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Center on Japanese Economy and Business Working Papers
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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
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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/
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2. Worker discontent, voice, and EI programs in Japan: Evidence from the Japanese worker representation and participation survey
3. Women's higher education in Japan: Family background, economic factors, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Law
4. Why is there a home bias? An analysis of foreign portfolio equity ownership in Japan
5. Why I expect Japan to prevail: Ruminations on Morishima
6. Why do markets move together? An investigation of U.S.-Japan stock return comovements
7. Why do firms behave similarly? A study on new product introduction in the Japanese soft-drink industry
8. Why are there so many retail stores in Japan?
9. When Intellectual Property Management Changes Management Perceptions: A Research Note on the Invention of Proanthocyanidins
10. What went wrong: Aggregate demand, structural reform, and the politics of 1990s Japan
11. What Drives the Profitability of Japanese Multi-Business Corporations? A Variance Components Analysis
12. 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
13. Ware ware nihonjin but we're not all alike: How Japanese managers champion innovation
14. Wage structures and labor turnover in the U.S. and in Japan
15. Visible hands: Auctions and institutional integration in the Tsukiji wholesale fish market, Tokyo
16. US-Japan trade friction and its dilemmas for US policy
17. Update on Japanese bad debt restructuring
18. Trends in Long-term Employment and Job Security in Japan and the United States: The Last Twenty-Five Years
19. Trade Finance and the Great Trade Collapse
20. Trade and growth: Import led or export led? Evidence from Japan and Korea
21. The Yen and Japan's Economy, 1985-2007
22. The transfer of human resource management systems overseas: An exploratory study of Japanese and American maquiladoras
23. The Structure and Evolution of Buyer-Supplier Networks
24. The Strategic Logic of Japanese Keiretsu, Main Banks and Cross-Shareholdings, Revisited
25. The status of women in Japan: Has the Equal Employment Opportunity Law made a difference?
26. The role of preconceived ideas in macroeconomic policy: Japan's experiences in the two deflationary periods
27. The role of long-term credit banks within the main bank system
28. The relevance of Japanese finance and its main bank system
29. The relationship of industry evolution to patterns of technological linkages, joint ventures, and direct investment between the U.S. and Japan
30. The relationship between expatriates, parent company-affiliate integration and HRM control in overseas affiliates of Japanese and American MNCs
31. The Regional Spillover Effects of the Tohoku Earthquake
32. The recent transformation of participatory employment practices in Japan
33. The Realities and Relevance of Japan's Great Recession: Neither Ran nor Rashomon
34. The question of access to the Japanese market
35. The prospects for industrial cooperation between the United States and Japan
36. The political economy of internationalizing the Japanese financial system: The case of the bond market
37. The performance of Japanese mutual funds
38. The Performance Implications of Asset versus Transactional Advantages of MNEs
39. The Market for Corporate Subsidiaries in Japan: An Empirical Study of Trades Among Listed Firms
40. The market and the state in economic development: Some questions from East Asia and Australia
41. The main bank system and corporate investment: An empirical reassessment
42. The Keiretsu puzzle
43. The Japan-U.S. Exchange Rate, Productivity, and the Competitiveness of Japanese Industries
44. The Japanese system of foreign exchange and trade control, 1950-1964
45. The Japanese market for corporate control and managerial incentives
46. The Japanese Employment System after the Bubble Burst: New Evidence
47. The Japanese economy: Sustained recovery and growth not yet assured
48. The Japanese distribution sector in economic perspective: The Large Store Law and retail density
49. The Japanese business system: Key features and prospects for change
50. The Japanese Asset Price Bubble: A 'Heterogeneous' Approach
51. The (Japan-Born) "Flying-Geese" Theory of Economic Development Revisited--and Reformulated from a Structuralist Perspective
52. The intra-daily exchange rate dynamics and monetary policies after the G5 agreement
53. The Impact of Outsourcing on the Japanese and South Korean Labor Markets: International Outsourcing of Intermediate Inputs and Assembly in East Asia
54. The "hidden" side of the "flying-geese" catch-up model: Japan's dirigiste institutional setup and a deepening financial morass
55. The Great Realignment: How the Changing Technology of Technological Change in Information Technology Affected the U.S. and Japanese IT Industries, 1983"“1999
56. The governance of failure: An anatomy of corporate bankruptcy in Japan
57. The gas industry in Japan
58. The financial strategies of Japanese multinational enterprises and internal capital market
59. The Fed's response to the financial crisis: Pages from the BOJ playbook, or a whole new ball game?
60. The Fama-French factors as proxies for fundamental economic risks
61. The Evolution of the Productivity Dispersion of Firms—A Reevaluation of Its Determinants in the Case of Japan
62. The end of "lifetime employment" in Japan? Evidence from national surveys and field research
63. The efficiency of the Tokyo housing market
64. The Effect of the U.S.-China Trade War on U.S. Investment
65. The effect of the 1987 Stock Crash on international financial integration
66. The effect of bank credit on asset prices: Evidence from the Japanese real estate boom during the 1980s
67. The Economics of Japan's Postal Services Privatization
68. The economic rationality of the Japanese distribution system
69. The disposal of bad loans in Japan: A review of recent policy initiatives
70. The difficulty of discerning what's too tight: Taylor rules and Japanese monetary policy
71. The difference in taxation on financial transactions between Japan and the United States: Can the U.S. system and theory be the model?
72. The Development of Studies of the Japanese Economy in the United States: A Personal Odyssey
73. The decline of the Japanese automobile industry: Domestic and international implications
74. The controversy over Japan's low manufactured imports
75. The Contribution of Bank Lending to the Long-Term Stagnation in Japan
76. The components of the bid-ask spread in a limit-order market: Evidence from the Tokyo Stock Exchange
77. The complexity of wholesale distribution channels in Japan
78. The commercial paper market in Japan
79. The causes of Japan's financial crisis
80. The causes and consequences of Japan's high saving ratio
81. The CAPM with human capital: Evidence from Japan
82. The best of both worlds? An exploratory study of human resource management practices in U.S.-based Japanese affiliates
83. Technological superiority and the losses from migration
84. Technological Leadership and Late Development: Evidence from Meiji Japan, 1868-1912
85. Taxicab regulation in Japan
86. Study on the interactive approach between insurance and capital markets for catastrophe risks
87. Stratification and attainment in a large Japanese firm
88. Stock index autocorrelation and cross-autocorrelations of the size-sorted portfolios in the Japanese market
89. Steel: Tokyo Steel, K.K.: Gaining and sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
90. Steel: Nippon Steel, K.K.: Gaining and sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
91. Stability and change in embedded relationships: Broken ties in Japanese automotive keiretsu
92. Spinning Tales About Japanese Cotton Spinning: Saxonhouse (1974) Then and Now
93. Some empirical evidence on hysteresis in aggregate US import prices
94. Soft policies and hard competition: Government, industry, and user impacts on the development of Japan's software industry
95. Short-run and long-run expectations of the yen/dollar exchange rate
96. Shareholding interlocks in the Keiretsu, Japan's financial groups
97. Semiconductors: NEC: Sustaining long-term advantage through information technology
98. Self-regulation and the sanctuary strategy: Competitive advantage through domestic cooperation by Japanese firms
99. Self-Regulation and the Sanctuary Strategy: Competitive Advantage through Domestic Cooperation by Japanese Firms
100. Securities trading in the absence of dealers: Trades and quotes on the Tokyo Stock Exchange
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