Japan’s Onward plans Bangladesh entry
Business
Kazi Azizul Islam
Onward Holdings, one of the leading Japanese textile and garment manufacturers and retailers of fashion brands, has planned to make Bangladesh the company’s third manufacturing base, industry sources said.
Officials of the Japan Bangladesh Chamber of Commerce and Industry told New Age that Onward disclosed that it had eyed Bangladesh as a manufacturing base as the country’s garment industry is attracting the company.
‘Onward aims to lay the groundwork for making Bangladesh its third manufacturing base overseas, following China and Vietnam,’ company chairman Takeshi Hirouchi was quoted in Tokyo by Japanese media on Tuesday.
Onward operates hundreds of fashion brands in Japan with its local apparel business subsidiary Onward Kashiyama Co Ltd.
Having annual sales worth $3 billion, Onward also owns European brands like Gibo, Jil Sander, Joseph, Erika, J Press and Freed of London, which are sold in stores in Spain, Italy, UK, Germany, Taiwan and China. Its Chacott is one of the world’s largest dancewear brands.
‘It is a very good thing that an important Japanese company has shown its eagerness to enter into Bangladesh market,’ said Yasuharu Shinto, head of economic cooperation department at the Japan embassy in Dhaka.
The Japanese diplomat sees the move as a sign of strength in the relation between Bangladesh and his country.
Abdul Haque, president of the JBCCI, said Onward’s entry into Bangladesh would be significant advancement in Japan-Bangladesh investment and trade relation.
‘Onward’s foray into Bangladesh will be another big venture after the Japanese giant Uniqlo started sourcing from and manufacturing in Bangladesh a year ago,’ said Haque.
Haque, who is also a director of the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry, said the government should concentrate on speedy developments of infrastructures including special industrial estates.
‘Not only the apparel manufacturers, other Japanese industrial sector entrepreneurs are set to come here, but they need ready industrial estates, gas, electricity and other infrastructures,’ he added.
Japanese apparel retailers have been increasingly showing eagerness on Bangladesh for the past couple of years or so as they search for competitive sourcing destination that could be alternative to China.
Rising wages in China are discouraging the European and Japanese importers, who have diverted their attention to Bangladesh, Indonesia, Vietnam and Cambodia.
Japan imports $28 billion worth of apparels a year while China still controls 80 per cent of the market. Vietnam is the next major source which exports to Japan $1 billion annually.
Indonesia, India and Myanmar are also significant players in Japanese market but, industry people say, Bangladesh’s garment shipments to Japan started to swell last year.
Bangladesh’s apparel shipments to Japan in January-May, 2010, amounted to $64 million, which is 167 per cent higher than the same period of 2009.
Opening of sourcing office in Dhaka last year by the Japanese retail giant Uniqlo has prompted many other Japanese companies to set their sight on Bangladesh. Top Japanese companies like Toray and Kurabo have also stared ventures in Bangladesh.