1 / 16

BSP 2005

BSP 2005. Asia Pacific Business and Society. Good Friday, April 6. No class No make-up unless requested (to email me in that case) 30 th March: First round of presentations 13 th April: Second round of presentations & Project write-up (last class). News….

hayley-ryan
Download Presentation

BSP 2005

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BSP 2005 Asia Pacific Business and Society

  2. Good Friday, April 6 • No class • No make-up unless requested (to email me in that case) • 30th March: First round of presentations • 13th April: Second round of presentations & Project write-up (last class)

  3. News… • Biggest private equity buyout of TXU • $45 billion USD • By KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts)

  4. Japan’s phenomenal growth • Nominal GDP in 1965: $91 bn USD 1980: $1065 bn USD • ‘Economic miracle’ began in 1950 • By mid-1960s, Japan’s GDP was third largest after US and Soviet Union. • Japanese steel, ships and electronics were world leaders

  5. Reasons behind Japan’s phenomenal growthDiscuss.

  6. America’s aid & influence • Believed that economic development will prevent militarism and communism • US security framework in Asia Pacific • Japan closest to Soviet Union, North Korea, Communist China, Taiwan • Vietnam War • Supplied military technology to Japan • In return for political and industrial support • With U.S. aid, no need for Japan to spend on military

  7. Government policies • Ministry of International Trade and Industry • Untied technology imports from goods & services • Low cost of technology with focused channeling led to increases in productivity

  8. Businesses • Keiretsu • System of ownership and restricted trading of shares • Tolerated lower profits in short run • Less concerned about paying out stock dividends • Concentrate on long-term growth • Policy of lifelong employment

  9. Japan’s Recession. What led to it?

  10. Banks • Financial market liberalizations in 1980s • Corporate vs. Equity financing • Freed Japanese companies and allowed them to borrow from global money markets • Huge influx of funds • Stimulated the property and stock markets • Non-performing loans (by 1990) • Domestic banks had to compete to loan to smaller companies

  11. Government • Tried to cool off markets • Bank of Japan increased discount rate • By 1991, discount rate = 6%, market interest rate = 2.5% • Mexican currency crisis • Lost confidence in the US dollar • Yen appreciated • Japanese manufacturers hit • Government spending • Built highways, benefited only certain well-connected construction companies • Added public debt

  12. Spread to rest of Asia • Banks needed profitable loans to cover bad debts • Early 1990s, rest of Asia was booming • Loaned to Thailand, S. Korea, Indonesia • Kept lowering interest rates, attracting less profitable investments • Japan’s hint of an interest rate increase • Investment banks sold all asian currencies • Fluctuations in exchange rates • Speculation by US hedge funds on Thai baht further destabilized the region

  13. Factors unique to Japan • Government policy • Unwritten guarantee to never let banks go out of business • Business regulations • Bank reserve capital ratios • Allowed to include stock holdings • Benefited them even more during boom years, allowed bigger loans

  14. Japanese Culture • Banks’ fear of losing face • Refusal to accept public funds by government to write off bad debts • Thrift culture of Japanese • Paradox of savings • Led to prolonged recession • Firm’s commitment to lifelong employment • Protect dignity and morale of employees by guaranteeing lifetime employment • Believe that productivity is strongly correlated to job security

  15. Japanese Culture (cont’d) • Firm’s commitment to lifelong employment • Attempt to retain workforce during downturn • By obtaining more bank loans • Prolonged recession, led to even greater operating losses • Banks • Abandoning longstanding relationships with firms viewed as dishonorable • More than willing to continue financing debt of companies to maintain employment • Different from US firms/banks

  16. Japan today • Main challenge is exactly the success of the industrial infrastructure that led to the miracle • Keiretsu • Result of government policies of controlled competition • Loss in flexibility of business infrastructure • Culture • Labor shortages back then led to lifetime employment • Labor immobility • Structure was adapted to high production, high quality, catch up economic growth model

More Related