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학술논문

Motives, Strategies and Patterns of Foreign Direct Investment: The Case of Japanese and Korean Firms

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영문명
발행기관
한국통상정보학회
저자명
Kang-H. Park Yong-Taek Lim
간행물 정보
『통상정보연구』제7권 제4호, 1~19쪽, 전체 19쪽
주제분류
사회과학 > 무역학
파일형태
PDF
발행일자
2005.12.30
5,080

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국문 초록

영문 초록

This paper is to study globalization motives and strategies of Japanese and Korean industries by analyzing the causes and patterns of foreign direct investment (FDI) of the firms of the two countries during the 1980s and 1990s. First we develop a FDI function from the profit maximizing model of firms. Then we use regression analysis to determine internally driving-out factors and externally-inducing factors. Japanese FDI strategy has gone through three different stages; from natural resource-seeking investment in the 1950s and 1960s to market-expansion investment in the 1970s and 1980s and to a combination of cost-reducing (low-cost labor-seeking) investment and market-penetrating investment in the 1990s. On the other hand, Korean FDI behavior has gone through four different stages; from the learning stage with small investments in the 1970s, to natural resource-seeking investment in the early and mid 1980s, to the growth stage in the late 1980s and the early 1990s, to the maturity stage of the mid and late 1990s. The last two stages were characterized by a combination of cost-reducing investment and market-seeking investment. As a late comer, Korea began its FDI two decades later than Japan, but caught up the patterns of Japanese FDI by the mid 1990s and is in a competing position with Japan. Our findings show that both Japanese FDI and Korean FDI in Asia and other developing countries tendto be in labor-intensive sectors where their firms are losing their comparative advantages at home. The main motive for FDI into these regions is low-cost resource seeking. On the other hand, both Japanese FDI and Korean FDI in the U.S. and Europe tend to be knowledge-intensive sectors where Japanese and Korean firms attempt to internalize transaction and information costs by globalizing its production. The main motive for FDI into these regions is market-seeking. Firms in both countries have increased their investments in Mexico and Western and Eastern Europe in order to penetrate large economic blocs such as the EU and NAFTA area. Korean firms are more aggressive in expanding into new and untested markets than are their counterpart in Japan. Evidence of this can be seen in the scarcity of Japanese FDI and abundance of Korean FDI in Eastern Europe and China.

목차

Ⅰ. Introduction
Ⅱ. Trend in Japanese and Korean FDI Outflow
References
Abstract

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APA

Kang-H. Park,Yong-Taek Lim. (2005).Motives, Strategies and Patterns of Foreign Direct Investment: The Case of Japanese and Korean Firms. 통상정보연구, 7 (4), 1-19

MLA

Kang-H. Park,Yong-Taek Lim. "Motives, Strategies and Patterns of Foreign Direct Investment: The Case of Japanese and Korean Firms." 통상정보연구, 7.4(2005): 1-19

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