Abstract
As regional integration proceeds in East Asia, intermediate goods production of advanced technology has been locked in Japan despite the dispersion forces of high factor costs. However, the disastrous earthquake in 2011 may have revealed supply chain disruption risk as another dispersion force. We analyze how these dispersion forces affect the specialization in intermediate goods production of Japan and discuss future competitive challenges for the Japanese economy under deindustrialization from the spatial economics viewpoint.
Article PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Aoki M (1990) Toward an economic model of the Japanese firm. J Econ Lit 28(1): 1–27
Athukorala P-C, Yamashita N (2006) Production fragmentation and trade integration: East Asia in a global context. North Am J Econ Finance 17(3): 233–256
Belderbos R, Carree M (2002) The location of Japanese investment in China: agglomeration effects, Keiretsu, and firm heterogeneity. J Jpn Int Econ 16(2): 194–211
Berliant M, Fujita M (2008) Knowledge creation as a square dance on the Hilbert cube. Int Econ Rev 49(4): 1251–1295
Carlin W, Soskice D (2009) German economic performance: disentangling the role of supply-side reforms, macroeconomic policy and coordinated economy institutions. Socio Econ Rev 7: 67–99
Dean JM, Fung KC, Wang Z (2011) Measuring vertical specialization: the case of China. Rev Int Econ 19(4): 609–625
Depaere P, Lee J, Paik M (2010) Agglomeration, backward and forward linkages: evidence from South Korean investment in China. Can J Econ 43(2): 520–546
Fujita M (2007) Globalization, regional integration and spatial economics: an introduction. In: Fujita M (eds) Regional integration in East Asia—from the viewpoint of spatial economics. Palgrave Macmillan, London, pp 1–20
Fujita M, Hamaguchi N (2010) Regional integration of production system and spatial income disparities in East Asia. In: Jovanovic M (eds) International handbook on the economics of integration, vol 2. Edward Elgar, Chalterham, pp 242–261
Fujita M, Thisse J-F (2002) Economics of agglomeration: cities, industrial location, and regional growth. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Fujita M, Thisse J-F (2006) Globalization and the evolution of the supply chain: who gains and who loses. Int Econ Rev 47(3): 811–836
Fujita M, Krugman P, Venables AJ (1999) The spatial economy-cities, regions, and international trade. MIT Press, Massachusetts
Hamaguchi N, Zhao W (2011) Economic integration and regional disparities in East Asia. In: Fujita M, Kuroiwa I, Kumagai S (eds) The economics of East Asian integration: a comprehensive introduction to regional issues. Edward Elgar, Chalterham
Kimura F, Ando M (2005) Two-dimension fragmentation in East Asia: conceptual framework and empirics. Int Rev Econ Finance 14(3): 317–348
Kojima K (2000) The “flying geese” model of Asian economic development: origin, theoretical extensions, and regional policy implications. J Asian Econ 11: 375–401
METI, Results of an emergency survey on the actual status of industries after the great East Japan earthquake http://www.meti.go.jp/english/press/2011/pdf/0801_03a.pdf
Miller E (1977) Risk, uncertainty, and divergence of opinion. J Finance 32: 1151–1168
Sheffi Y, Rice JB Jr (2005) A supply chain view of the resilient enterprises. MIT Sloan Manag Rev 47(1): 41–48
Wakasugi R (2005) The effect of Chinese regional conditions on the location choice of Japanese affiliates. Jpn Econ Rev 565(4): 390–407
Wakasugi R, Ito B, Tomiura E (2008) Offshoring and trade in East Asia: a statistical analysis. Asian Econ Pap 7(3): 101–124
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Fujita, M., Hamaguchi, N. Japan and economic integration in East Asia: post-disaster scenario. Ann Reg Sci 48, 485–500 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00168-011-0484-y
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00168-011-0484-y