日本制造业在美国投资的区位、治理与战略决定因素

Location, governance, and strategic determinants of japanese manufacturing investment in the united states

STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 1994
被引 302
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究了区位、治理和战略因素对日本企业在美国制造业投资决策的影响,发现规模经济、贸易壁垒、研发支出和国内市场地位是关键因素。

Abstract

Abstract A firm's decision to manufacture abroad depends on location, governance, and strategic factors. Governance factors are firm‐specific. In spite of this, most empirical studies of foreign direct investment (FDI) have been conducted at the industry level (making it impossible to look at firm‐specific determinants), and only a handful have considered governance, location, and strategic factors simultaneously. This paper is the first large sample study of the determinants of foreign direct investment at the product and firm‐level. It examines the impact of location and governance factors, and of four types of strategic interactions, on a Japanese firm's propensity to manufacture in the U.S. The results support the view that foreign direct investment is explained by location, governance, and strategic variables. Economies of scale and trade barriers encourage Japanese FDI in the U.S. The larger a Japanese firm's R & D expenditures, the greater the probability it will manufacture in the U.S., but this is not the case for advertising expenditures. Some strategic factors are also important: Japanese firms with medium domestic market shares have the highest propensity to invest in the U.S. There is evidence of follow‐the‐leader behavior between firms of rival enterprise groups, but none of ‘exchange‐of‐threat’ between American and Japanese firms. Japanese investors are also attracted by concentrated and high‐growth U.S. industries.

外国直接投资公司治理产业组织经济地理国际贸易