The 'crazy' fight in France over the domestic VCR market in 1982

In 1982, France used every bureaucratic tool at its disposal to try to trim back the hold Japan had on the domestic market for VCRs.

French government used taxes, bureaucratic measures to try to push back against Japanese companies

A bureaucratic war

42 years ago
Duration 2:24
In 1982, France was pulling bureaucratic levers in a bid to slow the advance of Japan in the VCR market.

In 1982, Japanese companies had locked down the market in France for VCRs.

They had massive demand for their product, more customers than any other countries' manufacturers and high-end shops on the Champs-É​​​lysées with their high-tech products displayed in the windows.

Yet, they had a problem — the French government, which did not like their dominant position in the market and was doing what it could to shake things up.

First, France had tried slapping various taxes on those same VCRs, but that didn't dampen demand for them.

"Japanese sales keep soaring," the CBC's David Bazay reported on The National on Nov. 19, 1982, as he explained the situation to viewers. "Nine out of 10 video recorders sold here are made in Japan."

A bureaucratic bottleneck

label reading Made in Japan
In 1982, the French government was battling with Japanese VCR manufacturers -- a time when those companies had established a dominant position in the French market. (The National/CBC Archives)

Eventually, France used another bureaucratic measure to try to shave down the Japanese advantage in its domestic market.

"The government has decreed that all imported video recorders must now be cleared by customs at Poitiers in central France," Bazay explained.

Bazay said that meant truckloads and trainloads of VCRs had to be inspected at a facility that had just two customs agents working there.

Man with notepad looking at VCR inside a warehouse
A French customs agent is seen inspecting a Japanese-made VCR unit in Poitiers, France, in November 1982. (The National/CBC Archives)

"One agent has received instructions to get lost in paperwork," said Bazay. "The other is under orders to be extremely curious, to check the serial numbers of nearly every [VCR] set."

Indeed, The National showed viewers footage of said inspector opening individual VCR boxes, removing the units from their protective foam, and looking at the serial numbers on individual units. 

'This is crazy'

Man in suit
Ryoichi Urata, the manager of Hitachi France, said the situation involving the French government's actions in the VCR market in 1982 was "crazy." (The National/CBC Archives)

Bazay said Japanese companies had been sending 25,000 units a week to France, but the customs action "had slowed things down to a trickle."

He said the French government was justifying its actions by claiming that Japan was not buying enough French products.

Yet Ryoichi Urata, the manager of Hitachi France, saw it as a situation lacking any rationality.

"This is crazy," he told The National.

Hitachi had made moves of its own, laying off workers at its French plants. Urata said the company could "not survive" if it did not have VCRs to supply for the upcoming Christmas sale season.

Could things get worse?

VCR from the 1980s
Japanese manufacturers, such as Sony, had captured 90 per cent of the French VCR market share as of 1982. (The National/CBC Archives)

Bazay said it appeared France was poised to further intensify its actions against the foreign VCR manufacturers.

"The French government has ordered its state-owned electronics company, Thomson, to start negotiations with Grundig of Germany and Philips of Holland," he said.

"The plan? Form one huge European company to fight the Japanese."

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