Evolution of Multinationals from Japan and the Asia Pacific

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Adam R. Cross b
Asia Pacific Business Review
Asia Pacific multinational evolution
Category=KJK
Category=KJVG
Chinese Government
Chinese MNCs
Chris Rowley b c d e
comparitive business
corporate governance Asia
Current Ceo
Deputy Ceo
Emerging economy MNCs
emerging market firms
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
FDI Flow
FDI Outflow
FDI Stock
Firm's FDI
Firm’s FDI
foreign direct investment
Global Competition
Globalization
Huaichuan Rui
IMF Crisis
international business strategy
International Product Life Cycle
internationalisation strategies
Japanese FDI
Japanese Firms
Japanese MNCs
Japanese multinationals
Jenny Berrill
Keith Jackson b
Korean Firms
Korean Outward FDI
Location Determinants
Martin Hemmert a
Mg Rover
Outward FDI
Outward FDI Stock
Parent Firm Control
Pearlean Chadha
production networks
Robert Fitzgerald a
Samsung Electronics
Sierk A. Horn a
Strategic capabilities
subsidiary autonomy
UK Firm
UNCTAD World Investment Report
Uppsala Model
World Gdp

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367139513
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jan 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The rise of the Japanese multinational company (JMNC) marked, from the 1980s onwards, an historic change in the structure and in the dynamics of the international economy. For the first time, businesses from a non-Western nation established a competitive global presence, and they did so by bringing their advanced products and management systems to the developed economies of Europe and North America. In the last 30 years, our interpretations of JMNCs have undergone a series of revisions. Korean firms followed JMNCs in the 1990s and the Chinese likewise in the 2000s. A seeming decline in JMNC competitiveness and developments in the structure of the international economy challenged a business model of parental company direction, control and capabilities. Both trends asked questions about how Japanese subsidiaries should operate in global production chains increasingly reliant on contracting out and off-shoring, and how JMNCs might engage more in strategic cooperation and empower subsidiary decision-making. The contributors to this volume consider a wide range of relevant issues: they demonstrate the long-term evolution of JMNCs; they compare the experience of JMNCs with firms from the other two major Asia Pacific economies, Korea and China; they evaluate the applicability of established foreign direct investment (FDI) theory to MNCs from Japan and the Asia Pacific; and they reflect on the internal organization of JMNCs at the global, national and subnational level. This book was originally published as a special issue of Asia Pacific Business Review.

Dr Robert Fitzgerald is at Royal Holloway, University of London, UK. He specializes in business history, Asia Pacific business, and multinational enterprise, and he has recently published Rise of the Global Company: Multinational Enterprise and the Making of the Modern World (Cambridge University Press). Professor Rowley is the Inaugural Professor of Human Resource Management, Cass Business School, City University, London, UK and Adjunct Professor, Griffith University, Australia. He is Book Series Editor of Working in Asia (Routledge) and Asian Studies (Elsevier) and has published widely, with over 500 journal articles, books and chapters and other contributions in practitioner journals, magazines and newsletters.