nep-sea New Economics Papers
on South East Asia
Issue of 2005‒02‒20
fourteen papers chosen by
Kavita Iyengar
Asian Development Bank

  1. WTO Negotiations and Other Agricultural Trade Issues in Japan By Masayoshi Honma
  2. Measuring network effects on trade: are Japanese affiliates distinctive? By Theresa M. Greaney
  3. Judging Japan's FDI: The verdict from a dartboard model By Keith Head; John Ries
  4. Intellectual Property Rights in Agriculture and the Interests of Asian-Pacific By Keith E. Maskus
  5. Determinants of high-royalty contracts and the impact of stronger protection of intellectual property rights in Japan By Sadao Nagaoka
  6. East Asia's Antidumping Problem By Thomas J. Prusa
  7. An Evaluation of Japan's First Safeguards Actions By Arata Kuno
  8. Foreign outsourcing and firm-level characteristics: evidence from Japanese manufacturers By Eiichi Tomiura
  9. International Comparison in Historical Perspective: Reconstructing the 1934-36 Benchmark Purchasing Power Parity for Japan, Korea and Taiwan By Kyoji Fukao; Debin Ma; Tangjun Yuan
  10. The Determinants of Exit from Nursing Homes and the Price Elasticity of Nursing Home Care: Evidence from Japanese Micro-level Data By Haruko Noguchi; Satoshi Shimizutani
  11. Nonprofit and For-profit Providers in Japan's At-home Care Industry: Evidence on Quality of Service and Household Choice By Haruko Noguchi; Satoshi Shimizutani
  12. Schools, School Quality and Academic Achievement: Evidence from the Philippines By Bacolod, Marigee; Tobias, Justin
  13. International Capital Flows and Boom-Bust Cycles in the Asia Pacific Region By Henry Kim
  14. Fear of Floating in East Asia By Henry Kim

  1. By: Masayoshi Honma
    Date: 2004–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-54&r=sea
  2. By: Theresa M. Greaney
    Abstract: This paper examines network effects on trade by comparing the trade patterns of foreign affiliates in the United States with the trade patterns of U.S.-owned firms. The evidence strongly supports the following hypotheses: 1) foreign affiliates behave differently from U.S. firms in their trade patterns; 2) in particular, foreign affiliates display strong home biases in their trade patterns; and 3) among the foreign affiliates, Japanese affiliates demonstrate by far the strongest home bias in their trade patterns. Controlling for income and distance effects, foreign affiliates from Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland traded on average 17 times more with their respective home countries and those from the United Kingdom traded 30 times more with the United Kingdom, while Japanese affiliates traded a whopping 130 times more with Japan.
    Keywords: Network effects, Foreign affiliates, Trade patterns
    JEL: F14 F23
    Date: 2004–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-57&r=sea
  3. By: Keith Head; John Ries
    Abstract: We evaluate Japan's inward and outward FDI performance using theoretical benchmarks based on the premise that management teams headquartered around the world bid for the production facilities located in each country. Our model incorporates the assumption that bids are inversely proportionate to distance. It accurately predicts the multilateral shares of FDI stocks for most important countries. The theory predicts lower shares of FDI for Japan than its share of the world economy. Japan's actual share of outward FDI exceeds its inward share -as the model predicts- but both currently lie below the benchmark predictions.
    Keywords: Foreign direct investment, gravity, mergers and acquisitions, openness
    JEL: F21 F23
    Date: 2004–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-58&r=sea
  4. By: Keith E. Maskus
    Date: 2004–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-59&r=sea
  5. By: Sadao Nagaoka
    Abstract: This paper first reviews how Japan has strengthened the protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs), focusing on the expansion of the patentable subject matter, the restriction of the possibility of compulsory licensing, stronger deterrence against infringement and the introduction of the doctrine of equivalents. Second, based on the statistical analysis of sector-level panel data, it shows that (1)R&D intensity of domestic industry, trademark licensing, cross-licensing and, to a smaller degree, monopoly provisions are the significant determinants of the incidence of high-royalty contracts, and (2)Stronger protection of intellectual property rights looks to have increased the incidence of high-royalty contracts in the latter part of 1990s in the Japanese industries for which patent is important for appropriability.
    Keywords: Intellectual property rights, Licensing contract, Appropriability, Patent
    JEL: F23 O34
    Date: 2004–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-60&r=sea
  6. By: Thomas J. Prusa
    Date: 2004–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-61&r=sea
  7. By: Arata Kuno
    Date: 2004–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-62&r=sea
  8. By: Eiichi Tomiura
    Abstract: Based on micro data of 118,300 firms without firm-size thresholds covering all manufacturing industries in Japan, this paper investigates the foreign outsourcing, distinguished explicitly from domestic outsourcing, at the firm level. Less than three percent of the firms are outsourcing their production across national borders. The fixed entry cost for foreign outsourcing is significant and related with the firm's human skills and foreign business experience. The firms tend to outsource more of their activities overseas when their productivity is higher or when their products are more labor-intensive.
    Keywords: Foreign outsourcing, Firm-level data, Productivity, Capital-labor ratio
    JEL: F1 F23 J31
    Date: 2004–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-64&r=sea
  9. By: Kyoji Fukao; Debin Ma; Tangjun Yuan
    Abstract: This article provides the first expenditure approach estimate of purchasing power parity (PPP) converters for 1934-36 Japan, Korea and Taiwan. We matched all together 70 to 80 types of goods and services for private consumption, government expenditure and investment using three levels of weights derived from actual expenditure surveys. We find that the 1934-6 average prices of Korea for private consumption, investment and government expenditure were about 0.86, 0.89 and 0.98 times that of Japan respectively; and for Taiwan 0.84, 0.87 and 0.95 respectively. This gives the 1934-6 Korea and Taiwan overall GDE average price levels of 0.87 and 0.86 respectively that of Japan. Our new benchmark estimate is an improvement over existing converters based either on exchange rates or the 1990 backward projection method, which was embedded with index number biases. It provides a vital link for a long-term overview of structural change, ethnic income distribution and the historical convergence or divergence for these three economies in the past century.
    Date: 2005–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-66&r=sea
  10. By: Haruko Noguchi; Satoshi Shimizutani
    Abstract: This study examines how the price mechanism affects the length of residents' nursing home stay and their destination after exit. The purpose of this analysis is to evaluate policy options to reduce the number of socially institutionalized elderly nursing home residents in Japan. To address these issues, we take advantage of micro-level data from The Survey on Care Service Providers compiled by the Japanese government. Our duration estimates show that the price elasticity of the hazard of exit from welfare care facilities was 1.7 (95% CI: 0.4-3.0) and 1.8 (95% CI: 0.0-3.8) from health care facilities. The probit estimates show that a 1 percentage point increase in copayments leads to an increase in the probability of returning home by 0.04% for patients of welfare care facilities and 3.7% for those of health care facilities. In contrast, the price elasticity of the probability of being re-hospitalized is -3.3% for patients of health care facilities and -1.9% for those of medical care facilities. An appropriate price policy may work well to shorten patients' length of stay and to reduce the number of the socially institutionalized. Since the effects of the introduction of a price mechanism may differ for different types of facilities, public policies aimed at broadening residents' range of choices need to be designed with care and incorporate an appropriate risk adjustment system to provide a safety net for those elderly highly at risk of being socially institutionalized.
    Date: 2005–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-67&r=sea
  11. By: Haruko Noguchi; Satoshi Shimizutani
    Abstract: In 2000, government deregulation along with the introduction of the long-term insurance scheme for the first time allowed for-profit providers of at-home care for the elderly to compete directly with nonprofit operators. According to the contract failure hypothesis, we would expect consumers to prefer nonprofit providers over their for-profit counterparts as a result of information asymmetry and non-distributional constraints. This study takes advantage of household level data to examine whether households' choice of care provider is biased toward nonprofits. We find that nonprofit providers to command a larger market share, but this is at least partly explained by having operated in the market longer and by continuing restrictions in medical and institutional care that confer various advantages on nonprofit providers. However, we do find that user with better knowledge of providers tend to favor for-profit providers, suggesting that measures to reduce information asymmetries may help to provide a more level playing field.
    Date: 2005–02
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hst:hstdps:d04-73&r=sea
  12. By: Bacolod, Marigee; Tobias, Justin
    Abstract: A broad literature seeks to assess the importance of schools, proxies for school quality, and family background on children's achievement growth using the education production function. Using rich data from the Philippines, we introduce and estimate a model that imposes little structure on the relationship between intake achievement and follow-up achievement and evaluate school performance based on this estimated relationship. Our methods nest typical value added specifications that use test score gains as the outcome variable and models assuming linearity in the relationship between intake and follow-up scores. We find evidence against the use of value-added models for our data and show that such models give very different assessments of school performance in the Philippines. Using a variety of tests we find that schools matter in the production of student achievement, though variation in performance across schools only explain about 6 percent of the total (conditional) variation in follow-up achievement. Schools providing basic facilities - in particular schools providing electricity - are found to perform much better in the production of achievement growth.
    Date: 2005–02–11
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:isu:genres:12249&r=sea
  13. By: Henry Kim
    Abstract: This paper documents evidence of business cycle synchronization in selected Asia Pacific countries in the 1990s. We explain business cycle synchronization by the channel of international capital flows. Using the VAR method, we find that most Asian countries experience boom-bust cycles following capital inflows, where the boom in output is mostly driven by consumption and investment. Empirical evidence shows that capital flows in the region are highly correlated, which supports the conclusion that capital market liberalization has contributed to business cycle synchronization in Asia. We also find that business cycles in the Asian crisis countries are highly synchronized with those in Japan.
    Keywords: business cycle synchronization, capital flows, boom-bust cycles, financial integration
    JEL: F02 F36 F41
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:tuf:tuftec:0506&r=sea
  14. By: Henry Kim
    Abstract: We examine the de facto exchange rate arrangements in East Asia by applying the methods suggested by Calvo and Reinhart (2002) and Kim (2004). Estimation results suggest that three East Asian countries in our sample adopted a hard peg or a peg with capital account restrictions in the post-crisis period. Five East Asian countries in our sample moved toward a more flexible exchange rate arrangement in the post-crisis period. At least three of these five countries (Korea, Indonesia and Thailand) achieved the level of exchange rate flexibility that is close to the level accomplished in the free floater such as Australia. These results suggest that “Fear of Floating” of East Asian countries is not prevalent in the post-crisis period and that the bi-polar view has some support in East Asian samples.
    Keywords: Bi-polar View, De Facto Exchange Rate Arrangements, De Jure Exchange Rate Arrangements, East Asia, Fear of Floating
    JEL: F02 F36 F41
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:tuf:tuftec:0507&r=sea

This nep-sea issue is ©2005 by Kavita Iyengar. It is provided as is without any express or implied warranty. It may be freely redistributed in whole or in part for any purpose. If distributed in part, please include this notice.
General information on the NEP project can be found at http://nep.repec.org. For comments please write to the director of NEP, Marco Novarese at <director@nep.repec.org>. Put “NEP” in the subject, otherwise your mail may be rejected.
NEP’s infrastructure is sponsored by the School of Economics and Finance of Massey University in New Zealand.