[No.097] Competitive Interactions between Global Competitors–The Entry Behavior of Korean and Japanese Multinational Firms
2006/08/08
Abstract
We investigate the competitive influence on a multinational firm’s geographic market entry decisions as conditioned on the actions of industry competitors from within its own country and on the actions of competitors from a nearby country. We frame our study in the competitive action literature in which we interpret the market entry decision in the context of the timing of the globalization of a firm. Using descriptive and multivariate analysis, we try to understand how late entrants are influenced by the actions of early entrants and how early entrants react to the competitive challenges posed by late entrants. We examine the entry behavior of Japanese and Korean firms across four distinct strategic time periods, and find that Korean firms tended not to follow the actions of Japanese competitors. Meanwhile, Korean and Japanese firms actively imitated the investment decisions of peer firms, competing in the same industry.
- 2022/05/30
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[No.154] ESG Management and Credit Risk Premia: Evidence from Credit Default Swaps for Japan’s Major Companies
- 2021/08/24
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[No.153] Comparing the Earned Income Tax Credit and Universal Basic Income in a Heterogeneous Agent Model
- 2021/05/25
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[No.152] Nowcasting Japanese GDP using targeted predictors
- 2020/01/24
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[No.150] Enhancing infrastructure connectivity in Vietnam under Japan’s Free and Open Indo-Pacific Strategy versus China’s Belt and Road Initiative
- 2019/10/01
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[No.149] Global Imbalances and Demographic Changes