Economists and legal scholars routinely posit an implicit contract between Japanese firms and their principal lender (called their "main bank"). Under this arrangement, the bank implicitly agrees to rescue the firm (through financial and managerial help) when times turn bad. Out of court, it rescues the firm from insolvency. Not only does it save the investments specific to the troubled firm, it lowers the use of costly bankruptcy proceedings and cuts the costs of those bankruptcy procedures it does occasionally invoke. Given the creditor-shareholder conflicts of interest that arise as firms approach insolvency, such arrangements would seem unstable. Yet according to a long sociological tradition, conflicts of interest are inherently less p...
Empirical studies in corporate finance have long been focused on the role of banks in reducing the c...
The Ministry of Finance's "Corporate Enterprise Quarterly Statistics" (Hojin kigyo tokei kiho) is th...
In this essay on Masahiko Aoki's recent study of Japanese corporate governance, we argue that he and...
Economists and legal scholars routinely posit an implicit contract between Japanese firms and their ...
Economists and legal scholars routinely posit an implicit contract between Japanese firms and their ...
The Japanese "main bank system" figures prominently in the recent literature on "relationship bankin...
The Japanese "main bank system" figures prominently in the recent literature on "relationship bankin...
A notable feature of the Japanese corporate finance environment is the existence of close financial ...
This article identifies potential relationships between the methods by which large firms in the busi...
First version: March 2003; This version: Sep. 2004In this paper, we argue that the bank-led rescues ...
While the Japanese banking sector seems to have disciplined borrower firms for inefficient managemen...
Empirical studies in corporate finance have long been focused on the role of banks in reducing the c...
Empirical studies in corporate finance have long been focused on the role of banks in reducing the c...
While it is well established that bank lending to severely impaired (zombie) Japanese firms during t...
In this paper, we argue that the bank-led rescues of \u85nancially dis-tressed rms in the heyday of ...
Empirical studies in corporate finance have long been focused on the role of banks in reducing the c...
The Ministry of Finance's "Corporate Enterprise Quarterly Statistics" (Hojin kigyo tokei kiho) is th...
In this essay on Masahiko Aoki's recent study of Japanese corporate governance, we argue that he and...
Economists and legal scholars routinely posit an implicit contract between Japanese firms and their ...
Economists and legal scholars routinely posit an implicit contract between Japanese firms and their ...
The Japanese "main bank system" figures prominently in the recent literature on "relationship bankin...
The Japanese "main bank system" figures prominently in the recent literature on "relationship bankin...
A notable feature of the Japanese corporate finance environment is the existence of close financial ...
This article identifies potential relationships between the methods by which large firms in the busi...
First version: March 2003; This version: Sep. 2004In this paper, we argue that the bank-led rescues ...
While the Japanese banking sector seems to have disciplined borrower firms for inefficient managemen...
Empirical studies in corporate finance have long been focused on the role of banks in reducing the c...
Empirical studies in corporate finance have long been focused on the role of banks in reducing the c...
While it is well established that bank lending to severely impaired (zombie) Japanese firms during t...
In this paper, we argue that the bank-led rescues of \u85nancially dis-tressed rms in the heyday of ...
Empirical studies in corporate finance have long been focused on the role of banks in reducing the c...
The Ministry of Finance's "Corporate Enterprise Quarterly Statistics" (Hojin kigyo tokei kiho) is th...
In this essay on Masahiko Aoki's recent study of Japanese corporate governance, we argue that he and...