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Dear AIB members,

The Japan Academy of Multinational Enterprises is pleased to announce that
Volume 6, Issue 1 of Japan MNE Insights (newsletter) is now available
online ( http://www.mne-jp.org/english/column.html ).
This issue includes two special essays, and we would like to share their
summaries with you.

*By Rajneesh Narula, "Japan and Japanese Firms: Historical and modern
lessons for International Business and economic development" *

Synopsis: The obsession in both the popular and academic press about Japan,
Japanese firms and their management practices lasted until the 1990s, after
which there has been an inexplicable absence of curiosity. I argue here
that there is still much to learn, not only from their contemporary
activity, but from their historical actions. Less developed countries, in
particular, can benefit from a careful study of the Meiji era, during which
Japan built up the structure, institutions and organizations that underlay
its economic success for much of the 20th century, and was a blueprint for
many Asian success stories. The Meiji period was crucial in building up of
Japan’s location advantages, and the rapidity of the reforms in this period
underlined much of its subsequent growth. I also argue that despite Japan’s
economic stagnation since the 1990s, its firms have not been stationary.
There has been considerable evolution in the management and structure of
Japanese firms and its innovation system. Such developments represent a
useful preview of challenges ahead for the more advanced emerging economies
such as China and India, as well as newer advanced economies, such as Korea.

*By Tetsuya Usui, “Dynamic marketing capabilities for emerging market
development: Lessons from Japanese multinationals”*

Synopsis: The major MNCs from developed nations such as Japan, the United
States, and Western Europe have been struggling with establishing and
maintaining competitive advantages in emerging markets (i.e., China in the
1990s, Southeast Asia in the 2000s, and Africa in the 2010s). This is
expected to continue to be the most critical global marketing issue unless
our globe turns entirely flat. Those MNCs from developed nations need to
pursue economies of scale by transferring and exploiting home-based
resources and standardizing marketing strategy. They also need to respond
to each emerging market condition by simultaneously adapting its strategy.
However, they face more difficulties in utilizing their home-based,
firm-specific advantages (FSAs) for value creation when they enter emerging
markets, as a wider institutional gap exists in these cases. In this
special essay, as an international marketing scholar, I will share with you
some significant lessons drawn from Japanese MNCs that demonstrate how they
are able to surmount these difficulties in emerging market developments by
utilizing their home-based resource bundle. Of course, these strategies did
not succeed right away.

We hope you find the essays interesting and share them with your
colleagues. If you have any comments or feedback, please do not hesitate to
contact us.

With kind regards,

Dr. Tamiko Kasahara

Editorial member of Japan MNE Insights

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Tamiko Kasahara (Ph.D.)

University of Shizuoka, School of Management and Information
52-1 Yada, Suruga-ku, Shizuoka, 422-8526, Japan
TEL/FAX:+81-54-264-5435 (direct)
E-mail :[log in to unmask]

The Japan Academy of Multinational Enterprises (
http://www.mne-jp.org/english/)
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