首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Kimiyuki Suda should be a perfect customer for Japan’s carmakers. He’s a young (34), successful executive at an Internet-service
Kimiyuki Suda should be a perfect customer for Japan’s carmakers. He’s a young (34), successful executive at an Internet-service
admin
2011-02-11
86
问题
Kimiyuki Suda should be a perfect customer for Japan’s carmakers. He’s a young (34), successful executive at an Internet-services company in Tokyo and has plenty of disposable income. He used to own Toyota’s Hilux Surf, a sport utility vehicle. But now he uses mostly subways and trains. "It’s not inconvenient at all, " he says. Besides, "having a car is so 20th century."
Suda reflects a worrisome trend in Japan; the automobile is losing its emotional appeal, particularly among the young, who prefer to spend their money on the latest electronic gadgets. While minicars and luxury foreign brands are still popular, everything in between is slipping. Last year sales fell 6.7 percent--7.6 percent if you don’t count the minicar market. There have been larger one-year drops in other nations: sales in Germany fell 9 percent in 2007 thanks to a tax hike. But analysts say Japan is unique in that sales have been eroding steadily over time. Since 1990, yearly new-car sales have fallen from 7.8 million to 5.4 million units in 2007.
Alarmed by this state of decay, the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association launched a comprehensive study of the market in 2006. It found a widening wealth gap, demographic changes--fewer households with children, a growing urban population--and general lack of interest in cars led Japanese to hold their vehicles longer, replace their cars with smaller ones or give up car ownership altogether. "Japan’s automobile society stands at a crossroads, "says Ryuichi Kitamura, a transport expert and professor at Kyoto University. He says he does not expect the trend to be reversed, as studies show that the younger Japanese consumers are, the less interested they are in having a car. JAMA predicts a further sales decline of 1.2 percent in 2008. Some analysts believe that if the trend continues for much longer, further consolidation in the automotive sector (already under competitive pressure) is likely.
Japanese demographics have something to do with the problem. The country’s urban population has grown by nearly 20 percent since 1990, and most city dwellers use mass transit (the country’s system is one of the best developed in the world) on a daily basis, making it less essential to own a ear. Experts say Europe, where the car market is also quite mature, may be in for a similar shift.
But in Japan, the "demotorization" process, or kuruma banare, is also driven by cost factors. Owning and driving a car can cost up to $ 500 per month in Japan, including parking fees, car insurance, toll roads and various taxes. Taxes on a $17, 000 car in Japan are 4.1 times higher than in the United States, 1.7 times higher than in Germany and 1.25 times higher than in the U. K. , according to JAMA. "Automobiles used to represent a symbol of our status, a Western, modern lifestyle that we aspired for, "says Kitamura. For today’s young people, he argues, "such thinking is completely gone."
Cars are increasingly just a mobile utility; the real consumer time and effort goes into picking the coolest mobile phones and personal computers, not the hippest hatchback. The rental-car industry has grown by more than 30 percent in the past eight years, as urbanites book weekend wheels over the Internet. Meanwhile, government surveys show that spending on cars per household per year fell by 14 percent, to $ 600, between 2000 and 2005, while spending on Net and mobile-phone subscriptions rose by 39 percent, to $1, 500, during the same period.
For Japanese car companies, the implications are enormous. "Japan is the world’s second largest market, with a 17 to 18 percent share of our global sales. It’s important, "says Takao Katagiri, corporate vice president at Nissan Motor Co. The domestic market is where Japanese carmakers develop technology and build their know-how, and if it falters, it could gut an industry that employs 7.8 percent of the Japanese work force.
While surging exports, particularly to emerging markets, have more than offset the decline in domestic sales so far, companies are looking for ways to turn the tide. Nissan, for example, is trying to appeal to the digital generation with promotional blogs and even a videogame. A racing game for Sony’s PlayStation, for example, offers players the chance to virtually drive the company’s latest sporty model, the GT-R-a new marketing approach to create buzz and tempt them into buying cars. Toyota Motors has opened an auto mall as part of a suburban shopping complex near Tokyo, hoping to attract the kinds of shoppers who have long since stopped thinking about dropping by a car dealership. It’s a bit akin to the Apple strategy of moving electronics out of the soulless superstore, and into more appealing and well-trafficked retail spaces. It worked for Apple, but then Apple is so 21st century.
It can be concluded from the passage that Japanese young people
选项
A、no longer consider owning a car as being fashionable.
B、tend to be rebellious in their choice of automobiles.
C、are becoming more reasonable when buying cars.
D、are becoming more and more interested in owning cars.
答案
A
解析
推断题。由文章第一、二段可以看出,在日本,汽车正失去它的感性吸引力,在那些更愿意把钱花在最新电子产品上的年轻人当中更是如此(the automobile is losing its emotional appeal…latest electronic gadgets)。第三段指出,日本消费者越年轻,拥有汽车的兴趣越淡漠(the younger Japanese consumers are,the less interested they are in having a car),他们认为“拥有汽车太20世纪了。”("having a car is so 20th century.”)表明对于年轻人来说,拥有汽车已不再被认为是时尚、现代的生活方式了。故[A]为答案。[D]与上述事实不符,故排除。[B]指出年轻人在选择汽车的问题上十分反叛,文章没有提及,故排除。[C]指出日本年轻人在购买汽车时越来越理性,也与文章分析年轻人迷恋最新电子产品,因而对汽车兴趣索然不符,故排除[C]
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/3OeO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Anumberoffactorsrelatedtothevoicerevealthepersonalityofthespeaker.Thefirstisthebroadareaofcommunication,wh
1"Internationalcommunication"iscommunicationbetweenmembersofdifferentcultures.Thisdefinitionissimple.Butthep
CommunicatingThroughInternetThehistoryoftheInternetcanbedatedbacktothe1960’s,whentheDepartmentof【1】______
Ifyouhaveeverdreamedofslippingintothecomfortingsoftnessofacashmeresweateryoushouldfollowtheexampleofthehab
Thepublicationof______.establishedEmersonasthemosteloquentspokesmanoftheNewEnglandTranscendentalism.
Mostdoctorsinarecentsurveysaidthatannualphysicalexaminationswereeffectivewith【M1】
A、Tohelptheconstructionofthecountry.B、Topayforthesalaryofthestaff.C、Tohelppaydebts.D、Toredecoratethemuseum
NewYorkwasoncethemurdercapitaloftheworld.Thankstothezero-tolerancepolicingpolicyintroducedbyGiuliani,themean
A、BeijingEducationalPress.B、LiaoningEducationalPress.C、LondonGuinnessWorldRecordD、IrelandGuinnessWorldRecordC
RainmakingScientificrainmakingwasstartedbyVincentJ.Schaeferaftertheyearof【1】.Alucky【2】broughthimtosuccess.
随机试题
手工钨极氩弧焊机焊炬的控制电路电压在交流时为()。
成人烧伤总面积达到多少为重度烧伤?
中药调配前对处方再次进行审查的内容不包括
28岁妇女,孕33周,初产妇,产前检查:胎背位于母体腹部右侧,胎心位于脐右上,宫底部触及浮球感,耻骨上方先露部较软,不规则,诊断为何种胎位( )
项目生命周期中,开始阶段需要完成的工作是()。
案例某化工厂位于某市开发区,占地3.3×104m2。厂区东面1km是国道,东面1.5km是条河流;南面0.5km是大片农田;西面0.5km和1km处分别有2家化工厂;北面紧邻一条公路,1km处是一个城镇,3km处是一条高速公路。该
从横向分类看,薪酬制度包括()。
小兰、小明、小强是摄影协会的成员,三人趁着寒假约好一起去韩国旅游,旅游途中为了留下更好的相片,每个人都拿着另一个人的单反相机,背着剩下一个人的背包(即不负责自己的东西)。假如背着小兰背包的人拿的是小明的单反相机,那么可以推出()。
Imustleavenow,______,ifyouwantthatbookI’llbringittoyoutomorrow.
有以下程序main(){inti,j;for(i=1;i<4;i++){for(j=i;j<4;j++)printf(“%d*%d=%d”,i,j,i*j);printf("\n")
最新回复
(
0
)