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  6. Are Joint Ventures with Local Firms an Efficient Way to Enter a Culturally Distant Market? The Case of Japanese Entry into the United States

Are Joint Ventures with Local Firms an Efficient Way to Enter a Culturally Distant Market? The Case of Japanese Entry into the United States

File(s)
Cornell_Dyson_wp0227.pdf (846.64 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/58052
Collections
Dyson School Working Papers
Author
Hennart, Jean-Francois
Roehl, Thomas
Hagen, James M.
Abstract

We empirically test the proposition that foreign direct investors should use joint ventures with local firms for their first investment in unfamiliar markets. By tracking the expansion paths of Japanese investors in the US, we find no evidence that the growth of Japanese firms which first entered the US in a joint ventures with local firms is different from that of Japanese counterparts which used wholly-owned subsidiaries for initial US market entry.

Description
WP 2002-27 August 2002
JEL Classification Codes: F2; F21; L22; D2; L6
Date Issued
2002-08
Publisher
Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management, Cornell University
Keywords
Joint venture
•
Foreign market entry
•
Japan
•
Transaction costs
Type
article

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