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- <text id=89TT3152>
- <title>
- Nov. 27, 1989: Yellow-Peril Journalism
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 27, 1989 Art And Money
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 79
- Yellow-Peril Journalism
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Is latent racism coloring business coverage of Japan?
- </p>
- <p>By Ellis Cose
- </p>
- <p> "Under present conditions we are virtually at the mercy of
- the Japanese," editorialized the Los Angeles Times. The
- Sacramento Bee, equally indignant, warned of a planned Japanese
- "invasion of industrial fields." And in a spirited appearance
- before a congressional committee, the Bee's publisher argued for
- "protective measures." The Japanese, he fumed, were after
- nothing less than "control of the country . . . through economic
- competition."
- </p>
- <p> Those xenophobic outbursts were not made in 1989 but in
- 1920, during a time of "yellow peril" panic over Japanese
- immigration to the U.S. But they are not much different from the
- alarmed press comments that are now greeting Japan's continuing
- economic ventures. When the Sony Corp. announced in September
- that it would buy Columbia Pictures Entertainment, for example,
- Newsweek called the deal "the biggest advance so far in a
- Japanese invasion of Hollywood." An entertainment-industry
- executive quoted by the Washington Post thought the acquisition
- might be "bad for America," as did an economist who saw "a
- potential for propaganda."
- </p>
- <p> Mitsubishi Estate Co.'s purchase of controlling interest in
- the Rockefeller Group last month set off even more worrisome
- reports. JAPANESE BUY HEART OF N.Y., declared the Dallas Times
- Herald. "The roll call of all-American icons falling into
- foreigners' hands added a new name yesterday," reported
- Newsday. "When the whole house is being sold off, it doesn't
- matter much that a cherished heirloom goes as well," sobbed the
- San Jose Mercury News. The Sacramento Bee carried a photo of
- "delighted" Japanese tourists gazing at the property now
- controlled by "their countrymen."
- </p>
- <p> The less than subliminal message is that Japan Inc. is
- buying up America, a point underscored by the ubiquity of
- headlines portraying Japan -- as distinguished from Japanese
- individuals or companies -- snapping up American treasures.
- Similar coverage greeted OPEC in the 1970s, when Arab oil sheiks
- seemed ready to slap down their petrodollars and pick up America
- piece by piece. Yet even the most alarmist press scenarios of
- that era did not envision oil merchants daring to seize the home
- of the nation's Christmas tree.
- </p>
- <p> Peter G. Peterson, an American involved in the
- Sony-Columbia deal, wondered why Sony's acquisition was so
- controversial, while an Australian firm's attempted takeover of
- MGM/UA "was mainly treated by the media as a minor business news
- item." Part of the answer, he suggested in the Wall Street
- Journal, is a "media pandering to American xenophobia and latent
- racism." Sony chairman Akio Morita, noting the U.S. Government's
- World War II internment of Japanese Americans, surmised that
- Americans still see the Japanese as "strangers."
- </p>
- <p> Peterson and Morita have a point. When Australian Rupert
- Murdoch was taking substantial control of major American media
- properties (including Metromedia Inc. and 20th Century Fox),
- little was written about the dangers of media manipulation from
- Down Under. Reportage focused less on the fact that the predator
- was Australian (Murdoch has since acquired American citizenship)
- than that he was Murdoch. Nor did warnings sound when Canada's
- Thomson Newspapers acquired more than 100 papers in the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Reporting on Japanese investment has been peculiar for
- several reasons. One is that Japanese corporations are less open
- to American governance than American companies are to Japanese
- control. Also, Japan has been less than effusive in welcoming
- U.S. goods. Then too, no U.S. bureaucracy compares with Japan's
- Ministry for International Trade and Industry, an entity whose
- principal mission, some commentators believe, is to plot Japan's
- economic domination of the world.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps most troubling is that Japanese direct investment
- in the U.S. is not only three times America's investment in
- Japan but is also growing at a remarkable pace. According to
- figures compiled by the U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of
- Economic Analysis, Japan's direct investment (ownership of at
- least 10% of any one firm) in the U.S. stood at $53 billion in
- 1988, a 52% increase since 1987. Even so, Japanese direct
- investment was only one-fourth that of all Europe, about half
- that of Great Britain and roughly equal to that of the
- Netherlands. Nor was it any more one-sided than that of the
- Dutch. Neither Japan nor any other country imminently threatens
- to gain economic control over the U.S., whose nonbank
- multinational corporations have assets totaling well over $5
- trillion.
- </p>
- <p> Dismaying though the financial trends concerning Japan may
- be, economics alone cannot explain the current media attitude
- any more than the immigration levels of the early 1900s could
- explain the Nippon hysteria of those years. But modern-day Japan
- is hardly a suitable candidate for press pity. American
- reporters have a duty to be tough minded in their exploration
- of Japanese business practices. Yet publications have all too
- frequently reached for easy headlines and analyses that evoke
- some of the worse aspects of the yellow-peril era. That is
- unfortunate. For, to the extent that coverage of Japanese
- business is reduced to the 1989 equivalent of "Japanese plan
- invasion of industrial fields," journalism will be that much
- more diminished and readers that much less informed.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-