A Clash of Capitalisms: Foreign Shareholders and Corporate Restructuring in 1990s Japan

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
A Clash of Capitalisms: Foreign Shareholders and Corporate Restructuring in 1990s Japan
Abstract
This article examines the clash between stakeholder- and shareholder-based business systems resulting from an increase in foreign portfolio investment in the Japanese economy during the 1990s. An analysis of 1,108 firms between 1991 and 2000 shows that as foreign institutional investors, who were more interested in investment returns than in long-term relationships, replaced domestic shareholders, one fundamental pillar of Japan's stakeholder capitalism began to crack. Japanese firms began to adopt downsizing and asset divestiture, practices more characteristic of Anglo-American shareholder economies. The influence of foreigners, however, was weaker in firms more deeply embedded in the local system through close ties to domestic financial institutions and corporate groups. Thus, foreign investors were influential primarily in firms less embedded in the existing stakeholder system. This research contributes to debates on globalization and convergence of business systems, institutional change, and corporate governance systems.
Publication
American Sociological Review
Publisher
SAGE Publications Inc
Date
2005-06-01
Volume
70
Issue
3
Pages
451-471
Journal Abbr
Am Sociol Rev
Citation Key
ahmadjianClashCapitalismsForeign2005
Accessed
5/15/24, 6:46 PM
ISSN
0003-1224
Short Title
A Clash of Capitalisms
Language
en
Library Catalog
SAGE Journals
Citation
Ahmadjian, C. L., & Robbins, G. E. (2005). A Clash of Capitalisms: Foreign Shareholders and Corporate Restructuring in 1990s Japan. American Sociological Review, 70(3), 451–471. https://doi.org/10.1177/000312240507000305