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Foreign Direct Investment in Japan is the first serious and
comprehensive examination of why the direct participation of
foreign firms in the economy of Japan is lower than in any other
advanced industrial nation. An internationally acclaimed group of
scholars and practitioners addresses this problem and considers
what policy actions, if any, the Japanese government can take to
increase direct investment. Foreign exchange controls banned direct
investment into Japan until the late 1970s and this is still
partially responsible for the low penetration of foreign firms. A
fundamental question addressed by the book is whether or not
ownership advantages in technology and management know-how
possessed by foreign firms are strong enough to overcome the extra
costs of doing business in Japan. Such extra costs or locational
disadvantages include very high land and labour costs as well as
business practices unique to Japan, characterized by the long-term
customized transaction relationship among assemblers, component
suppliers, distributors and financial institutions and the
long-time employment system. Although the Government of Japan
desires to invite more foreign firms, this book demonstrates that
there are many areas where direct investment has been adversely
affected by internal regulation. Foreign Direct Investment in Japan
explores this participation of foreign firms in this economy from
the perspectives of economic theory, history, and the practical
experiences of non-Japanese firms that have attempted to do
business directly in Japan.
Edward M. Graham, Nina Oding and Paul J. J. Welfens Eastern Europe
and the former Soviet Union have achieved sustained economic growth
in first half of the new decade in the 2V DEGREES century. EU ac
cession countries which have joined the EU have benefited mainly
from high capital inflows, a reduced risk premium - with shadow
effects of this already occurring in the years before explicit
membership - and growing trade. While system transformation has
undermined trade between Eastern Europe and Russia for several
years there are medium prospects for grow ing trade in the whole of
Europe. Russia's case, however, is different from the EU accession
countries as a major driving force of economic dynamics is the oil
and gas sector which has considerable backward and forward
linkages. At the same time this sector apparently is politically
quite sensi tive. The Transatlantic Transformation and Economic
Development Re search Group has organized several workshops within
a major interna tional research project. The project is devoted to
analyzing the internatio nalization of the Russian economy and the
associated changes in major policy fields. This book contains the
revised analytical papers from the St. Petersburg conference in
2003 when the city celebrated its 300 year anniversary. We are very
grateful to the Leontief Center for excellent organization of the
conference. The paper by Paul J. J."
Edward M. Graham, Nina Oding and Paul J. J. Welfens Eastern Europe
and the former Soviet Union have achieved sustained economic growth
in first half of the new decade in the 2V^ century. EU ac cession
countries which have joined the EU have benefited mainly from high
capital inflows, a reduced risk premium - with shadow effects of
this already occurring in the years before explicit membership -
and growing trade. While system transformation has undermined trade
between Eastern Europe and Russia for several years there are
medium prospects for grow ing trade in the whole of Europe.
Russia's case, however, is different from the EU accession
countries as a major driving force of economic dynamics is the oil
and gas sector which has considerable backward and forward
linkages. At the same time this sector apparently is politically
quite sensi tive. The Transatlantic Transformation and Economic
Development Re search Group has organized several workshops within
a major interna tional research project. The project is devoted to
analyzing the internatio nalization of the Russian economy and the
associated changes in major policy fields. This book contains the
revised analytical papers from the St. Petersburg conference in
2003 when the city celebrated its 300 year anniversary. We are very
grateful to the Leontief Center for excellent organization of the
conference. The paper by Paul J. J.
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