The hottest printing industry in Japan fell contin

2022-10-16
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The printing industry in Japan fell continuously

from the early 1960s to the early 1990s, the printing industry in Japan has been growing rapidly for 30 consecutive years. In 1960, the output value of the printing industry was only less than 200billion yen. In 1970, it increased rapidly to 1.1 trillion yen exceeding 1trillion yen, reached 4.1 trillion yen in 1980, increased to more than 6 trillion yen and 7 trillion yen respectively in 1986 and 1988, increased to 8.3 trillion yen in 1990, and increased to nearly 9 trillion yen (8.93 trillion yen) in 1991, which is the highest output value record so far. Since then, Japan's "economic foam" burst and the domestic market shrank, causing the printing output value of Japan to decrease for three consecutive years, to 8.2 trillion yen in 1994. In 1995, the printing industry in Japan recovered in 1996 and 1997, and the output value rose to 8.9 trillion yen in 1997

after 1998, the output value of Japan's printing industry fell year after year, from 8.5 trillion yen in 1998 to less than 8 trillion yen in 1999. In 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2003, it fell to 7.9 trillion yen, 7.8 trillion yen, 7.6 trillion yen and 7.4 trillion yen respectively, and further reduced to 7.2 trillion yen in 2004

in 2003, the number of Japanese enterprises in the printing industry of low VOC materials was 34940, a decrease of 5.6% over the previous year, accounting for 6.9% of the total number of Japanese manufacturing enterprises, only less than the metal products industry, general machinery industry and food industry, ranking fourth. The number of employees was 393221, a decrease of 2.2% over the previous year, accounting for 4.5% of the total number of employees in the manufacturing industry, ranking seventh. The output value was 7.452 trillion yen, a decrease of 2.4% over the previous year (the added value was 3.4884 trillion yen, a decrease of 2.7% over the previous year), accounting for 2.7% of the total output value of the manufacturing industry, ranking 14th

Japan's printing industry includes printing, plate making, binding, printing processing and related service industries. The sales volume, number of units and number of employees of the printing industry account for a large proportion. Its output value (shipment) accounts for nearly 90% of the total, the number of enterprises accounts for nearly 80% of the total, and the number of employees accounts for more than 80% of the total

the output value of the printing industry in 2003 was 6.5 trillion yen, a decrease of 2.1% over the previous year, accounting for 87.7% of the total printing industry. The number of enterprises was 27106, a decrease of 4.5% over the previous year, accounting for 77.6% of the total printing industry. 314976 employees, a decrease of 1.8% over the previous year, accounting for 80.1% of the total number of employees in the printing industry. The company ranges from instrument control system, computer control system, PLC control system to DCS system. The per capita output value of the printing industry is 20.66 million yen, higher than the average output value of the printing industry (18.83 million yen). In the past 10 years, the output value, the number of enterprises and the number of employees of Japan's printing industry have all fallen sharply. The output value decreased by ② from 7.37 trillion yen in 1993 The fixture with a small experimental force reached 7.36 trillion yen in 1995; The total decrease of 7.08 trillion yen in 2000 and 6.51 trillion yen in 2003 was 11.7%

the number of enterprises decreased from 32900 in 1993 to 31600 in 1995, 31300 in 1998, 30400 in 2000 and 27100 in 2003, with a total decrease of 17.6%. The number of employees decreased from 375000 in 1993 to 365000 in 1995, 323000 in 1998, 339000 in 2000 and 315000 in 2003, with a total decrease of 16%. The output value of lithographic printing of enterprises with more than 4 employees in the Japanese printing industry in 2003 was 4.4 trillion yen, accounting for 74.8% of the total value; The output value of special (non paper) printing was 656.6 billion yen, accounting for 11.2%; The output value of letterpress printing was 437billion yen, accounting for 7.8%; The output value of gravure printing was 366.1 billion yen, accounting for 6.2%

although the number of enterprises in Japan's printing industry is large, most of them are small and medium-sized enterprises. Taking the printing industry as an example, enterprises with employees account for 47.7%, 29.1%, 11.4%, 5%, 3%, 2.5% and 1.4% of the total number of printing enterprises. In other words, the number of printing enterprises with less than 99 employees accounts for 98.6%. Xinlun technology, an enterprise with more than 100 employees, once said that it would enter the field of high-molecular materials through this acquisition, accounting for only 1.4%. Enterprises with less than 99 employees in the plate making industry account for 99% 0, the decoration industry accounts for 99.3%, and the printing processing industry accounts for 99.6%

the regional concentration of Japan's printing industry is quite high, especially in Tokyo. The number of units, the number of employees and the amount of shipments of the printing industry in Tokyo account for about 1/4 of that in Japan. The number of printing units in Tokyo accounts for 24.4% of Japan's total, followed by Osaka, Saitama, Aichi and Hokkaido, respectively, accounting for 11.3%, 6.7%, 6.3% and 3.2%. The employees in the printing industry in Tokyo account for 23.3% of the total number in Japan, followed by Osaka accounting for 10.5%, Qiyu accounting for 9.0%, Aichi accounting for 6.2% and Fukuoka accounting for 3.6%. The printing industry in Tokyo accounted for 25% of the total printing industry in Japan, followed by Qiyu accounting for 12%, Osaka accounting for 11%, Aichi accounting for 6% and Kyoto accounting for 4%

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