How much has competition among Japanese firms changed? Have the tougher penalties provided under the Antimonopoly Law in 1992 pushed Japanese firms to compete more? A basic assumption behind our understanding of market systems is that firms compete over price to attract customers, spurring them to lower productions costs, improve productivity, and provide greater benefits to society. Assumptions about price competition also underlie international trade agreements. Parties to such agreements presume that if governments lower their barriers to trade, that the intrinsic competitiveness of markets will mean that price-competitive foreign firms will be able to sell their goods
With the successful conclusion of the Uruguay Round of negotiations under the General Agreement on T...
The International Trade Commission asserted that for most of 1978 and probably for the indefinite fu...
Based on an extensive survey of corporate executives living and working in Japan, this study examine...
In this Article, I examine Japanese competition law and policy with a view toward increasing its eff...
This article deals with the question of differences in competition policy enforcement regimes in Jap...
The Japanese substantive competition law is, in theory, very well equipped to prevent anticompetitiv...
This article focuses on the legislative history of the Japanese Antimonopoly Law and a comparison be...
When industries are exposed to foreign competition, relaxation of antitrust law in general, and of a...
Conventional trade theory assumes perfect competition among firms and makes on balance a strong case...
The present paper investigates the potential value of strategic antitrust policy in an oligopolistic...
Article published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal ...
As border barriers have declined, private barriers to competition have grown more significant. More ...
On October 7, 1999, the United States and Japan signed an antitrust cooperation agreement. The agree...
Sound antitrust law and policy is in tension with industrial policy. Antitrust promotes consumer wel...
The ground rules governing competition in international trade rank high among current issues of econ...
With the successful conclusion of the Uruguay Round of negotiations under the General Agreement on T...
The International Trade Commission asserted that for most of 1978 and probably for the indefinite fu...
Based on an extensive survey of corporate executives living and working in Japan, this study examine...
In this Article, I examine Japanese competition law and policy with a view toward increasing its eff...
This article deals with the question of differences in competition policy enforcement regimes in Jap...
The Japanese substantive competition law is, in theory, very well equipped to prevent anticompetitiv...
This article focuses on the legislative history of the Japanese Antimonopoly Law and a comparison be...
When industries are exposed to foreign competition, relaxation of antitrust law in general, and of a...
Conventional trade theory assumes perfect competition among firms and makes on balance a strong case...
The present paper investigates the potential value of strategic antitrust policy in an oligopolistic...
Article published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal ...
As border barriers have declined, private barriers to competition have grown more significant. More ...
On October 7, 1999, the United States and Japan signed an antitrust cooperation agreement. The agree...
Sound antitrust law and policy is in tension with industrial policy. Antitrust promotes consumer wel...
The ground rules governing competition in international trade rank high among current issues of econ...
With the successful conclusion of the Uruguay Round of negotiations under the General Agreement on T...
The International Trade Commission asserted that for most of 1978 and probably for the indefinite fu...
Based on an extensive survey of corporate executives living and working in Japan, this study examine...