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10 - Japanese direct manufacturing investment in Europe
- Edited by L. Alan Winters, University of Birmingham, Anthony Venables, University of Southampton
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- Book:
- European Integration
- Published online:
- 07 September 2010
- Print publication:
- 23 May 1991, pp 200-231
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
The basic facts
Japanese direct investment in advanced countries is a relatively recent phenomenon, but an impressive acceleration has taken place since 1985. Investment in western Europe expanded gradually during the second half of the 1970s and the early 1980s and picked up sharply after 1986 (Figure 10.1). Investment has been mostly in finance (banking and insurance), services, and real estate, with industrial investment representing less than 10% of yearly flows in the 1970s, rising to 12–13% in the early 1980s and to some 20% towards the end of that decade.
The growing Japanese presence in manufacturing has attracted much attention and has been a source of debate and controversy within the EC: a quick look at the data in Table 10.1 can help focus the nature of the problem.
The Japanese presence in Europe is still quite small. It is small as a share of total Japanese investment abroad: Europe represents only about 16% of the total, running well behind North America (40% of the total), Asia (23%) and Latin America (19%). Even smaller, comparatively, is the share of manufacturing: only 10% of total investment in Europe, compared with 48% of the total going to manufacturing in North America, 38% in Asia and 24% in Latin America (Watanabe, 1988).
It is small, too, if compared with other foreign presences in European countries. For instance, according to some estimates by EUROSTAT, intra-EC direct investment amounted in 1980–6 to about 35 billion dollars, and US investment in Europe was 46 billion dollars in 1982–7 (out of which over 60% was in manufacturing).