carter fuel pump made in korea?
If you are old enough to remember the 50's/60's Japan made nothing but crap. Cheap toys etc. (they always made a good sewing machine-a copy of the Singer 15) They learned to make it better and better and now the GOOD stuff comes from Japan. In the 70's Taiwan made the cheap crap. Now they have some good stuff to sell.
That is true. It is interesting to see the large difference between Taiwanese stuff (much of which is now very good and all of which is getting better) and Chinese stuff (much of which is still utter garbage). What a difference a little freedom makes, eh! The Japanese (and the Koreans and Taiwanese after them) started out building trash because that was all they were equipped to build, and that is all the world wanted to buy from them. Culturally, both the Japanese and the Koreans have a history of valuing quality and durability. The Japanese got a big boost on that front after WWII, when American know-how (which was very good at the time) was poured in large quantity into Japan.
The Chinese, on the other hand, for many decades actively scorned such basic concepts as engineering and specialization, which they considered decadent and quaint Western affectations. Mao had a deep-seated loathing for engineers and other intellectuals, and so did everything he could to minimise their contribution to Chinese society. In the so-called Great Leap Forward, intellectuals were rounded up and shot, and Mao (who didn't know a thing about metallurgy) ordered farmers to quit farming and instead build small coal smelters on their land, melt down their farming implements and turn them into raw steel. He thought this would act as a springboard for China to have a sudden industrial revolution. What actually happened was a sudden lack of food because nobody was farming, a sudden lack of farm implements because they'd all been melted down, and a sudden glut of utterly useless metal goo that couldn't even remotely be called steel. Vast numbers of people starved to death. Think I'm exaggerating? Nope! I recently read a 1970 booklet from China entitled "China Tames Her Rivers". It is full of eye-poppingly extreme Communist propaganda, but every word of it was meant seriously, including these: "There were early attempts by traitors to hoodwink the people with such decadent Western notions as 'put technique first' and 'place specialists in charge of engineering'. These traitors were swiftly dealt with."
So, culturally, China not only has no history of valuing quality as we know it, but they actually have a strong history of violently
devaluing it. They will emerge from this, but it's going to take awhile. Unfortunately, Western MBAs don't want to wait until China figures out how to participate in the 21st century, and many of us are shortsighted enough to aggravate the problem by shopping at Wal-Mart.