Related to your search
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. Will the United States join the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or neither?
3. In the Eye of the Storm
4. Product Dynamics and Aggregate Shocks: Evidence from Japanese Product and Firm Level Data
5. Protectionist Fallacies
6. The Regional Spillover Effects of the Tohoku Earthquake
7. The rise of self-judging essential security interest clauses in international investment agreements
8. Why some advanced economy firms prefer to be taken over by Chinese acquirers
9. Implications of New Oil Sanctions on Iran
10. Implications of Sustained Low Oil Prices on Iran
11. Revisiting Oil Sanctions on Russia
12. Dakar’s Market Imaginary: Mobility, Visuality, and the Creative Economy of Second Chances
13. Explaining the Rise of East Asian Multinationals: State-Industry Links, a Stages Model of Structural Change, and Japan as a Precedent Setter
14. Japanese Monetary Policy and International Spillovers
15. Japan’s Foreign Economic Policy Strategies and Economic Performance
16. Organizational Barriers to Technology Adoption: Evidence from Soccer-Ball Producers in Pakistan
17. Quantifying Sentiment for the Japanese Economy as Predictors of Stock Prices
18. Spinning Tales About Japanese Cotton Spinning: Saxonhouse (1974) Then and Now
19. The Structure and Evolution of Buyer-Supplier Networks
20. Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry
21. Hagihara Industries Inc.
22. Information and Export Decisions: Bank’s Role as a Conduit of Information
23. Japan Post Bank: Problematic Issues
24. The Market for Corporate Subsidiaries in Japan: An Empirical Study of Trades Among Listed Firms
25. A good business reason to support mandatory transparency in extractive industries
26. A new economic nationalism? Lessons from the PotashCorp decision in Canada
27. Built-in Stabilizers and Risk Literacy: Protecting the Sustainability of the Insurance Industry
28. Complementarity between Formal and Informal Manufacturing in India: The Role of Policies and Institutions
29. Economic patriotism: Dealing with Chinese direct investment in the United States
30. External Shocks and Japanese Business Cycles: Impact of the "Great Trade Collapse" on the Automobile Industry
31. FDI, catch-up growth stages and stage-focused strategies
32. Inward FDI in Bulgaria and its policy context
33. Inward FDI in Russia and its policy context, 2012
34. Inward FDI in Taiwan and its policy context
35. Inward FDI in Uruguay and its policy context
36. Is Chinese FDI pushing Latin America into natural resources?
37. Is Japan Really a "Buy"? The Corporate Governance, Cash Holdings, and Economic Performance of Japanese Companies
38. Japan’s Sputtering Economic Recovery Amid Heightened Political Turmoil
39. Labor Regulations and the Firm Size Distribution in Indian Manufacturing
40. Outward FDI from Hungary and its policy context, 2012
41. State-controlled entities control nearly US$ 2 trillion in foreign assets
42. The Arab Spring: How soon will foreign investors return?
43. The standing of state-controlled entities under the ICSID Convention: Two key considerations
44. The times they are a-changin' -- again -- in the relationships between governments and multinational enterprises: From control, to liberalization to rebalancing.
45. Trends in Long-term Employment and Job Security in Japan and the United States: The Last Twenty-Five Years
46. Are resurging state-owned enterprises impeding competition overseas?
47. Chinese FDI in the United States is taking off: How to maximize its benefits?
48. Currency Invoicing Decision: New Evidence from a Questionnaire Survey of Japanese Export Firms
49. Does Liberalization Promote Competition?
50. Emerging challengers in knowledge-based industries? The case of Indian pharmaceutical multinationals
51. Environmental concerns in international investment agreements: The "new era" has commenced, but harmonization remains far off
52. From the FDI Triad to multiple FDI poles?
53. Inward FDI in Argentina and its policy context, 2011
54. Inward FDI in Spain and its policy context
55. Is the party-appointed arbitrator a "pernicious institution"? A reply to Professor Hans Smit
56. Organized Retailing in India: Issues and Outlook
57. Responsible agricultural investment: is there a significant role for the law to promote sustainability?
58. The backstory of China and India's growing investment and trade with Africa:Separating the wheat from the chaff
59. The coming harmonization of climate change policy and international investment law
60. The role of multinationals in sparking industrialization: From "infant industry protection" to "FDI-led industrial take-off"
61. The world economic crisis as a changed circumstance
62. Trade Finance and the Great Trade Collapse
63. Variety In, Variety Out: Imported Input and Product Scope Expansion in India
64. What Drives the Profitability of Japanese Multi-Business Corporations? A Variance Components Analysis
65. Why and how least developed countries can receive more FDI to meet their development goals
66. German outward FDI and its policy context
67. How much do U.S. corporations know (and care) about bilateral investmenttreaties? Some hints from new survey evidence
68. Investment, Production and Trade Networks as Drivers of East Asian Integration
69. Investor Activism in Japan: The First 10 Years
70. Selling the family silver to pay the grocer's bill? The case of privatization in India
71. State-controlled entities as claimants in international investment arbitration:an early assessment
72. The (Japan-Born) "Flying-Geese" Theory of Economic Development Revisited--and Reformulated from a Structuralist Perspective
73. The pernicious institution of the party-appointed arbitrator
74. The Realities and Relevance of Japan's Great Recession: Neither Ran nor Rashomon
75. What will an appreciation of China's currency do to inward and outward FDI?
76. An Exploration of the Japanese Slowdown during the 1990s
77. Bank Monitoring Incentives and Borrower Earnings Management: Evidence from the Japanese Banking Crisis of 1993-2002
78. Changes in Corporate Restructuring Processes in Japan, 1981-2007
79. Comparing Exit Decisions and Corporate Governance
80. Comparing Japanese Versus U.S. Decision Making in Corporate Governance
81. Consumption, Land Prices and the Monetary Transmission Mechanism in Japan
82. Credit ratings failures : causes and policy options
83. Exporting Deflation? Chinese Exports and Japanese Prices
84. Exports and Financial Shocks
85. Industrial Concentration, Price-Cost Margins, and Innovation
86. International Financial Integration and Japanese Economic Performance
87. Japan's Deep Recession and Protracted Recovery
88. Japan's Solar and Wind Ambitions: How Bright Is the U.S. Market? The Tenth Annual Mitsui USA Symposium
89. Labor Immobility in Japan: Its causes and consequences
90. Technological Leadership and Late Development: Evidence from Meiji Japan, 1868-1912
91. The Contribution of Bank Lending to the Long-Term Stagnation in Japan
92. The Fed's response to the financial crisis: Pages from the BOJ playbook, or a whole new ball game?
93. The Global Trade Architecture and the Developing World
94. The Great Realignment: How the Changing Technology of Technological Change in Information Technology Affected the U.S. and Japanese IT Industries, 1983"“1999
95. The Japanese Asset Price Bubble: A 'Heterogeneous' Approach
96. The Japanese Employment System after the Bubble Burst: New Evidence
97. The Japan-U.S. Exchange Rate, Productivity, and the Competitiveness of Japanese Industries
98. The Yen and Japan's Economy, 1985-2007
99. When Intellectual Property Management Changes Management Perceptions: A Research Note on the Invention of Proanthocyanidins
100. A Comparative Analysis of Productivity Growth and Productivity Dispersion: Microeconomic Evidence Based on Listed Firms from Japan, Korea, and China
- « Previous
- Next »
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4