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Back to topAnticompetitive Practices in Japan: Their Impact on the Performance of Foreign Firms (Production Sourcebooks; 11) (Hardcover)
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Description
The U.S.-Japan bilateral trade relationship is perhaps the most consequential and the most tumultuous in the world. Government and business leaders devote substantial time and effort to resolving the stream of disputes that arise between the two allies and trading partners. Many of the issues are rooted in the perception that Japan's impressive economic success may be due in some degree to anticompetitive practices through which Japan's domestic markets are protected, and that an unfair advantage is granted to Japanese companies as they expand abroad. Regardless of the validity of these opinions, their existence exerts a negative influence upon this important bilateral relationship.
About the Author
MASAAKI KOTABE is Professor at Temple University, Institution of Global Management Studies. He has written widely on international affairs including Global Sourcing Strategy: R&D, Manufacturing, and Marketing Interfaces (Quorum, 1992). KENT WHEILER is Senior Analyst for Weyerhauser Company. He has extensive experience in dealing with the Far East.