论文资料-日本在东亚及东南亚的直接投资_第1页
论文资料-日本在东亚及东南亚的直接投资_第2页
论文资料-日本在东亚及东南亚的直接投资_第3页
论文资料-日本在东亚及东南亚的直接投资_第4页
论文资料-日本在东亚及东南亚的直接投资_第5页
已阅读5页,还剩8页未读 继续免费阅读

下载本文档

版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领

文档简介

1、.羃芀蒃袆肅蒆荿袅膈芈蚇袅袇肁薃袄肀芇蕿袃膂膀蒅袂袁莅莁袁羄膈蚀袀肆莃薆罿膈膆蒂罿袈莂莈羈羀膄螆羇膃莀蚂羆芅芃薈羅羅蒈蒄薂肇芁莀薁腿蒇虿薀衿艿薅虿羁蒅蒁蚈肄芈莇蚇芆肀螅蚇羆莆蚁蚆肈腿薇蚅膀莄蒃蚄袀膇荿螃羂莂蚈螂肄膅薄螁膇莁蒀螁羆膄蒆螀聿葿莂蝿膁节蚁螈袁蒇薇螇羃芀蒃袆肅蒆荿袅膈芈蚇袅袇肁薃袄肀芇蕿袃膂膀蒅袂袁莅莁袁羄膈蚀袀肆莃薆罿膈膆蒂罿袈莂莈羈羀膄螆羇膃莀蚂羆芅芃薈羅羅蒈蒄薂肇芁莀薁腿蒇虿薀衿艿薅虿羁蒅蒁蚈肄芈莇蚇芆肀螅蚇羆莆蚁蚆肈腿薇蚅膀莄蒃蚄袀膇荿螃羂莂蚈螂肄膅薄螁膇莁蒀螁羆膄蒆螀聿葿莂蝿膁节蚁螈袁蒇薇螇羃芀蒃袆肅蒆荿袅膈芈蚇袅袇肁薃袄肀芇蕿袃膂膀蒅袂袁莅莁袁羄膈蚀袀肆莃薆罿膈膆蒂罿袈莂莈

2、羈羀膄螆羇膃莀蚂羆芅芃薈羅羅蒈蒄薂肇芁莀薁腿蒇虿薀衿艿薅虿羁蒅蒁蚈肄芈莇蚇芆肀螅蚇羆莆蚁蚆肈腿薇蚅膀莄蒃蚄袀膇荿螃羂莂蚈螂肄膅薄螁膇莁蒀螁羆膄蒆螀聿葿莂蝿膁节蚁螈袁蒇薇螇羃芀蒃袆肅蒆荿袅膈芈蚇袅袇肁薃袄肀芇蕿袃膂膀蒅袂袁莅莁袁羄膈蚀袀肆莃薆罿膈膆蒂罿袈莂莈羈羀膄螆羇膃莀蚂羆芅芃薈羅羅蒈蒄薂肇芁莀薁腿蒇虿薀衿艿薅虿羁蒅蒁蚈肄芈莇蚇芆肀螅蚇羆莆蚁蚆肈腿薇蚅膀莄蒃蚄袀膇荿螃羂莂蚈螂肄膅薄螁膇莁蒀螁羆膄蒆 The Japanese FDI in East and Southeast AsiaTable of Content:1. Introduction .P.22. Japanese FDI str

3、ategy after WWIIi. A brief review of Japanese FDI history from 1960s to early 2000s.P.2-4ii. Motive of Japanese FDI to East and Southeast Asia .P.4-53. Japanese FDI strategies after the financial crisis in 2008 i. Mindset change of Japanese FDI strategy .P.5-6ii. Opportunities brought by the financi

4、al crisis .P.64. Areas to push FDI after financial crisis i. Production, R&D and Supply Chain .P.7-8ii. Resource .P.8-9iii. Development of emerging market .P.95. The future of Japanese FDI under the increasing competition of China .P.9-116. Conclusion .P.117. Source .P.121. Introduction After WW

5、II, Japan exhibited the economic miracle and became the most developed country in Asia. Throughout the years in 20nd century after WWII, Japan has long been the economic driving force in East and Southeast Asia and exerted enormous influential power to these regions. The most obvious way that Japan

6、showed its influence is the amount of FDI that Japan has pushed in East and Southeast Asia. For a long time, Japanese FDI is one of the major capital inflows in the East and Southeast Asia which can be seen by the uncountable number of Japanese companies, factories and facilities that established in

7、 the regions. However, as the burst of economics bubble of Japan in early 1990s, followed by the Asia financial crisis in 1997 and the financial crisis in 2008, the Japan economic downturn seems to continue without a signal of recovery. More, the neighbor of Japan, China, showed increasingly influen

8、ce in Asia started from 2000s. Japanese FDI faces more and more challenges than that of last century. In the following discussion, we will evaluate the Japanese FDI strategy from the past to the recent years. Then, the FDI strategies after the financial crisis in 2008 and the future situation of Jap

9、anese FDI under the increasing competition of China in Southeast Asia will be discussed. 1. Japanese FDI strategy after WWIIi. A brief review of Japanese FDI history from 1960s to early 2000s1 The Japanese FDI History in East Asia started with late 60s and early 70s. This was believed to be triggere

10、d by several reasons, e.g. yen appreciation and the needs to relocate the manufacturing base away from Japan. The Nixon shocks led to the end of fixed exchange rates and the appreciation of the yen against the dollar, while the first oil crisis in 1973 increased the energy and production costs for J

11、apanese companies inside Japan, and forced them to be less reliance on heavy industry. Also, the rise in labor costs in Japan and the increasing pressure from Japanese public to move heavy and polluting industries offshore made the Japanese corporation to seek for overseas productions capacity. This

12、 resulted in the upsurge of Japanese FDI in the East Asia region that the FDI increased from US$165 million in 1970 to US$1 billion in 1975, in which most of the FDI went into textile (30%-40%) and electronics (15%-30%) industries. The 2nd upsurge of Japanese FDI occurred in the later 70s and early

13、80s. This was the result from the continuous effort of Japanese corporations to restructure and seek lower labor cost in East and Southeast Asia. More, the development of NIE in Asia (South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong) also drew a lot of Japanese FDI. The investment mainly flowed into met

14、allurgical and chemical industries. As a result, the FDI in East and Southeast Asia increased from $1,007 million in 1975 to $1,375 million in 1978.The 3rd and largest upsurge of Japanese FDI occurred in mid to late 1980s. The Plaza Accord of 1985 forced yen to appreciate against dollars by up to 70

15、% and this created a major driving force for Japanese corporations to invest overseas. The major FDI went into electronics, automobiles and manufacturing assembly. Another observation of Japanese FDI in late 1980s is that the geographical concentration of Japanese FDI started to shift from the NIEs-

16、4 to the ASEAN-4 (Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines and Indonesia). This indicated the rising wage and currency in the NIEs-4 that force Japanese corporation to seek for the place of lower cost.The 4th upsurge of FDI occurred in early 1990s. The further appreciation of yen to around 100 yen to the dol

17、lar became the main driving force to the increase in Japanese FDI. In 1995 Japanese FDI in East and Southeast Asia rose to $11.7billion, or 23% of Japans total world FDI. The major part of Japanese investment was devoted to manufacturing industry mainly in the electronics, automobile and metallurgy

18、industries.Since mid-1990s, Japans FDI to East Asia was fluctuated in terms of overall proportion of its world FDI. In the late-1990s, the Asia Financial Crisis and the prolong economic downturn after burst of Japans economic bubble caused Japan FDI in East and Southeast Asia to decline and fluctuat

19、e. In 2003-2004, the geographical focus has also shifted, with China 9% per Japans worldwide FDI, 5% for ASEAN-4 and 3% for the NIEs-4.ii. Motive of Japanese FDI to East and Southeast AsiaOver the year, two main reasons for Japanese Corporation to invest in East and Southeast Asia can be summarized.

20、 They are the appreciation of yen and the seeking of lower production cost. Undoubtedly, the yen appreciation means that the purchasing power of yen in overseas increases, in which Japanese corporation can spend lesser to establish the overseas production base. On the other hand, the high production

21、 cost inside Japan such as labor cost, together with the increasing pressure to move the highly polluted production process offshore, these entire factors triggered the upsurge of Japanese FDI to the rest of AsiaThe strategy of Japanese FDI also reflects the mindset or principle of Japanese corporat

22、ions. Japanese corporations treated East and Southeast Asia as production bases for products that export to the North America and West Europe. In other words, there was a triangular relationship between Japan, East & Southeast Asia and North America & West Europe, where the Japanese FDI flow

23、ed to East & Southeast Asia for production and the product then exported to North America and West Europe. The Purchase amount then finally went to Japan. A triangular relationship between Japan, East & Southeast Asia and US & West Europe2. Japanese FDI strategies after the financial cri

24、sis in 2008In the September of 2008, the Lehman burst signaled the beginning of financial crisis. The financial crisis originated in US and spread to rest of the world especially West Europe. The detrimental influences of the crisis are mainly expressed in the developed nations, such as US, England

25、and Japan. 2Their GDP showed a negative growth after the crisis. For example, the GDP Growth 2008 for US, England and Japan are -1.83%, -0.53% and -4.23% respectively. These implied that the traditional market of Japan, US and West Europe, can no longer has the purchasing power to support Japans exp

26、ort as before. Therefore, Japan has to seek other ways out rather than being too dependence on the US and West Europe market. i. Mindset change of Japanese FDI strategyJapan economy is very dependent on export, which can be viewed by the overseas portions of the major famous Japanese corporations. F

27、or example, the 2007 overseas sales proportion of Toyota, Honda and Sony are 76%, 83% and 73% respectively. Before the Financial crisis, the mindset of Japanese FDI that treating East and Southeast Asia as production base for producing product to export to US and West Europe has been effective for l

28、ong. However, as mentioned that the purchasing power of US and West Europe has been harmed to a large extent that affected directly to Japanese export. On the other hand, the situation in other East and Southeast Asia countries are different from US and West Europe. 3China recorded a strong GDP Grow

29、th 11.9% in 2009 and 4Thailand also recorded 3.8%. The growing living standard in East Asia and Southeast Asia is a best potential market, especially China, to absorb the export of Japanese. Therefore, the mindset of Japanese FDI strategies, which lasted for several decades, should be changed. That

30、is, Japanese corporations should invest in East and Southeast Asia not only for production bases but also developing them as a market to absorb Japanese goods. ii. Opportunities brought by the financial crisisAs discussed before, the yen appreciation has been the major driving force for Japanese out

31、wards FDI in the past few decades where the most representative appreciation appeared after the plaza accord created the largest upsurge of Japanese FDI in late 1980s and early 1990s. Similarly, the financial crisis caused the yen appreciation to the historical high in the past 10 years and continue

32、s to stay at a high level. This, again, gives Japanese corporations an opportunity to make use of the increased purchasing power because of high yen to invest in the East and Southeast Asia countries. However, this time, the FDI should also consider investing in building up the market, e.g. marketin

33、g and merge & acquisition of good local companies. 3. Areas to push FDI after financial crisis After the financial crisis, three areas can be summarized for Japan corporations to push FDI. They are (i) Production, R&D and Supply Chain, (ii) Resources and (iii) Development of Emerging Market.

34、 i. Production, R&D and Supply ChainThe Japanese has long been remarked as high quality and price competitive such as the automobile and electronics products. However, in the past decades, the Korean and Chinese corporations developed at a high speed and competed vigorously with the Japanese cor

35、porations. Japanese brands competitiveness over the competitors become vanishing. This phenomenon can be viewed by the Flat Panel Display TV (FPDTV) market, in which more and more consumers choose Korean brands. Taking Sony as an example, Sony has long been the giant in consumer electronics goods. T

36、he Sony Trinitron TV has been the market leader in TV market worldwide for several decades. However, Samsung and LG replaced Sony as the market leader in the FPDTV market. 5In 2009, Samsung recorded 17.2% world market share in FPDTV market, nearly one in five televisions shipped during 2009 was Sams

37、ungs. Another Korean company, LG, also occupied 14.8% market share. However, Sony can only achieve 5.9% market share. Korean companies, Samsung and LG, have vertically integrated all stages of the value chain from R&D, semiconductor & Panel, Assembly to Supply Chain in manufacturing FDPTV wi

38、thin their own corporate organizations, which secures all the material and process in the region of relatively low cost such as ASEAN. However, Sony does have the entire value chain, which means Sony need to purchase panels from other parties. Moreover, Sonys assemble of the finished products domest

39、ically also lowered the profitability or price-competiveness when comparing to its Korean rivalsThere is almost no economic rationale for having domestic manufacturing bases which products are intended for sale overseas. Therefore, it is now the high time brought by the high yen rate to invest in bu

40、ilding up the production facilities, R&D and value & supply chain in East and Southeast Asia. Manufacturers should shift to local integrated manufacturing in ASEAN. Also, acquiring local corporations with established value and supply chain can facilitate Japanese companies development. ii. R

41、esourceJapan is highly dependent on overseas countries for resources, especially food. 6Japan has 5.04 million hectare farmland which can only satisfy 40% domestics demand. That means the majority of food are imported. Japanese companies should not merely purchase from overseas corporations, but sho

42、uld buy or acquire stakes in companies to gain control of manufacturing processes overseas from upstream to downstream. By acquiring manufacturing and logistics capabilities overseas for vegetables and cereals, as well as for meat and fish products, Japanese corporations can not only lower their ing

43、redient costs, but can boost their competitiveness by vertically integrating these with their own processed food manufacturing operations at home and abroad.iii. Development of emerging marketIn order to build up the brand power of Japanese products in the emerging market like China and ASEAN countr

44、ies, Japanese corporation should increase their marketing expense so that the brand awareness among the consumers in the emerging market could be increased. Since the potential purchasing power of emerging is huge, it is worth investing at this stage for market development. On the other hand, merge

45、and acquire the good local companies is another way to speed up the development of emerging market. By bringing powerful local companies into Japanese organizations, Japanese products will rapidly increase their local market presence. Utilizing the strong local brand power and supply chain networks

46、of the merged or acquired companies, it is easier to transfer the brands of the Japanese corporations to the local markets. Recently, some Japanese corporations also adopted the merger and acquisition strategy to increase the paces of developing emerging market. For example, Asahi bought 20% share o

47、f famous Chinese beer companies, Qingdao Beer, in 2009. Kirin brought 49% share of San Miguel Beer of Philippines in 2009. These activities enable Asahi and Kirin to make use of the established supply chain network to facilitate the market entries of their products4. The Future of Japanese FDI under

48、 the increasing competition of ChinaIn the 21st century, the ASEAN region will become the major place to invest in Asia. ASEAN provide resources, e.g. mineral, limber and food, and also cheap labors. Japanese FDI will have no doubt to increase pushing FDI into ASEAN region. However, unlike last cent

49、ury which Japan is the main FDI to invest in Southeast Asia, China now also joins the competition. 7Chinas Efforts to boost economic ties with ASEAN can be back tracked in 1991 when China entered into Dialogue relations with ASEAN in 1991 and obtained full ASEAN Dialogue Partner status in 1996. In 2

50、000, Chinese officials suggested the idea of a China-ASEAN FTA. In 2002, ASEAN and China signed the Framework Agreement on Comprehensive Economic Co-operation to create an ASEAN-China Free Trade Area (ACFTA) within 10 years. In 2004, the two sides signed the Agreement on Trade in Goods of the Framew

51、ork Agreement on Comprehensive Economic Co-operation between the ASEAN and China, which included a schedule of tariff reductions and eventual elimination for most tariff lines between the two sides. The efforts of China government in building up economic relationship with ASEAN facilitated Chinese F

52、DI into the region. Taking energy as example, China has been actively pushing FDI to ASEAN countries on a number of energy related projects. For example, in 2007, China National Petroleum Corporation signed production sharing contracts with Myanmars Ministry of Energy covering crude oil and natural

53、gas exploration projects in three deep-water blocks off the western Myanmar coast. In 2007, the Vietnamese government had authorized state-owned PetroVietnam to begin joint oil and gas operations with China National Offshore Oil Corporation in the Gulf of Tonkin. Also, in the same year, Chinese oil

54、companies planned to invest as much as $14 billion in Indonesias oil and gas exploration sectors. These examples of Chinese corporations actively pushing FDI in the Energy area indicated that Chinese corporations are looking the same things with that Japanese corporations are looking for, e.g. resou

55、rces. Together with the increasing economics influences of China to ASEAN regions, e.g. by official development assistance (ODA), Japanese corporations will face keener competition in Southeast Asia. Therefore, Japanese Corporations are now in the crucial time to push FDI into Southeast Asia in this high yen opportunity. On the other hand, Japanese corporation could also seek for win-win solution rathe

温馨提示

  • 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
  • 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
  • 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
  • 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
  • 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
  • 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
  • 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。

评论

0/150

提交评论