Foreign banks in Japan: A study of a Japanese deregulation process |
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Authors: | Marshall Sarnat François Thibault MSc Terry Ursacki Ilan Vertinsky |
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Affiliation: | (1) The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel;(2) The University of Calgary, Canada;(3) Centre for International Business Studies, The University of British Columbia, Canada |
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Abstract: | The deregulation of foreign banks in Japan, although corresponding in broad outline to world-wide trends, has diverged substantially in many particulars from patterns seen elsewhere. It has tended to be excruciatingly slow and piecemeal and to have been of minimal benefit to foreign banks. A review of this process leads to the conclusion that these characteristics result from organisational and political-bureaucratic factors inherent to the Japanese style of government which is, in turn, partially a reflection of Japanese culture. Although these non-economic factors have influenced the specific pattern of change, its overall direction appears to have been consistent with the broader national interest.The authors wish to acknowledge financial support from the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Florsheimer Center for Policy Studies, and the Krueger Center for Financial Research. |
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