Hirotaro Higuchi
Hirotaro Higuchi (樋口 廣太郎, Higuchi Hirotaro, January 25, 1926 - September 16, 2012) was a Japanese business executive, the representative director and president of The Sumitomo Bank, the representative director and president of Asahi Breweries, and the vice chairman of Keidanren.
Career
[edit]Hirotaro Higuchi was born to the family running futon shop in Kyoto in 1926.[1] He graduated from Hikone Commercial College (now, Shiga University).[2][3] and joined Nomura Securities and got a new job in Nomura Bank (later, The Daiwa Bank, now, Resona Bank).[3] After leaving Nomura Bank, he entered Kyoto University in 1946.[3] In 1949, he graduated from Kyoto University[4] and joined The Sumitomo Bank.[4]
He moved up through the ranks to the level of director of The Sumitomo Bank in 1973, managing director thereof in 1975, representative & senior managing director thereof in 1979 and the representative director & vice president thereof in 1982.[4] After losing in the presidential race with Ichiro Isoda, in 1986, he became the advisor of Asahi Breweries which was then thought unrebuildable and the representative director & president thereof.[4] He became the representative director & chairman of the board of directors thereof in 1992 and director, advisor and honorary chairman in 1999.[4]
He also served as the vice chairman of Keidanren, the president of New National Theatre Foundation, the chairman of Osaka Securities Exchange and the special adviser to the Cabinet.[5][4][6][7]
References
[edit]- ^ Hirotaro Higuchi / NHK ARCHIVES (in Japanese)
- ^ Let's learned from the management of Konosuke Matsushita The success of the successor Hirotaro Higuchi (in Japanese)
- ^ a b c Hirotaro Higuchi / TV RANKING (in Japanese)
- ^ a b c d e f Hirotaro Higuchi, "There are no precedents. So I do." (in Japanese)
- ^ “self-responsibility”, “self-disclosure” and “self-reassessment” / Messages from Monthly Keidanren, October 1997 (in English)
- ^ Executives List (in alphabetical order) (in English)
- ^ Asahi's Higuchi to chair new OSE / thejapantimes (in English)