|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
East Asia has led rapid economic growth in the last few decades
with India joining them over the last five years. Automotive parts
manufacturers have been an important component of domestic
production in all these economies. Experts with several years of
multi-disciplinary research experience on the field examine the
actual and potential technological and localization implications of
MNC operations in East Asia and India. The rich collection of
country experiences are both original and incisive. This volume
includes: Case studies from China, Japan, India, Thailand and
Malaysia A study of the role of multinationals in Asian technology
building An examination of the growing Chinese automobile sector
Featuring leading academics from across Asia, this title is
essential reading for those studying industrial growth in the
continent's major economies.
East Asia has led rapid economic growth in the last few decades
with India joining them over the last five years. Automotive parts
manufacturers have been an important component of domestic
production in all these economies. Experts with several years of
multi-disciplinary research experience on the field examine the
actual and potential technological and localization implications of
MNC operations in East Asia and India. The rich collection of
country experiences are both original and incisive. This volume
includes: Case studies from China, Japan, India, Thailand and
Malaysia A study of the role of multinationals in Asian technology
building An examination of the growing Chinese automobile sector
Featuring leading academics from across Asia, this title is
essential reading for those studying industrial growth in the
continent's major economies.
Japanese automobiles dominate the Southeast Asian car market and,
although European automobile policies have for a long time been
highly discriminatory towards Japanese imports, their production
methods have been quickly implemented by European makers and
suppliers. This study explains the various influences of the
Japanese automobile industry on industrial development in both
Southeast Asia and Europe. In Part I, contributors examine
industrial organization and policy issues in Thailand, Malaysia,
the Philippines and Indonesia, looking at Japanese investment and
the relative policy successes and failures in these host countries.
Part II looks at skill formation systems in the Japanese dominated
automobile industry in Southeast Asia and in Part III the authors
focus on the EU and the very different influence of Japanese
investment. These discussions suggest that Japanese assemblers by
no means stick to restricted business relations with their
traditional suppliers but are open to cooperation with non-Japanese
firms.
|
You may like...
The Wedding Video
Lucy Punch, Miriam Margolyes, …
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R481
R40
Discovery Miles 400
|