Stephen Hawkins said:Origins of manufacture have been discussed many times on this forum, and I am still of the opinion that consumers are routinely misled. There is conclusive proof that some (not all) European manufacturers use parts made elsewhere, whilst still trading on their name and reputation for quality.
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It is no secret that accordion manufacturers use parts made in other countries. I firmly believe this is ALL and not SOME European manufacturers. Things like buttons and other small parts are made in countries with low wages. They do not affect the overall quality of the instruments. Celluloid is all made in China, then further processed in Italy. There is nothing wrong with having parts made elsewhere. It becomes different when most, if not all of an instrument is made (not just parts but large subassemblies or even the complete assembly) in a different country than what the final "stamp" on the instrument says. I have a nice Hohner Artiste XS at home with a "Made in Germany" stamp that was actually built by Excelsior in Italy. Some brands are a bit more honest about it: an E.Soprani is an instrument made in China and only "quality checked" in Italy and that is made publicly known.
It is not just a problem with accordions that are passed as being German or Italian when this is in fact not true. North Korea also builts bayans that are sold under the name Jupiter and that are fine instruments, but are the same as the ones made near Moscow.
Origin is not a constant indicator of quality either. Shortly after WWII Japan started to produce consumer electronics that were junk and just a few decades later they were the finest and most wanted producers of electronics. I see improvement in Chinese accordions of longer-standing brands versus recently started outfits. I'm sure that North Korean accordions will be fine in the future if they are not already.