International automaker Toyota has been  in the headlines for weeks because of the controversy surrounding their  acceleration problems, which have led to an estimated 51 deaths in the  country. Earlier today, I came across this  article on Business Week  explaining how the companies once rewarding frugality turned in to its  worst enemy causing millions of recalls. Checkout a section of the interesting  piece below, or find the full text at Business  Week.com.
 
Toyota Motor has always been fanatical  about frugality, and for many years that was good for both the company  and its customers. This is a Japanese carmaker that routinely turned  down the heat at its employee dormitories during working hours and labeled  photocopy machines with the cost per copy to discourage overuse. Its  engineers collaborated with suppliers to extract cost-savings without  compromising quality. Yet by the middle of the last decade Toyota's  virtue had become a vice.
So say current and former auto executives  who are trying to grasp how Toyota, with its gold-plated reputation  for engineering excellence, slipped up on such a scale, with 8 million  cars recalled due to mechanical failures linked by U.S. regulators to  51 deaths. Before company officials knew that runaway acceleration was  causing crashes, one of these executives says, a simple manufacturing  process would sometimes ignite small fires in a component as a direct  result of corner-cutting. It was just one early sign that the focus  on cost reduction had gone too far.
