Related to your search
Center on Japanese Economy and Business Working Papers
See all series content
The Center on Japanese Economy and Business Working Paper Series showcases preliminary research results in the field before publication. https://www8.gsb.columbia.edu/cjeb/research
Center on Japanese Economy and Business
See all partner content
The Center on Japanese Economy and Business is the preeminent US academic center focused on promoting knowledge of Japanese business systems in domestic, East Asia, and international contexts. https://business.columbia.edu/cjeb/
Search Results
2. A Retrospective on Abenomics
3. The Responses of Consumption and Prices in Japan to the COVID-19 Crisis and the Tohoku Earthquake
4. The Impact of the 2018 Trade War on U.S. Prices and Welfare
5. Earnings Management and Internal Control in Bank-dominated Corporate Governance: Evidence from Japan
6. The Neo-Fisher Effect: Econometric Evidence from Empirical and Optimizing Models
7. The Samurai Bond: Credit Supply and Economic Growth in Pre-War Japan
8. Lending to Unhealthy Firms in Japan During the Lost Decade: Distinguishing between Technical and Financial Health
9. Education and Marriage Decisions of Japanese Women and the Role of the Equal Employment Opportunity Act
10. Heterogeneity in Japanese TFP, Part 2: Regulation, Capital Allocation, and TFP in Japan
11. Lessons From Koizumi-Era Financial Services Sector Reforms
12. Puzzles in the Forex Tokyo “Fixing”: Order Imbalances and Biased Pricing by Banks
13. Absence of Safe Assets and Fiscal Crisis
14. Exchange Rate Exposure and Risk Management: The Case of Japanese Exporting Firms
15. Heterogeneity in Japanese TFP, Part 1: Why Overcoming Deflation Alone is Not Enough
16. Selective Disclosure: The Case of Nikkei Preview Articles
17. Was the Forex Fixing Fixed?
18. Academic Entrepreneurship: A Comparison of U.S. and Japanese Promotion of Information Technology and Computer Science
19. Does Embeddedness Reduce Innovation and Differentiation? Evidence from the Japanese Microbrewery Industry
20. Five Years Later: Lessons from the Financial Crisis
21. Framing From Afar: External Agents and the Construction of the Japanese Ji-Buru Industry
22. How Making it Easier to Succeed Reduces Success: IPO Reform and New Firm Performance
23. How Much Do Official Price Indexes Tell Us About Inflation?
24. Japanese Newspapers
25. Japan Post Insurance: Unjustified Favoritism
26. Monetary Policy and Transmission of Bubbles
27. Nonlinear Pricing of Japanese Newspapers
28. Real Exchange Rates in a Model of Structural Change: Applications to the Real Yen-Dollar and Chinese RMB-Dollar Exchange Rates
29. Samsung and LG: From Also-Rans to Dominance in Consumer Electronics
30. Saving-Investment Balance and Fiscal Sustainability of Japan: A View from the JGB Market
31. The Classical Origins of Akamatsu’s “Flying-Geese” Theory: A Note on a Missing Link to David Hume
32.
The Dynamics of Multinational Corporation Impacted Comparative Advantage: Relevancy to Ricardo’s View on Cross-border Investment and Samuelson’s Skepticism
about Globalization
33. Regulation and Supervision
34. Fiscal Policy Switching in Japan, the U.S., and the U.K.
35. On the Evolution of the House Price Distribution
36. The Effect of the VAT Rate Change on Aggregate Consumption and Economic Growth
37. The Great Intervention and Massive Money Injection: The Japanese Experience 2003-2004
38. Japan's Economy: The Idiosyncratic Recovery Continues
39. Interventions and Japanese Economic Recovery
40. CEO compensation and firm performance in Japan: Evidence from new panel data on individual CEO pay
41. Choices for Japanese fiscal policy
42. Economical impacts of IT on industries in Japan
43. Evolving corporate governance in Japan
44. Inflation targeting discussions in Japan - unconventional monetary policy under deflation: How people have argued; Why the BOJ opposes adoption
45. It takes more than a bubble to become Japan
46. Policy challenges and the reform of postal savings in Japan
47. Political economy of competition policy in Japan: Case of airline services
48. Putting e-commerce to work: The Japanese convenience store case
49. Stock index autocorrelation and cross-autocorrelations of the size-sorted portfolios in the Japanese market
50. The difficulty of discerning what's too tight: Taylor rules and Japanese monetary policy
51. A clash of capitalisms: Foreign shareholders and corporate restructuring in 1990s Japan
52. Distribution keiretsu, FDI and import penetration in Japan
53. Exchange rate fluctuations, financing constraints, hedging, and exports: Evidence from firm level data
54. Has Japan's innovative capacity declined?
55. Idiosyncratic risk and creative destruction in Japan
56. Japan's internal debt
57. Parallel imports and the Japan Fair Trade Commission
58. Pax-Americana-led macro-clustering and flying-geese-style catch-up in East Asia: Mechanisms of regionalized endogenous growth
59. Paying for the FILP
60. Taxicab regulation in Japan
61. Technological superiority and the losses from migration
62. The components of the bid-ask spread in a limit-order market: Evidence from the Tokyo Stock Exchange
63. The difference in taxation on financial transactions between Japan and the United States: Can the U.S. system and theory be the model?
64. The Japanese distribution sector in economic perspective: The Large Store Law and retail density
65. What does the consumption tax mean to Japanese society and U.S. society? The difference in the priorities of overall tax reforms in both countries
66. Women's higher education in Japan: Family background, economic factors, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Law
67. Bones, bombs and break points: The geography of economic activity
68. Changing Japanese corporate governance
69. Downsizing and the deinstitutionalization of permanent employment in Japan
70. From cozy regulation to competitive markets: The regime shift of Japan's financial system
71. From Fast to Last: The Japanese Economy in the 1990s
72. The "hidden" side of the "flying-geese" catch-up model: Japan's dirigiste institutional setup and a deepening financial morass
73. Automobiles: Toyota Motor Corporation: Gaining and sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
74. Bank underwriting of corporate bonds: Evidence from Japan after the financial system reform of 1993
75. Corporate investment in Japan: How important are the financial factors?
76. Demographic density, per capita consumption, and the Japanese saving-investment balance
77. Electronic money projects in Japan
78. Food retailing: Ito-Yokado Group: Gaining and sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
79. International market segmentation, and the CME Quanto Nikkei Future
80. International retail banking: The Citibank Group
81. Is foreign direct investment a channel of knowledge spillovers? Evidence from Japan's FDI in the U.S.
82. Living with the "enemy": An analysis of foreign investment in the Japanese equity market
83. Nationwide financial services: Gaining and sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
84. Nomura Research Institute: Gaining and sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
85. Steel: Nippon Steel, K.K.: Gaining and sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
86. The end of "lifetime employment" in Japan? Evidence from national surveys and field research
87. The Fama-French factors as proxies for fundamental economic risks
88. The recent transformation of participatory employment practices in Japan
89. Historical, structural, and macroeconomic perspectives on the Japanese economic crisis
90. Institutional affiliation and the role of venture capital: Evidence from initial public offerings in Japan
91. Japan at a crossroads
92. Japanese-style capitalism
93. Life insurance: Meiji Life, K.K.: Sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
94. On the development of rotating credit associations in Japan
95. Retail banking: Sanwa Bank: Sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
96. Self-regulation and the sanctuary strategy: Competitive advantage through domestic cooperation by Japanese firms
97. Semiconductors: NEC: Sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
98. Steel: Tokyo Steel, K.K.: Gaining and sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
99. Trade and growth: Import led or export led? Evidence from Japan and Korea
100. Why do firms behave similarly? A study on new product introduction in the Japanese soft-drink industry
- « Previous
- Next »
- 1
- 2
- 3