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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. Japanese high technology industrial policy in comparative context
3. Japan's small-scale family enterprises
4. Market access and international competition: A simulation study of 16K Random Access Memories
5. A comparative study of Japanese plants operating in the U.S. and American plants: Recruitment, job training, wage structure and job separation
6. Housing finance imperfections and private saving: A comparative simulation analysis of the U.S. and Japan
7. Japan and the international monetary regime
8. Japanese labor markets and subcontracting
9. Japan's industrial structure in crisis: National concerns and international implications
10. Labor force withdrawal, re-entry and wages by educational attainment in Japanese women
11. Management of the United States-Japan trade relationship and its implications for the Pacific Basin economies
12. Saving and investment in Japan
13. The intra-daily exchange rate dynamics and monetary policies after the G5 agreement
14. Wage structures and labor turnover in the U.S. and in Japan
15. Problems of the U.S. trade structure
16. Some empirical evidence on hysteresis in aggregate US import prices
17. The political economy of internationalizing the Japanese financial system: The case of the bond market
18. Why are there so many retail stores in Japan?
19. American management: Reformation or revolution? The transfer of Japanese management technology to the US
20. Analyzing leading and coincident indicators for Pacific Basin countries
21. Declining industries, mechanisms of structural adjustment, and trade policy in Pacific Basin economies
22. Do management forecasts of earnings affect stock prices in Japan?
23. Foreign exchange rate expectations: Micro survey data
24. Growth cycle signals as inflation indicators for major industrial nations
25. Inventory behavior and economic instability in Japan
26. Is the Bank of Japan a closet monetarist? Monetary targeting in Japan, 1978-1988
27. Pensions and labor turnover in Japan
28. The causes and consequences of Japan's high saving ratio
29. The economic rationality of the Japanese distribution system
30. The relationship of industry evolution to patterns of technological linkages, joint ventures, and direct investment between the U.S. and Japan
31. Bringing a network perspective into research on technological transfers and other interorganizational relationships
32. Change and response in Japan's international economic policy
33. Fundamentals and stock returns in Japan
34. Japan's resource imports
35. Japan's role in Asia-Pacific cooperation: Dimensions, prospects, and problems
36. Section 301 and the U.S. Japan economic relationship: Reflections on Kuroda
37. Shareholding interlocks in the Keiretsu, Japan's financial groups
38. The controversy over Japan's low manufactured imports
39. The market and the state in economic development: Some questions from East Asia and Australia
40. Alternative estimates of Japanese saving and comparisons with the U.S.: Can the capital gains to land be included in "saving?"
41. Commuting and land prices in the Tokyo metropolitan area
42. Indirect shareholding within Japan's business groups
43. Japanese investment in the border region of the United States and Mexico
44. Japan's financial system and the evolving role of main banks
45. Monetary policy and the term structure of interest rates in Japan
46. Peace and security on the Korean peninsula: Reflections on the economic dimension
47. Penetration without dependence: A network analysis of Japanese economic activity in the U.S.
48. Predictable stock returns in the United States and Japan: A study of long-term capital market integration
49. The complexity of wholesale distribution channels in Japan
50. The effect of the 1987 Stock Crash on international financial integration
51. The Performance Implications of Asset versus Transactional Advantages of MNEs
52. A comparison of relations between security market prices, returns and accounting measures in Japan and the United States
53. Comparisons, contrasts and implications from financial development in Japan, Taiwan and Korea
54. Is Japan's retail sector truly distinctive?
55. Japanese multinationals: An evolutionary theory and some global political implications for the 1990's
56. Keiretsu shareholding ties: Antitrust issues
57. Securities trading in the absence of dealers: Trades and quotes on the Tokyo Stock Exchange
58. The best of both worlds? An exploratory study of human resource management practices in U.S.-based Japanese affiliates
59. The decline of the Japanese automobile industry: Domestic and international implications
60. The efficiency of the Tokyo housing market
61. The governance of failure: An anatomy of corporate bankruptcy in Japan
62. The status of women in Japan: Has the Equal Employment Opportunity Law made a difference?
63. The transfer of human resource management systems overseas: An exploratory study of Japanese and American maquiladoras
64. Visible hands: Auctions and institutional integration in the Tsukiji wholesale fish market, Tokyo
65. Changing patterns in corporate financing and the main bank system in Japan
66. Contracting with contracts: How the Japanese manage organizational transactions
67. Fundamental issues in the United States-Japan economic relations
68. Is the Japanese extended family altruistically linked? A test based on Engel curves
69. Japanese banking in the United States: From transient advantage to strategic failure
70. Organizational variation in championship behavior: The case of Japanese firms
71. Short-run and long-run expectations of the yen/dollar exchange rate
72. The prospects for industrial cooperation between the United States and Japan
73. The relevance of Japanese finance and its main bank system
74. The role of long-term credit banks within the main bank system
75. US-Japan trade friction and its dilemmas for US policy
76. A longitudinal study of staffing patterns in U.S. affiliates of Japanese multinational corporations
77. Can winners be losers? The case of the Deming Prize for quality and performance among large Japanese manufacturing firms
78. Japan's saving rate: An update
79. Medium-term prospects for the Japanese economy and for U.S.-Japan relations
80. Securities trading in the absence of dealers: Trades and quotes on the Tokyo Stock Exchange
81. The disposal of bad loans in Japan: A review of recent policy initiatives
82. Air transport policy in Japan
83. Bank organization and screening performance
84. Bubbles in Japan's stock market: A macroeconomic analysis
85. Crumbling or transforming? Japan's economic success and its postwar economic institutions
86. Decision making localization and decentralization in Japanese MNCs: Are there costs of leaving local managers out of the loop?
87. Educational credentials and promotion prospects in a Japanese and an American organization
88. Japanese government bond auctions: The U.S. experience
89. Japan's banking: The darkest hour before dawn: The future is in the hands of MoF
90. Living with the "enemy": An analysis of foreign investment in the Japanese equity market
91. Northeast Asia: The role of international and regional economic institutions and regimes
92. Soft policies and hard competition: Government, industry, and user impacts on the development of Japan's software industry
93. Stratification and attainment in a large Japanese firm
94. The CAPM with human capital: Evidence from Japan
95. The Keiretsu puzzle
96. The question of access to the Japanese market
97. Ware ware nihonjin but we're not all alike: How Japanese managers champion innovation
98. Why is there a home bias? An analysis of foreign portfolio equity ownership in Japan
99. An analysis of bidding in the Japanese government bond auctions
100. Consumers, the legal system and product liability reform: A comparative perspective between Japan and the United States
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