Distribution in Japan
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 10 January 2002
- ISBN 9780199248902
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages224 pages
- Size 244x164x20 mm
- Weight 465 g
- Language English
- Illustrations numerous tables and figures 0
Categories
Short description:
Several years have passed since the 'store wars' over barriers to foreign products at Japanese distribution firms. Yet among English-speaking readers, how these firms operate remains a puzzle. In this book, the best Japanese scholars in their fields attempt to unravel that puzzle. Avoiding culture-based explanations, they employ a systematic and rigorous economic logic---yet, since they also avoid mathematical notation, the argument remains accessible to generalist readers.
MoreLong description:
Several years have passed since the 'store wars' over barriers to foreign products at Japanese distribution firms. Yet among English-speaking readers, how these firms operate remains a puzzle. In this book, the best Japanese scholars in their fields attempt to unravel that puzzle. Avoiding culture-based explanations, they employ a systematic and rigorous economic logic---yet, since they also avoid mathematical notation, the argument remains accessible to generalist readers.
Collectively, the authors make four basic points:
* Within a country, distribution is less similar than it appears. Not only does it vary enormously across industries, but it often varies within a given industry as well.
* Across countries, distribution is less diverse than it appears. Although appearances sometimes suggest major cross-national contrasts, on more careful analysis the differences often disappear.
* Distribution sometimes depends on the product involved. Because distribution functions as the principal means by which manufacturers acquire information about consumer preferences, the character of distribution can depend crucially both on demand patterns and on manufacturing technology.
* In the absence of regulatory intervention, distribution generally will be efficient and non-exclusionary. Regulation usually introduces inefficiency and often creates barriers to entry. Importantly, however, the targets of exclusion will less often involve foreign than domestic competitors.
To illustrate these points, the authors draw on both analyses that cross various sectors and analyses that are specific to sectors; they study both regulated and unregulated industries; they describe industries with extensive imports, industries with extensive exports, and industries with neither; they examine the effect of technological change; and they introduce a variety of case studies, from agriculture and automobiles to electrical appliances and apparel.
The book is rich in relevant and easy-to-understand statistics, and the economic reasoning accompanying the statistics is short but helpful.
Table of Contents:
Japanese Distribution: Background, Issues, Examples
The Evolution of the Japanese Distribution Structure: An International and Institutional Perspective
Apparel Distribution: Inter-firm Contracting and Intra-firm Organization
The Distribution of Household Appliances: A Keiretsu Distribution System
Distribution of Imported Products: The Case of Automobiles
The Large-Scale Retail Stores Act and its 'Erosion' in the 1970s--1980s
Agricultural Cooperatives in Distribution
Information Technology in Distribution: Daily Necessities and Processed Foods
Conclusions: Implications for International Trade