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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:The Moynihan Institute's East Asia Program presents&nbsp\;Ulrik
 e Schaede\, professor of Japanese business and director\, Japan Forum for 
 Innovation and Technology\, UC San Diego.Over the past two decades\, Japan
 ’s leading companies have a launched a reinvention of their business strat
 egies and internal management and innovation processes. This has enabled t
 hem to build high global market shares in several hundred critical\, upstr
 eam inputs into global supply chains. Some of these advanced materials and
  components anchor Northeast Asian supply chains.&nbsp\; There are also se
 veral steps in semiconductor manufacturing where advanced technologies fro
 m Japan are essential. This presentation will explain this transformation 
 of Japan’s role in global business\, and then discuss what the resulting d
 ependencies mean for the potential of the reorganization and decoupling of
  global supply chains. Political discussions of economic security should i
 nclude considerations of the growing business dependencies within Asia.Sch
 aede is professor of Japanese business at the University of California\, S
 an Diego\, School of Global Policy and Strategy. She is the director of JF
 IT (Japan Forum for Innovation and Technology) where she organizes a regul
 ar “Japan Zoominar” on current issues on Japan. She works on Japan’s chang
 ing corporate strategies and management\, including business culture\, emp
 loyment practices\, financial markets\, and manufacturing and innovation u
 nder the digital transformation.She has written extensively on Japanese bu
 siness organization\, including "The Business Reinvention of Japan: How to
  Make Sense of the New Japan" (Stanford University Press\, 2020)\, which w
 on the 2021 Masayoshi Ohira Memorial Prize and has been translated into Ja
 panese as&nbsp\;"Saikō THE KAISHA." She holds a Ph.D. in Japan studies and
  economics from Marburg University\, Germany.
DTEND:20231128T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260411T122422Z
DTSTART:20231128T203000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:The Business Reinvention of Japan and Economic Security in Asia
UID:RFCALITEM639114926626845171
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>The Moynihan Institute's East Asia Program 
 presents&nbsp\;Ulrike Schaede\, professor of Japanese business and directo
 r\, Japan Forum for Innovation and Technology\, UC San Diego.</p><p>Over t
 he past two decades\, Japan’s leading companies have a launched a reinvent
 ion of their business strategies and internal management and innovation pr
 ocesses. This has enabled them to build high global market shares in sever
 al hundred critical\, upstream inputs into global supply chains. Some of t
 hese advanced materials and components anchor Northeast Asian supply chain
 s.&nbsp\; </p><p>There are also several steps in semiconductor manufacturi
 ng where advanced technologies from Japan are essential. This presentation
  will explain this transformation of Japan’s role in global business\, and
  then discuss what the resulting dependencies mean for the potential of th
 e reorganization and decoupling of global supply chains. Political discuss
 ions of economic security should include considerations of the growing bus
 iness dependencies within Asia.</p><p>Schaede is professor of Japanese bus
 iness at the University of California\, San Diego\, School of Global Polic
 y and Strategy. She is the director of JFIT (Japan Forum for Innovation an
 d Technology) where she organizes a regular “Japan Zoominar” on current is
 sues on Japan. She works on Japan’s changing corporate strategies and mana
 gement\, including business culture\, employment practices\, financial mar
 kets\, and manufacturing and innovation under the digital transformation.<
 /p><p>She has written extensively on Japanese business organization\, incl
 uding "The Business Reinvention of Japan: How to Make Sense of the New Jap
 an" (Stanford University Press\, 2020)\, which won the 2021 Masayoshi Ohir
 a Memorial Prize and has been translated into Japanese as<em>&nbsp\;"</em>
 Saikō THE KAISHA." She holds a Ph.D. in Japan studies and economics from M
 arburg University\, Germany.</p>
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