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Following the collapse of the Japanese financial bubble during the 1990s, Japanese corporations came to be saddled with increasingly large underfunded pension obligations. The gap between the level of retirement benefit promised and the market performance of retirement funds widened alarmingly,...
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This study focuses on the stock market impact of Japanese corporate decisions to adopt pension plans. Implementing corporate pension plans in Japan is complicated because they are heavily regulated by the government and the traditional lump-sum-only severance benefit plans already exist,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005284914
This paper investigates the empirical determinants of the initial FDI entry decisions by Japanese firms to enter into the U.S and Taiwanese markets. The study is based on a full-sample survey of firms listed on Japanese stock exchanges and is for the period 1976-2000. We find that a number of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005828379
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As has been reviewed in this book, capitalist economies in the world differ significantly from one another even though they are all capitalist economies. The Japanese, the American economy, and the German economy are all capitalist economies with their own specific features. It is, therefore,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008774354
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