2.133
Following the Great East Japan Earthquake, the Japanese Cabinet adopted
its Policy Guidelines: Towards Japan’s Revitalisation on 17 May 2011,
which indicated trade liberalisation would continue but with revised
timeframes.[149]
2.134
More recently, in discussions with Mr Tetsuro Amano of the Japanese
Embassy, the Committee heard about priority areas that had been adopted by the
Japanese Cabinet in July 2012 for the ‘rebirth of Japan’:
Firstly, energy and the environment: realising innovative
energy as an element of society—we symbolise that as ‘green’. Secondly, life:
this means we want to realise the world’s leading health and medical care and
the welfare of society—we symbolise that as ‘life’. Thirdly, agriculture and
small-to-medium enterprises—the revitalising of such areas.[150]
2.135
Mr Amano went on to state that Japan will implement growth strategies
that include promoting economic partnerships in the Asia-Pacific area,
including Australia:
Japan attaches high importance to further strengthening its partnerships
with Australia, which are based on mutual trust and the mutual benefit derived
from open trade.
From this point of view, Japan is promoting the bilateral FTA
negotiations with Australia.[151]
Agricultural reform
2.136
Japan’s agricultural sector is one of the most protected in the world.[152]
In 2009, it was estimated that 42.2 percent of Japanese farmers were 70 years
old or more with 66.4 percent aged at least 60.[153]
2.137
The Basic Policy on Economic Partnerships recognised the impact
that trade liberalisation would have upon Japan’s agricultural sector:
In particular, agriculture is the field most likely to be
affected by trade liberalization. Moreover, considering Japan’s aging farming
population, the difficulty farmers have in finding people to take over their
farms when they are ready to retire, and the low rate of profit, there is a
risk that sustainable agriculture will not be possible in the future. Hence it
is imperative to institute bold policies that will realize the full potential
of Japan’s agriculture, for example, by improving their competitiveness and
exploring new demand overseas.[154]
2.138
Japan’s policies and directions for agriculture were set down in
agricultural basic laws enacted in 1961 and 1999. The Department of
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry stated in its submission:
As well as the role of agriculture as a source of food,
emphasis is given in the current basic law to the ‘multifunctional roles of
agriculture’. Those roles are defined to include the maintenance of the
stability of people’s lives, stable production in rural areas, conservation of
land, water and the natural environment, the formation of good landscape and
the maintenance of cultural traditions.[155]
2.139
Over the period 2007-09, direct government support to Japanese
agricultural producers on average accounted for 47 percent of farmers’ incomes.[156]
2.140
Ms Jan Adams of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade commented
that:
… progress on the front of agricultural trade liberalisation
is very closely linked with Japan’s program of domestic economic and
agricultural reform. That is a major policy front that the Japanese government
is grappling with right now.[157]
2.141
Agricultural reform offers opportunities for Australia. The Department
of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry argued that:
With the pursuit of reform in Japan will come opportunities
for Australian agriculture. Many institutional barriers to trade with Japan
stand to be addressed if reform is taken-up, including barriers that prevent
Australian exporters establishing direct commercial relationships with Japanese
end-users. Opportunities may also extend to the granting of access to Japan’s
largely closed market for the delivery of agricultural services in Japan, and
to new investment opportunities.[158]
2.142
The Committee heard that Japan is under pressure to pursue agricultural
reform, both domestically, and in the context of its engagement with FTA
partners including Australia, its potential inclusion in the Trans Pacific
Partnership and from within the World Trade Organization.[159]
Delegation discussions
2.143
During its visit to Japan, the Committee delegation had the opportunity
to meet with Japanese ministers and parliamentarians. Discussions included the
difficulties, from a Japanese perspective, associated with the inclusion of
agriculture in the FTA.
2.144
In discussions with the Chair and Senior Members of the Upper and Lower
House Trade and Agriculture Committees, members indicated they were not opposed
to free trade but were concerned that the agreement achieves the right balance
on issues such as volumes and level of tariffs.
2.145
Members also indicated the need for discussion about necessary
protections. In particular, different members highlighted the sensitivities
surrounding agricultural products, informing the delegation that these products
are seen differently within Japan to other resources. For example, members
explained that a strong emotional relationship exists with rice, arising from
historical associations to its former use as currency. Farmers also express
concern about whether they will be able to continue farming with the FTA in
place.
2.146
Differing attitudes towards the proposed agreement were expressed to the
delegation during its visit, however, with others highlighting the
opportunities it presents for agricultural reform and to contribute to Japan’s
ongoing food security. Various groups have advocated the benefits of the
agreement with the Japanese government.
Australian perspectives
2.147
The National Farmers’ Federation (NFF), in its submission, recognised
the sensitivities surrounding agriculture, but stated:
If we look at the emerging challenges for food and fibre
production and the role that Australian agriculture can play in Japan, the NFF
does not believe that there is a long term or serious threat to Japan’s farmers.[160]
2.148
The NFF argued that more recognition should be given to the
complementary nature of Australia and Japan’s agriculture industries. In the
NFF’s view ‘completed trade deals can benefit everybody.’[161]
Specifically:
- Australia is able to
deliver the high quality, high value products desired by Japanese and Korean
customers;
- Australia has a
reputation for clean and natural supply systems, with the use of fumigants and
insecticides heavily regulated and monitored by government authorities;
- Australian
production, based around southern hemisphere seasons, is available in the ‘off
season’ for Japan and Korea, particularly in sectors such as horticulture; and
- many Australian
products are differentiated from Japanese and Korean local produce and service
different market sectors. For example, in both markets Australian beef competes
against other imported produce rather than against local beef. Similarly,
Australia grain exports complement local production, which does not produce
sufficient quantities of the grades of wheat necessary to make high quality
grain based foods such as udon and alkaki noodles. Dairy exports also
complement local production and do not compete in markets such as fresh milk,
providing cheese for processing and other vital ingredients to dairy companies
and other food manufacturers.[162]
2.149
The Committee shares the view that there are significant benefits to be
obtained for Australia from a comprehensive agreement that liberalises both
goods and services trade and liberalises and facilitates investment.
2.150
The Committee supports efforts by the Australian Government to negotiate
a comprehensive agreement that benefits both Australia and Japan. The Committee
considers that such negotiations should continue to be prioritised by the
Government, including at the Ministerial and Prime Ministerial level with their
Japanese counterparts.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
continue to prioritise negotiation and conclusion of a comprehensive free
trade agreement with Japan that addresses the numerous barriers, particularly
in the agricultural sector, to trade and investment between Australia and
Japan. |
Investment opportunities
2.151
As Australia’s third largest source of foreign investment, the
importance of Japanese investment in Australia has been recognised earlier in
the report. This section examines in more detail some of the future
opportunities.
2.152
Several inquiry participants noted that the attention given to Japanese
investment is generally much less than investment from China and India. The
AJBCC, for example, commented:
Much of the new and substantial Japanese investment in
resources has been part of major iron ore and coal mine expansions operated by
BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto, Anglo and Xstrata which has gone almost unnoticed.
Almost all the major LNG projects under development have Japanese equity
participation and are underpinned by Japanese power and gas utilities as
foundation customers.[163]
2.153
In evidence to the Committee, Mr Manuel Panagiotopoulos argued that the
strong relationship between Australia and Japan will lead to more Japanese
investment.[164] Mr Panagiotopoulos
outlined the attractiveness of Australia not only as a source of investment,
but also as a gateway to other parts of Asia. The size of the Australian
economy, high levels of income and growing population, together with
Australia’s biggest trading partners being in the adjacent region are all
attractions. Further:
We have regulatory frameworks, financial markets, legal
frameworks and political stability—all those commercial environmental issues
which make investment attractive. We can be used as a base not just for sales
in Australia but for sales to Asia.[165]
2.154
To build investment links, ANZ considered that:
This long standing relationship needs to be nurtured. For
example, the Japanese trading houses and corporates continue to look beyond
their domestic businesses in order to grow. They are very active investors in
the wider Asia Pacific region, including Australia. We believe the Australian
Government and businesses play an important role in facilitating this
investment.[166]
2.155
Some of the areas of investor interest include resources, agriculture,
services and manufacturing. As mentioned earlier, there is also growing
interest in renewable energy following the Great East Japan Earthquake.[167]
2.156
Mr Manuel Panagiotopoulos argued that ‘fundamental economic forces will
lead to much more Japanese FDI in the future’:
Demographic change in the form of an ageing, shrinking
population and a highly competitive domestic market means that the major growth
opportunities for Japanese companies will be found outside Japan.[168]
2.157
This view was echoed by the AJBCC, which pointed to opportunities in a
number of areas, including infrastructure.[169] The AJBCC considered
there were significant complementarities between Australia and Japan that could
be utilised in joint infrastructure ventures. This includes ‘world class
Australian competencies’ in design, construction, operation, maintenance,
consortia/project management and financial management built up over long term
private sector involvement in public infrastructure projects.[170]
2.158
The Committee heard that the AJBCC and its Japanese counterpart are
promoting the public-private partnership model of infrastructure financing in
Japan and in third countries. This work is supported by the Australian
Government.[171]
2.159
The AJBCC told the Committee about joint trade missions that have been
undertaken to India and Indonesia that included Australian banks, constructions
companies, law firms and other business together with their Japanese
counterparts, looking at opportunities to work together.[172]
2.160
Mr Bob Seidler described this opportunity:
In terms of third markets, there is a huge opportunity for
us—which we are trying to exploit—in the infrastructure area. One of the
benefits is that Japan has enormous influence around the region. They are the
major aid supplier to almost every country. If you look at India, Japan has
funded most of the major infrastructure projects there. Around the region,
governments do not have the money for infrastructure. So they are funding a lot
of this through aid agencies. It is either World Bank money, ADB or Japan. They
have huge influence.[173]
2.161
Sir Rod Eddington summarised this as follows:
They bring capital and influence and we bring expertise.[174]
2.162
The AJBCC also argued that Japanese companies have moved capital
investment and manufacturing capacity to countries ‘in which they look to do
business.’ Australia is one of these countries, with added attractiveness as
Japan is one of Australia’s major customers.[175]
Delegation discussions
2.163
During its visit to Japan, the Committee delegation heard about the
growth in Japanese investment and its increasing focus outside Japan.
2.164
The Committee had the opportunity to attend a roundtable meeting with
representatives of Japanese businesses, including Marubeni Corporation, Nikko
Asset Management, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC), Nippon Steel
Corporation, INPEX, Sumitomo Forestry and Kawasaki Heavy Industries.
2.165
Company representatives described their Australian investments,
highlighting that one of the key benefits of conducting business in Australia
is its stability. Compared with other markets, Australia was considered to be
‘comfortable’ with no sovereign risk. For companies such as Nippon Steel,
Japan’s leading steel company, which sources 65 percent of its iron ore and 60
percent of its coking coal from Australia, security of supply was extremely
important.
2.166
Australia was also seen as a sophisticated and mature investment market.
Mr Charles Beazley, Chief Executive Officer of Nikko Asset Management described
Australia as one of the most geo-strategically important countries in Asia,
with the fourth largest mutual investment market. Mr Beazley predicted a
significant increase in investment in the next five to ten years.
2.167
Some of the investment challenges identified by companies included
labour shortages and costs, the impact of the Mineral Resource Rent Tax, and
transport and infrastructure costs.
2.168
Investment is across a range of sectors and it was pointed out that many
companies are looking to diversify from a traditional investment focus upon
resources. Agri-business, infrastructure, Public Private Partnerships (PPP),
and emerging markets such as clean technology are some of the areas of interest.
The delegation also heard that Japanese trading banks are looking for
opportunities for domestic companies, such as joint ventures.
2.169
In Tokyo, the delegation also participated in a roundtable meeting with
executive members of the Australia New Zealand Chamber of Commerce in Japan
(ANZCCJ). Participants discussed investment opportunities in infrastructure,
renewable energy, PPP, superannuation and funds management. Some of the issues
that arose from the roundtable included:
- The importance of
relationship building. For example, Mr Nobi Yamaji of Rio Tinto indicated that
despite the length of time Rio Tinto has been involved in Japan and the scale
of its imports (at $10 billion), the relationship is still being developed. He
added that contract stability is highly important to the Japanese.
- Opportunities in
services. For example, Mr Andrew Gauci, Deputy Chair of the ANZJCC and CEO of
Lendlease Japan advocated a greater focus on services. He pointed out that
although the Japanese construction industry is the third largest in the world,
there are no Australian companies involved in the industry with the exception
of Lendlease, which has been in Japan for 24 years.
- Opportunities in the
legal sector. For example, Mr Edward Cole of Freshfields pointed out that while
the vast majority of foreign lawyers in Japan are Australian, Ashurt is the
only Australian firm.
2.170
Following its visit to Tokyo, the delegation travelled to the Kansai
region, which encompasses six prefectures in central Japan, and includes cities
such as Kyoto and Osaka. The region accounts for 16 percent of Japan’s GDP
(79.7 trillion yen) and 16 percent of its population (20.7 million).[176]
2.171
The delegation called on Osaka’s Vice Governor, Mr Shinsaku Kimura. Mr
Kimura described Osaka’s status as a special economic zone and the steps that
have been taken to eliminate local regulation and local taxes in order to
promote investment. Mr Kimura indicated that he would welcome a greater focus
on Osaka from Australian companies. It was noted the second largest Australian
investment in Japan, Toll Holdings, is based in Osaka.
2.172
The delegation also met with representatives of the Kansai Economic
Federation, known as Kankeiren. Established in 1946, Kankeiren is a non-profit
comprehensive economic organisation with about 1400 members. It is focussed
upon economic activities in the Kansai region and represents the business
community’s collective views on a range of economic, social and labour issues.
The area is characterised by industrial, electronics, biotech and port
infrastructure as well as significant agribusiness and tourism assets.
2.173
Discussions with Kankeiren representatives ranged across issues
associated with trade liberalisation and the TPP. Kankeiren supports Japan’s
participation in the TPP and advocates establishing FTAs with strategically
important countries. Discussions also included investment in Australia and some
of the challenges faced by Japanese investors.
2.174
During its visit to Kyoto, the delegation was briefed by Dr Takashi
Kamei on opportunities relating to the use of thorium for energy production. Dr
Kamai explained his research on this issue, advocating for the inclusion of
thorium in discussions about Japan’s energy policy.
Services trade
Background
2.175
This section discusses Australia’s services trade with Japan, with a
focus upon three areas that received particular attention during the inquiry:
education, tourism and financial services.
2.176
As noted earlier, Australia’s services exports to Japan have declined
since 2000. A significant part of the decline in Australia’s overall services
exports to Japan can be explained by the steady decline in Japanese tourism
since the mid-1990s, which was valued at $1.2 billion in 2010 compared with its
peak of $2.2 billion in 2000.[177]
2.177
Japanese student numbers have also declined and, as discussed earlier,
there are a number of difficulties encountered by Australian businesses when
trying to enter Japan’s services market.
2.178
While services account for about 80 percent of Australian GDP and 85
percent of total employment, they represent only 18.4 percent of Australia’s
exports. In the case of Japan, services represent 6.9 percent of total two-way
trade, reflecting two factors—first, that Australia is not a significant
services exporter and secondly, that Japan is not a big importer of services.[178]
2.179
Nonetheless, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade
highlighted in its submission that there are significant opportunities for
increased bilateral trade in services in a number of sectors, including:
- Government services;
- Legal and accounting
services;
- Real estate and
property services;
- Vocational training;
- Recreational;
- Music and performing
arts; and
- Hospitality services.[179]
2.180
Areas where Australia’s exports are particularly strong include travel,
insurance, financial services, personal and computer services.[180]
In financial services, particular opportunities exist for Australian investment
products. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Austrade commented
that:
… as long as returns on investment in equities and bonds in
Japan remain below those available in Australia, demand for Australian
investment products from Japanese mutual funds and retail investors is likely
to continue to grow.[181]
2.181
The AJBCC also saw opportunities for increased services trade between
Australia and Japan. Sir Rod Eddington commented:
One of the things we have been trying to do as a committee is
not only to build on the strengths of the past in areas like resources and
agriculture outbound from Australia—obviously inbound manufacturing goods,
primarily—but also to try to build around our service economies. Increasingly
our economy is a service economy, and we are looking through the free trade
agreement in our broader discussions to look at new opportunities for bilateral
trade between our two countries.[182]
2.182
Mr Manuel Panagiotopoulos expressed the view that with changing
demographics in Japan, including its ageing population, there will be
opportunities for services exports in areas such as health and lifestyle
services.[183]
2.183
The AJBCC also highlighted health services as an area of Australian and
Japanese complementarity. Both countries have an ageing population and health
care is a significant industry. Japan’s technological expertise can be offset
against Australia’s infrastructure capacity:
… we have got areas in aged-care management, health policy,
PPP or social infrastructure—those sorts of areas—which we can export to Japan.
Equally, we can bring from their side things like technology and money into our
social infrastructure.[184]
2.184
Mr Panagiotopoulos also advocated increased personnel exchange as a
mechanism to improve not only cultural understanding but also the processes in
either country. This has occurred for example in the legal sector, where
Australian law firms have seconded staff to the legal departments of Japanese
corporations.[185]
Education
2.185
Higher education is Australia’s largest services export. It plays a
significant role in the economies of Victoria and New South Wales, as
Victoria’s largest and New South Wales’ second largest export.[186]
2.186
Japan (and the Republic of Korea) are important education partners for
Australia:
The education ties that exist between Australia and the
Republic of Korea and Japan make a significant contribution to the economic,
political and cultural relationship with the countries. Continued engagement
and collaboration with both countries on education policy and sharing of best
practice will enable Australia to play a leading role in providing world class
quality international education.[187]
2.187
Japanese student numbers have declined however—in 2010, there were 9,200
students compared with 14,000 in 2002, making Japan Australia’s twelfth largest
source of international students.[188] According to Austrade,
Australia’s education relationship with Japan remains strong with Japanese
students increasingly likely to undertake short-term study rather than a full
degree course.[189]
2.188
Further, Australia continues to be a premier destination for Japanese
school study tours and working holiday makers, and there are a significant number
of university-to-university linkages between the two countries.[190]
2.189
The Committee heard about the challenges faced by Japan’s higher
education sector in developing a globally literate workforce that is
increasingly demanded by employers. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
and Austrade explained that:
Japan’s international competitiveness is increasingly
determined by its ability to develop a globally literate workforce capable of
developing and expanding overseas markets for Japanese products and services.
Japan today faces a contracting domestic market and mounting competition from
neighbouring countries...
Japanese companies are increasingly looking to extend their
overseas operations, in particular seeing the emerging economies of Asia as not
just cheaper production locations, but as attractive markets to penetrate.
However, at the same time, there is widespread realisation that Japan’s
education and training systems are largely failing to supply the quality of
human resources capable of negotiating these challenges.[191]
2.190
Significant investment is being made by Japanese companies to develop
the competency of their staff in the following areas:
- English language
ability with real world applicability;
- Cross-cultural
understanding, diversity in thinking, and an ability to adapt to different
environments; and
- Global leadership
skills to lead the development and expansion of overseas markets, and to
transfer that know-how to local staff.[192]
2.191
Japanese universities are responding to the challenge of producing globally-literate
recruits by devoting resources into internationalising their campuses through
recruiting international students and introducing courses taught in English
into curricula. There remains a prevailing view however that overseas study is
necessary to develop global literacy.[193]
2.192
Austrade has tapped into this with its major marketing initiative,
Global Human Capital Development, which is:
… positioning Australia as a preferred supplier of high-end
educational services and programs for global human capital development.
Austrade is assisting Australian educational institutions and providers to
create tailored solutions for Japanese corporate and educational institutions
to develop more globally competent human resource management capabilities.[194]
Delegation discussions
Kyoto Consortium
2.193
During its visit to Japan, the Committee met with the Consortium of
Universities in Kyoto (the Consortium).
2.194
Established in 1994, the Consortium comprises 50 local universities and
150,000 students. Its purpose is to promote overseas cooperation and exchange,
and it has alliances with universities in Boston, USA and Victoria, Australia.
The Consortium’s mission statement indicates that its member universities will
provide mutual cooperation and support to:
- promote ‘academic
internationalisation’ for students and international mobility for staff;
- educate students for
‘Global Citizenship’; and
- provide opportunities
for exchange studies.[195]
2.195
During its visit, the delegation heard that the Consortium had been
collaborating with several Victorian universities and the Gordon Institute of
TAFE since 2009, offering short term study abroad programs as well as
professional development programs for university staff.
2.196
Figures provided by the Consortium indicated that about 39 students had
undertaken a study tour and 37 staff had a staff exchange or professional
development program in Victoria between 2010 and 2012. A smaller number—about
17 students and 5 staff—had participated in programs in Kyoto.
2.197
The delegation heard about the opportunities for graduates with Japanese
language skills in small and medium sized enterprises that are currently
experiencing difficulties attracting employees, and the relevance of overseas
experience to recruitment opportunities. Consortium representatives considered
there were opportunities to be gained from Australian universities’ experience
in industry collaboration.
2.198
On its return to Australia, the Committee sought further information
from two educational institutions with links to the Kyoto Consortium.
2.199
Mr Andrew Palmer of Gordon TAFE, known as The Gordon, explained that the
Consortium has sought to establish a brand for their member universities
through which ‘they promote their consortium members as providing particular or
extra opportunities to students that non-member universities would not be able
to offer.’ In particular:
It was designed to give private universities a bit of, I
suppose, bulk buying power. Individual universities probably did not have the
connections both locally and internationally and maybe did not have the funding
or the resources to be able to develop opportunities such as overseas study and
cultural exchange. By coming together as a consortium they were able to
leverage that a bit better. Students at the consortium member universities are
able to enrol for units of study at other consortium members and get credit
transfer for those things—and they were looking to do the same overseas.[196]
2.200
Mr Palmer explained that The Gordon became involved with the Consortium
at a time when there was growing concern in Japan about the effect demographic
changes were having on Japanese universities and enrolment numbers.[197]
The Gordon considered there was potential for it to be involved with the
Consortium in short term study tours and English language studies.[198]
2.201
Mr Palmer indicated that the benefits to involvement in the Consortium
included the opportunities for professional development and access to more
vocationally relevant study tours for students.[199]
2.202
Mr Ben Stubbs of the Deakin University English Language Institute told
the Committee that the Consortium was very interested in engaging with
Victorian universities, due in part to their regard for the universities but
also because of their perception of Melbourne as a ‘more European older type of
sophisticated city’ that accords with perceptions of their own city.[200]
Mr Stubbs explained:
There is very much a prestige value of who they associate
with.
… the second tier universities have had trouble knowing how
to engage with people. The consortium in a sense is becoming a mechanism for
the universities that do not have exchange agreements, study abroad agreements
or English-language programs to match like-minded centres or like-minded
universities.[201]
2.203
Mr Stubbs considered the Consortium provided the opportunity to create
linkages with universities and give students an opportunity to undertake an
overseas study experience that is credited towards their course requirements.[202]
2.204
Mr Stubbs also indicated that there is a strong push from the Japanese
Government for students to improve their communication skills. To build ‘Global
Human Capital’, students are being encouraged to undertake an overseas study
experience—an ‘English plus a university study abroad program’.[203]
2.205
Victorian universities, including Deakin, Swinburne and Victoria
University have signed contracts with a Tokyo university to deliver an English
and study abroad program at each university from 2014.[204]
Mr Stubbs also saw relationship building between universities as key to increasing
the number of Australian students going overseas to study.[205]
2.206
While noting that collaboration with the Kyoto Consortium is relatively
new, the Committee considers the Australian Government should continue to
support opportunities for Australian educational institutions to build and strengthen
links with overseas institutions.
Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme
2.207
While in Japan, the Committee delegation travelled to Kobe to meet with
Australian participants in the Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme (JET).
2.208
JET has been operating for 26 years and is aimed at promoting
grass-roots international exchange between Japan and other nations. As at 1
July 2012, there were 4,360 people from 40 countries, including 262
Australians, participating in the program.[206] JET is administered by
the Japanese Council of Local Authorities for International Relations in
cooperation with local government organisations; the Minister of Internal
Affairs and Communications; the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; and the Ministry
of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. Applicants apply to the
Japanese Embassy in their country of citizenship, which also conducts the
interview process and then training sessions for successful applicants. Living
expenses for participants are subsidised by the Japanese Government.
2.209
The reception with current JET participants offered delegation members a
useful first-hand insight into the program. Recruited from all over Australia,
the reception attendees were mostly employed as Assistant Language Teachers.
The majority had been with the program around two years, with the longest
participant in his seventh year. Participants were generally highly positive
about their experiences and recommended that Australia establish a similar
program.
Cultural understanding
2.210
The AJBCC identified the significance of branding to opportunities in
the international education sector, arguing it is not only the quality of the
education but the perception of the country that is important. There is a need
to move beyond generalisations of Australia as a ‘beach, a farm and a quarry’
so that Japanese students understand ‘we are a clever country in a number of
areas’.[207]
2.211
Further, it is not just language learning, but also cultural
understanding that is important. Sir Rod Eddington described language without
an understanding of culture as a ‘sterile exercise’.[208]
Mr Ben Stubbs of Deakin University also emphasised the importance of
international students gaining cultural understanding and experiencing Western
culture firsthand.[209] The Committee agrees
with that view.
2.212
Noting the priority that the Government has placed upon Japanese
learning in the Australia in the Asian Century White Paper and that
Japanese is the most widely taught language in Australian schools[210],
the Committee sees merit in a program styled on the Japanese JET program that
would contribute to building relationships and cultural understanding.
Recommendation 2 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
investigate establishment of a complementary program to the Japan Exchange
and Teaching Programme (JET) to facilitate improved cross cultural links
between Australia and Japan. |
Tourism
2.213
Tourism is one of Australia’s main services exports. The Department of
Resources, Energy and Tourism described tourism as:
… an effective avenue of establishing the people to people
linkages necessary to forge closer cultural ties from which Australia’s
strategic and commercial interests may be more effectively pursued with Japan
and Korea.[211]
2.214
Australia has some distinct advantages in the tourism market. Mr Simon
Westaway of Tourism Australia told the Committee:
[Australia has] an extremely compelling advantage over the
rest of the world. Our nature and environment is very difficult for other
markets to replicate … our blue skies, our clean air, some of the best and
freshest seafood in the world, the freshest beef, and welcoming people…[212]
2.215
A key challenge for the tourism industry, however, is:
… how we get the visitors around the country as much as we
can as cost-effectively as we can and give them the types of experiences that
will get them to come back …[213]
The Japanese market
2.216
Japan is an important tourism market for Australia. Formerly Australia’s
largest inbound tourism market in the 1980s and early 1990s, it remains the
fifth largest by visitation and fifth largest by expenditure, delivering around
$1.4 billion to the Australian economy annually.[214]
2.217
Together, Japan and Korea account for nearly 10 percent of total tourism
exports and just over 10 percent of total visitors.[215]
This compares with the small number overseas trips taken annually by
Australians to each country.[216]
2.218
Mr Simon Westaway of Tourism Australia provided the following summary of
the Japanese market since 2007:
It is a market that is much maligned, but it is coming back.
We had the tragic circumstances around the tsunami and earthquake there in
2011; but it did stop, with some quite impressive growth returning to that
market. To give you some quick statistics: from the calendar year 2007, we had,
in essence, 574,000 visitors from Japan. By 2009, that fell down to 355,000
visitors. In 2010 it had jumped up to 398,000, but the disastrous impact of the
quake and tsunami there in early 2011 saw the numbers fall back to 332,000—a 16
per cent drop. On the current numbers, we are at around 350,000 annual visitors
from Japan, so it is coming back.
2.219
Mr Westaway predicted that tourist numbers could increase to 450,000 a
year, and possibly 500,000, over the next decade.[217]
2.220
Tourism Australia’s Market Profile for Japan provides the following key
statistics and predictions for the Japanese market:
- arrivals from Japan
peaked in 1997, and declined on average 6.8 percent annually between 2001 and
2011;
- in addition to the
Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011, arrivals dropped in the aftermath of the
Asian Financial Crisis in 1997, with the outbreak of SARS and other influenzas
also affecting travel demand between 2002 and 2009;
- Japan’s top five
outbound destinations in 2011 were China, the United States, Korea, Taiwan and
Thailand. Australia ranked 14th;
- excluding North East
Asian countries, Japan’s top five outbound destinations in 2011 were the United
States, Thailand, France, Germany and Singapore. Australia ranked 10th among
‘out of region’ destinations;
- aviation capacity on
the Japan-Australia route declined in 2011. Recent years have seen the
withdrawal of direct services to Perth, Brisbane and Melbourne, significantly
reducing capacity;
- Jetstar became the
key airline to Japan in 2009 and will remain a significant carrier,
particularly for Queensland. Qantas, JAL and Singapore Airlines also carry
significant numbers of visitors to Australia;
- Jetstar Japan’s
launch in 2012 is expected to improve connectivity from more cities in Japan to
Australia;
- Australia and Japan
signed an open skies agreement in September 2011; and
- new Japanese low cost
carriers Peach and AirAsia are expected to increase Japanese demand for travel
to short-haul destinations.[218]
Composition of the market and key attractions
2.221
Most Japanese visitors to Australia fall into the leisure and visiting
friends and relatives categories. Tourism Australia told the Committee that
leisure holiday makers are coming:
… for the experience of Australia. They are attracted as much
by our modern cities, such as Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, as by our nature.
The most compelling element for an Asian visitor generally, without putting a
badge on that saying, is our world-class nature, and the accessibility of that
nature. … The Great Barrier Reef is still an extremely important trigger for
visiting Australia. … Sydney is a well desired experience. Interestingly,
Tasmania is also an appealing experience, particularly for visitors who have
already been to Australia once and are looking for a great natural experience
of the kind that Tasmania provides.
… Food and wine, as we call that component—our cuisine—is
also becoming a bit of a driver.[219]
2.222
Uluru is another important destination that ‘has been holding up pretty
well’, with proactive approaches by tourism providers. Tourism Australia
indicated that it is currently working with Qantas, Virgin Australia and
Jetstar on good connectivity with international flights. Mr Westaway told the
Committee:
… accessibility to flights and that seamless connection are
really important, because if you start to break up people’s trips you can break
up the opportunity to visit.[220]
2.223
The Committee met with Tourism Australia’s Regional Manager for Japan,
Mr Kaz Hori during its visit to Tokyo. Mr Hori told the delegation that most
Japanese travellers to Australia are repeat visitors that are generally looking
for greater choice and a more in-depth experience. Some of the opportunities
identified in discussions to promote Australia’s clean and green reputation
included eco-tourism (an area where Australia is competitive with other
destinations), local food and wine experiences, and working holidays. Other
opportunities are presented by school groups learning English (the ‘Overseas in
School’ market).
2.224
The delegation noted that brochures available at Tourism Australia’s
office in Japan (and targeted to Japanese travellers) focussed on world
heritage, wildlife, food and wine, cruises and train travel (such as the Ghan and
Indian Pacific), events, Indigenous culture and lifestyle.
Issues
2.225
The Committee heard that there are a number of factors that have
impacted on the Japanese tourism market for Australia. These factors include a
shift amongst Japanese travellers to short-haul destinations, increasing
competition from other markets, and air service changes. The quality of
Australian tourism infrastructure and the high Australian dollar are also
contributing factors.
Short haul destinations
2.226
In Japan, Mr Kaz Hori told the Committee that 17 million people travel
from Japan each year, with 70 percent of these travellers visiting short haul
destinations no more than three hours away, including South Korea, China,
Taiwan and Guam.
2.227
The delegation heard that the shift to shorthaul affordable destinations
can be attributed to a number of factors, including 9/11, SARS, the Global
Financial Crisis and the Great East Japan Earthquake. Many Japanese travellers
are also simply time poor, resulting in neighbouring cities becoming more desirable
tourist destinations.
2.228
Tourism Australia also considered the increase in low-cost carriers, a
phenomenon that ‘has just started to take hold in Japan’ to be a factor. The
rise of low-cost carriers has meant:
… people are travelling more often to more places but are
generally taking shorter trips … They have changed the market.[221]
Competition from other destinations
2.229
Australia as an ‘out of region’ destination for Japanese travellers is
competing with ‘Hawaii through to the Maldives then through to Europe and the
US’. Tourism Australia described Australia’s performance as an out of region
destination as ‘about average’.[222]
2.230
The Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism commented that a number
of economies in the region, including Japan, are ‘seeking to develop tourism as
a way of diversifying their economic base’. As a result, Australia is facing
competition not only from traditional competitors, such as Hawaii and Palau,
but also Macau, Singapore, Guam and the Philippines.[223]
2.231
The value of the Japanese yen against the Australian dollar has also
made package holidays, which are the main travel segment, less competitive when
compared with other nearby travel destinations.[224]
Air services
2.232
Tourism Australia told the Committee about changes in air services
between Australia and Japan. In 2007, around 123,000 travellers came to
Australia on Japan Airlines. In 2011, this figure was 43,000, which:
For the flag carrier … is a huge change in that particular
market.[225]
2.233
For the same period, Jetstar increased from 66,000 passengers to 155,000
and Qantas declined from 273,000 to 53,000.[226]
2.234
Tourism Australia made several comments about the changes in air
services:
Jetstar is now the predominant flyer in the market. Japan
Airlines had significantly cut back capacity; however, we are hopeful that they
will put some more capacity back in due course. Qantas have a constant between
Sydney and Tokyo, but the majority of Qantas group’s flights are with Jetstar.[227]
2.235
With regard to Japan Airlines:
… Japan Airlines have been reducing their capacity into
Australia, and that is big when you have the flag carriers changing their
patterns. It is well documented that Japan Airlines had significant financial
issues. That has seen a decline: the reduction of service such as withdrawing
from Brisbane, which Japan Airlines did about 18 months ago from memory—that
was a significant hit to the industry just because it was a well-patronised
route.[228]
2.236
Mr Justin Wastnage of the Tourism Transport Forum told the Committee
that Japan is ‘unique’ amongst Australia’s tourist markets as it is
predominantly a low-cost carrier market. Jetstar operates flights between
Cairns, Darwin and the Gold Coast to Tokyo, as well as from Cairns, Darwin, the
Gold Coast and Sydney to Osaka in central Japan.[229]
2.237
More generally, the Tourism Transport Forum pointed out that through the
air liberalisation policies of successive governments, any pressures in the
Japanese (and Korean) markets are more commercial than regulatory with both
markets a role model for other Asian markets. Neither market has any
significant barriers to air transport.[230]
Jetstar Japan
2.238
The Committee delegation was pleased to have the opportunity in Tokyo to
hear about Jetstar’s investment in Japan through the establishment of Jetstar
Japan.
2.239
The delegation was informed that Jetstar has been working with carriers
in Japan, Hong Kong and the Pacific to develop low cost markets in these
countries. Aviation is the last major industry to be deregulated in Japan and
the low cost carrier is a new model in the Japanese market, directly competing
with the train system.
2.240
Jetstar Japan is a partnership between Qantas/Jetstar, JAL, Mitsubishi
Corporation and Century Tokyo Leasing. Established in September 2011 following
four years of negotiations, the airline is one of three low cost carriers in
Japan. Operations commenced on 3 July 2012 with a focus on flights up to five
hours.
2.241
Senior executives told delegation members that Jetstar Japan’s
management combines low cost expertise with Japanese cultural understanding to
create a model that is different to Jetstar Australia. Foreign operations in
Japan are required to have a Japanese Chief Executive Officer. Chief Executive
Officer, Ms Miyuki Suzuki expected Jetstar Japan to be successful because
Jetstar is already operating in 17 countries, has good brand recognition and a
quality connection to Qantas and therefore Australia.
2.242
This view was echoed in discussions with Tourism Australia. Mr Kaz Hori
expressed the view that Jetstar Japan would provide the opportunity for
Japanese travellers to use Jetstar domestically to build comfort with the
brand.
2.243
Mr Justin Wastnage of the Tourism Transport Forum also commented:
… looking briefly at the story of Jetstar Japan: the
impartation of an Australian brand in Japan we think is key in keeping
relations going and keeping the brand establishment of Australia and Australian
brands alive … they reinforce the image of Australia…[231]
2.244
From the Tourism Transport Forum’s viewpoint, Jetstar Japan is also
significant as it:
… demonstrates the openness of the Japanese market to
Australian businesses in opening up such joint ventures.[232]
2.245
The Committee notes that since its visit shortly after the airline
commenced operations, Jetstar Japan has announced three new domestic
destinations and increased its fleet to nine aircraft.[233]
The airline is leading its competitors in the low cost carrier market in Japan
and is forecast to carry more than 1.5 million passengers in its first year of
operations.[234]
Marketing
2.246
The Asia Marketing Fund, announced in the Government’s 2012-13 Budget,
provides $48.5 million over four years to promote Australia as a tourism
destination in Asia. The Fund is intended to allow Tourism Australia to
significantly increase its footprint in Asia (the source of 40 percent of all international
visitors in 2011) and build on the updated ‘There’s Nothing Like Australia’
campaign. Reinvigorating marketing in Japan will be one of the initial
projects.[235]
2.247
In terms of marketing to the Japanese market, the Committee heard about
a focus on what is described as the ‘affluent middles’—affluent, older Japanese
people as well as targeted campaigns towards people who have either been to
Australia before or have a connection to Australia.[236]
2.248
Mr Westaway highlighted the impact of airline models, such as Jetstar,
in targeting travellers:
Jetstar’s Jetstar Japan operation in particular target a
different consumer, in Australia and in Japan, and it is proving to be a very
successful business already. We think that, with the way that they go direct to
market in terms of distribution through the web, the way that they operate, we
are going to see a growth in the youth segment coming here from Japan. … I
think the sweet spot is the more affluent middle-class, in all of these Asian
markets, quite frankly. We do think we can re-engage the youth market with
Australia, but it will take time. [237]
2.249
Tourism Australia is also focussed on expanding awareness of
destinations such as the Kimberley, Bungle Bungles, and Cape Leveque as well as
reinforcing awareness of existing popular destinations such as Sydney and
Queensland.[238]
Tourism investment
2.250
In its submission, the Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism
emphasised the historical significance of Japanese investment in the Australian
tourism industry, whereby Japanese investment in the 1980s created:
… a hotel and resort infrastructure for the rapid expansion
of Australia as an international tourist destination. Investments were heavily
concentrated in prestigious hotels and resorts in popular tourist destinations.
Queensland received more than half of the total Japanese investment in the
hotel resorts market, particularly around the Gold Coast and Cairns.[239]
2.251
Mr Bob Seidler of the AJBCC told the Committee:
… we should not forget … that we would not have a tourism
industry if it were not for the Japanese. If you had a look around the country,
almost every major hotel that was built around Australia has been built by
Japanese money.[240]
2.252
Property investment plummeted however in the early 1990s with the
weakening of the Japanese economy.[241]
2.253
In its submission, the Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism
stated:
Investing in new products that are relevant to changing
demographics is critical to determining the attractiveness of a tourism
destination. Increased investment in tourism is essential to drive long-term
profitability, capacity and innovation in Australia’s tourism industry.[242]
2.254
A key challenge is to ensure Australia has quality tourism products and
services ‘required to move up the international tourism value chain’ and remain
internationally competitive. The Department considered this particularly
important for Australia:
… because Australia’s higher labour costs means that tourism
products and services are often more expensive than those of competitor
destinations. Without sufficient levels of additional investment, Australia’s
tourism product will fail to offer increasingly sophisticated tourists the
necessary value for money required to justify paying higher prices. This is
particularly true for the Japanese and Korean markets.[243]
2.255
The Committee heard about a five year partnership commenced in July 2012
between Tourism Australia, the Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism and
Austrade. Tourism Australia told the Committee that tourism is one of four new
investment priorities for Austrade and that this partnership:
… is about us working with Austrade in international markets,
promoting foreign investment in tourism product in Australia—from resorts,
accommodation and theme parks through to experiences. That is early days, but
we are quite excited by what is out there. A well-known firm, JL Ellis, is
saying that we might see the strongest levels of foreign investment in
Australian tourism products since 2007 this year.[244]
2.256
When asked about the reasons for strong investment, Mr Simon Westaway
stated:
Australia is a very attractive place to invest. Hotel yields
are better than residential and commercial at the moment. Places like Perth,
Sydney and Brisbane are getting very high hotel yield rates. Perhaps demand is
ahead of supply—that could be part of that driver. We are seeing the
attractiveness of Australia as a safe place to invest; good country, good rule
of law and we get 6 million international visitors a year, and lots of
Australians travel regularly. And there is a great business market underneath a
leisure market. There are some very good reasons. In fact, I think that
Australia probably has not promoted itself strongly enough to the international
market—that we are such an appealing proposition.[245]
2.257
Mr Westaway indicated that one of the contributions that Tourism
Australia is making to the partnership is its international marketing
experience. One of the goals is not only to attract travellers to Australia,
but to ensure that they stay for as long as possible and travel within the
country as much as possible, including to regional areas.[246]
2.258
The Tourism Investment Regional Fund will provide around $8.5 million
over the next four years to help regional areas to develop or refurbish
accommodation in areas with ‘world-class’ tourist attractions, but without
accommodation of a corresponding standard.[247]
A clever and interesting country
2.259
The Committee was interested to hear in its overseas discussions about
other approaches to marketing Australia that move beyond the image of Australia
as a friendly destination. For example, Austrade’s Australia Unlimited campaign
is focussed on promoting Australia as a clever and interesting country and
building its profile in business, science, education, technology, creativity
and not-for-profit activity.[248]
Financial services
2.260
Japan has the world’s second-largest pool of investable wealth with the
largest asset management market in Asia.[249] According to the AJBCC,
Japan has approximately US$21 trillion of investable funds, with about 54
percent held in cash.[250]
2.261
A number of Australian financial services firms are active in Japan,
including ANZ, National Australia Bank, Commonwealth Bank of Japan, First State
Investments, Macquarie Capital Securities (Japan) Limited, and AMP Capital
Investors KK.[251]
2.262
According to the AJBCC, unlike Australia, Japan does not have a range of
investment products nor do institutions have the design capacity. In contrast:
We have a fantastic design capability, because we have a very
competitive financial services market.[252]
2.263
Accordingly, Japan’s financial institutions:
… are now recognising that acquiring, or having a
relationship with an Australian investment management firm, will give them
sophisticated product design capability as well as the opportunity to
participate in our growing funds management industry.[253]
2.264
In discussing the important links between Australia and Japan, the AJBCC
highlighted the financial services sector, citing Dai-ichi Life’s acquisition
of the Tower insurance group and Mitsubishi UFJ Trust Bank acquiring a 15 per
cent share of AMP Capital. The AJBCC commented that these represent:
... the financial resources of Japan being put together with
the intellectual property around financial services in Australia…[254]
2.265
In evidence to the Committee, the ANZ highlighted it has a significant
presence in both Japan and South Korea and its strategy is to become a
super-regional bank. Head of Super Regional Business Development, Mr Robert
Bell told the Committee:
… we see our role in the region as providing seamless banking
across a number of countries in the Asia-Pacific, providing financial services
to customers. For this reason Australia’s bilateral relationships are really
central to our own strategy, so anything that would help improve those
relationships is obviously a benefit to us, and we see it as a way of helping
our customers across the region.[255]
2.266
ANZ is a major facilitator of investment into Australia and focusses on
the following areas: natural resources, oil and gas, infrastructure projects,
agriculture, electronics, telecommunications, manufacturing and diversified
industrials.[256]
2.267
Mr Bell told the Committee that Japanese investment is ‘flowing heavily’
particularly outside Japan. ANZ facilitates this through building relationships
in Japan and helping large Japanese trading houses to understand the Australian
market and establish contacts.[257]
2.268
When asked about ANZ’s future focus, Mr Bell told the Committee:
We see Japan and Korea as being absolutely critical if you
want to be in the greater Asian piece. Some people might think about just
focussing on high-growth Indonesia or China because of the headline growth. But
the reality of Australian investment in those countries is that Japan is also
in those countries and heavily invested in those countries. If you want to
capture businesses who are operating in multiple countries then you have to be
in Japan and Korea.[258]
Australian products in Japan
2.269
Given the importance of Australia’s agricultural and food exports to
Japan, the Committee delegation particularly sought the opportunity provided by
its visit to see Australian products on sale in Japan.
2.270
Accompanied by Ms Melanie Brock from Meat and Livestock Australia, the
delegation visited two supermarkets in Tokyo where Australian products are
available. One of these, Life, is a major supermarket chain in Japan and sells
Australian beef exclusively. Since 2010, Life has also sold Australian lamb.
2.271
In 2011, Australia supplied 70 percent of Japan’s beef imports, which
comprised 39 percent of the total market share in Japan. Ms Brock briefed the
delegation about the common branding of Australian beef as ‘Aussie Beef’ and
lamb as ‘Aussie Lamb’, an approach that has not been adopted in relation to
other products, which are therefore competing against each other.
2.272
In Kyoto, the delegation visited AEON supermarket to experience the
‘Australia Fair’ promotion which ran from 20 to 22 July 2012. AEON is one of
five partners in Austrade’s ‘Taste of Tomorrow’ program, one of its major
marketing initiatives in Japan.[259] AEON owns or franchises
over 5,100 stores worldwide. It is a major supermarket chain in Japan with
quality Australian produce, including fresh, particularly counter-seasonal,
Australian fruit and vegetables in its Japanese stores.[260]
The delegation received a very warm welcome at the supermarket and appreciated
the opportunity to see the range of Australian products. This included: beef,
salmon and other seafood, frozen yoghurt, macadamia nuts, cheese (fetta and
brie), fruit juice (carrot, peach, passionfruit, tropical and mango), oranges,
wine, Tim Tams, Nutella, chocolate (Milky Way, M&Ms), beef jerky, salt and
stock cubes.
2.273
The visit attracted the attention of a number of shoppers, who expressed
enthusiasm to delegates about Australian products.
2.274
While in Tokyo, the delegation also had the opportunity to visit Tsukiji
Wholesale Market, where it witnessed the tuna auction and toured the fisheries
and agricultural sections of the market. The market, established in 1935,
occupies a 23 hectare site, comprising the inner market (where wholesale
business takes places) and outer market (retail area and restaurants).
2.275
The delegation was informed that 94 percent of fish in the Tokyo
metropolitan area passes through this market. In 2011, 497,082 tonnes of fish
passed through the market, an average of 1,821 tonnes per day. In the same
period 308,582 tonnes of vegetables passed through the market. Produce is
sourced both domestically and from around the world, including tuna and lobster
from Australia.
Marketing
2.276
The Committee was particularly interested in the approach that Meat and
Livestock Australia has taken to marketing. Mr Andrew McCallum told the
Committee that the MLA’s marketing is industry funded, with expenditure of
around $9 million per annum in Japan. Initially focussed on creating a clear
country-of-origin differentiation and recognition of the Australian logo, MLA
has also sought to position Australian brands in the market:
So we provide an umbrella marketing approach for
identification, and below that sit individual brands with individual quality
attributes.[261]
2.277
In Japan, Ms Brock explained some of the marketing activities currently
being undertaken by Meat and Livestock Australia, including promotions
specifically targeted at women and older people, and focussed on the specific
health benefits of meat. For example, it has been found that about 70 percent
of Japanese women are iron deficient. One particular promotion is MLA’s ‘Iron
Beauties’, who work as ambassadors to promote health benefits to Japanese
women.
2.278
Mr Andrew McCallum told the Committee that this strategy arose from
efforts to differentiate Australian products from competing products.
Nutrition, and iron in particular, was identified as a potential point of
differentiation for Australian beef based on research with Japanese consumers.
This led to the establishment of the Iron Beauties program. According to Mr
McCallum, the rationale is that if Australia owns this particular message, it will
drive consumption of Australian beef, particularly given Japanese women are the
principal shoppers.[262]
2.279
Mr McCallum told the Committee:
We have done a lot of work as an industry in research and
understanding what consumers want … We have positioned our product quite
clearly in terms of differentiating from our competitors on the basis of our
safety, quality and reliability of supply attributes.[263]
2.280
The delegation saw opportunities to use MLA’s model of creating an
‘umbrella’ marketing campaign through the ‘Aussie Beef’ and ‘Aussie Lamb’
promotions as a mechanism that could be used effectively for other Australian
products. The benefits of this approach could include a reduction in
competition between individual Australian brands, improved customer awareness, and
the opportunity to utilise Japanese perceptions of Australian food as safe,
high quality products.
Recommendation 4 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
showcase the benefits of a coordinated approach to marketing, such as that used
by Meat and Livestock Australia, in its export facilitation activities. |
Government assistance
2.281
The Committee notes that Austrade and the Department of Innovation,
Industry, Science and Research have an important role in identifying and
assisting Australian business to access international opportunities.
2.282
Austrade has three broad pillars to its activities: education marketing,
investment opportunities and export opportunities.[264]
At a broad level, Austrade’s trade and investment initiatives aim to:
- build better brand
awareness of Australian capability;
- break down barriers
to market entry;
- develop new market
sectors for Australia;
- expand market share;
and
- create new pathways
to market.[265]
2.283
Austrade’s major marketing initiatives within Japan, which have been referred
to elsewhere in the report, are:
- Taste of Tomorrow
Food Safety, which aims to raise the profile of Australia’s food safety,
reliability and integrity;
- PPP Infrastructure,
which aims to position Australia as a sophisticated provider of infrastructure and
related services using the PPP financing model;
- Australia and
Japan in Asia, which facilitates collaboration between Australian and
Japanese businesses in third-country markets in Asia;
- Growth and
Diversification of Japanese FDI, particularly into areas that support the
Government’s clean energy priorities;
- Global Human
Capital Development, which positions Australia as a preferred supplier of
high-end educational services and programs for global human capital
development;
- Online Retail,
which is assisting Australian businesses to take advantage of on-line
opportunities; and
- Women in Business,
which is leveraging Japan’s need to incorporate more women into its workforce.[266]
2.284
In addition to Austrade’s activities, Meat and Livestock Australia told
the Committee of the value of the agricultural counsellor network in the
Australian Embassies, which they described as:
… invaluable in terms of their networks and their
relationships with their counterparts. So if we do have an issue of any sort,
they have the entrée that industry may not have via a government to government
relationship. We value that resource very highly and we work very closely with
them in market to pursue a whole lot of issues in terms of potential
regulations that may impact us and changes in legislation. That is a useful
network to have and to be made available to us as a sector. We would encourage
government to maintain those positions.[267]
2.285
Government assistance is also provided through the Export Finance and
Insurance Corporation, which provides export credit, guarantee and insurance
services to viable Australian exporters investing overseas that are unable to
obtain private market support.[268]
2.286
The Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research is also
actively engaged in developing Australia’s trade and investment relationship
with both Japan and Korea. The Department is focussed upon making companies
export ready. Austrade then helps those companies to access overseas markets.[269]
2.287
The Department outlined to the Committee its key programs:
- Enterprise Connect,
which helps improve business productivity, increase competitiveness and build
business capacity to capitalise on opportunities for growth;
- Supplier Access to
Major Projects (SAMP), which helps link Australian industry to major Australian
and international projects; and
- The state-based
Industry Capability Network, which is funded through the SAMP.[270]
2.288
Through the SAMP and the Industry Capability Network, Australian
companies have gained access to a number of supply chain opportunities in Japanese
(and Korean) projects, particularly in the resources sector.[271]
Concluding comments
2.289
The strength of the relationship between Australia and Japan was
reinforced to the Committee throughout this inquiry. Both countries benefit
greatly from what the other country has to offer.
2.290
In the resources and energy sector, Japanese investment, beginning in
the 1960s, helped build an industry that now supplies 85 percent of the value
of Australia’s exports to Japan. As Japan currently reviews its energy policy,
there are ongoing opportunities for Australia, including in LNG, renewable
energy, energy efficiency and low-emission technologies.
2.291
Australia’s agricultural exports to Japan contribute to its ongoing food
security, while our imports from Japan, such as cars and other manufactured
goods, are in high demand by Australian consumers.
2.292
As Japan’s engagement with its key trading partners changes and Japan
moves toward trade liberalisation and agricultural reform, Australia’s FTA with
Japan will be a significant milestone. The Committee strongly supports the
Government’s efforts to conclude a comprehensive agreement and considers
negotiations should continue to be prioritised.
2.293
When concluded, the FTA will be Japan’s first agreement with one of its
top six trading partners and its first with a major developed economy.[272]
The agreement will expand trade and investment between Australia and Japan and
offer numerous benefits to both countries.
2.294
Comprehensive agricultural outcomes will be necessary, however, to
address the many tariff and non-tariff barriers imposed by Japan in the
agricultural sector. The Japanese Government has recognised the need for
domestic reform to maintain Japan’s international competitiveness and has
committed to trade liberalisation (including agricultural reform).[273]
While the Committee heard the concerns of Japanese parliamentarians and their
constituents during its visit to Japan about the possible impact of the FTA on
Japanese agriculture, the Committee considers there are many potential positive
outcomes that should also be recognised.
2.295
The Committee also notes that a commitment to comprehensive trade
liberalisation is a prerequisite to admission to negotiations for the Trans
Pacific Partnership.
2.296
A FTA also offers opportunities to address the other barriers identified
in evidence to the inquiry, including in the services sector. Australia has
particular expertise, for example, in financial services, that is being
recognised in Japan. The Committee heard about opportunities to build
investment links through capitalising on each country’s strengths, including
through joint ventures in third countries. Such ventures utilise Australian
expertise and Japanese capital and influence.
2.297
Education and tourism are both important exports to Japan. Japanese
investment was critically important to the development of the Australian
tourism industry. Although Japanese tourist numbers have declined from their
peak in the 1990s, Japan remains an important market and the Committee supports
the efforts of Australia’s tourism industry to attract visitors. With the
growth of the low-cost carrier market in Japan, the Committee welcomed the
opportunity to learn more about Australia’s investment in this market with the
establishment of Jetstar Japan.
2.298
Current moves by Japanese universities to give students a more
international focus and build ‘Global Human Capital’ also present opportunities
for Australia, which have been recognised by the Australian Government and are
being promoted by Austrade. The Committee heard about the involvement of
particular Australian education institutions in the Consortium of Universities
in Kyoto, which offers one particular example of how the problem of creating a
globally literate workforce in Japan is being tackled. Given that education is
Australia largest services export, the Committee considers that the Government
should continue to support opportunities for Australian education institutions
to build and strengthen links with their Japanese counterparts.
2.299
The Committee considered cross cultural links between Australia and
Japan could also be improved through establishment of a complementary program
to the Japan Exchange and Training Programme run by the Japanese Government.
2.300
The Committee had several opportunities during its visit to Japan to see
how Australian products are promoted in Japanese supermarkets. The Committee
saw particular benefits to the approach taken by Meat and Livestock Australia
and has advocated showcasing MLA’s marketing in Austrade’s export facilitation
activities.
Visit to Life Supermarket, Tokyo, 16 July 2012
Delegation with Mr Joe Makano, Vice Minister for Foreign
Affairs, Tokyo, 17 July 2012
Breakfast meeting with Japanese DIET Members, Tokyo, 18 July
2012
Meeting with Jetstar Japan, Tokyo, 18 July 2012
Meeting with ANZ, Tokyo, 18 July 2012
Delegation members with Ms Melanie Brock of Meat and
Livestock Australia, Tokyo, 18 July 2012
Delegation with Australian participants in Japanese Exchange
and Teaching Programme, Kobe, 19 July 2012
Meeting with Mr Sinsaku Kumra, Vice Governor of Osaka, 20
July 2012
Visit to AEON Supermarket, Kyoto, for ‘Australia Fair’
promotion, 21 July 2012
‘Australia Fair’ promotion, AEON Supermarket, Kyoto, 21 July
2012
Delegation members with Japanese shoppers at AEON Supermarket,
21 July 2012
Tea ceremony at Fukujuen Tea Factory, Kizugawa, 19 July 2012
Delegation members with Dr Takashi Kamei, 20
July 2012
‘Australia Fair’ promotion material, AEON Supermarket Food
Note
Meat and Livestock Australia promotion in Elle magazine