Abstract

PurposeThis study investigates the dynamic production structure of the Japanese manufacturing industry by using the adjustment cost approach. The study is to shed some light on the unique dynamic structure of the Japanese manufacturing industry. The study attempts to help design and predict industrial policies that are implemented to enhance domestic investments by the Japanese government.Design/methodology/approachThis study obtains a system of dynamic factor demand and output supply equations by applying the dual approach to the intertemporal value function as represented by the Hamilton–Jacobi equation. By using industrial panel data for 1973–2012 of the Japanese manufacturing industry, the study estimates the system of the behavioral equations and corresponding elasticities. The study uses hypothesis tests and dynamic elasticities to investigate the dynamic structure of the Japanese manufacturing industry.FindingsEstimation results show that labor and capital are quasi-fixed variables that adjust about 0.2 percent annually to the long-run optimum levels. Estimated adjustment rates are very slow as often presumed about the Japanese manufacturing industry, which uses lifetime employment practice and slow decision-making process in investment decisions. The results also show that output supply and factor demand elasticities vary greatly depending on time horizon. Factor demand increases when its own price increases in the short run, suggesting that factor adjustment is mostly determined factor prices in the past due to sluggish factor adjustment. However, factor demand becomes a normal downward-sloping curve in the long run as factor adjustment gets completed.Originality/valueJapanese manufacturing firms hire employees through lifetime contract to exploit the benefits of dynamic learning-by-doing and execute investments carefully considering all the possible impacts. Under the strategy, adjustment costs for changing workers and capital stock are minimized. Dynamic adjustment model is expected to shed some light on the unique dynamic structure of the Japanese manufacturing industry. However, researches regarding the dynamic factor adjustment of the Japanese manufacturing industry are hard to find. This study is expected to fill the research vacuum.

Highlights

  • The Japanese manufacturing industry has endured intense transformation since the 1970s

  • The results show that elasticities of output supply and factor demand vary greatly depending on time horizon and that there exists disembodied technical change in labor even after the input is adjusted for quality

  • By applying a dynamic factor demand model to the Japanese manufacturing industry, estimation results show that labor and capital are quasi-fixed variables that adjust about 0.2 percent annually to the long-run optimum levels

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Summary

Introduction

The Japanese manufacturing industry has endured intense transformation since the 1970s. Previous studies applied dynamic factor demand model to empirically investigate the production structure of various industries. Berndt et al (1981), Epstein and Denny (1983) and Nadiri and Prucha (1996) investigated the US manufacturing industry, and Taylor and Monson (1985), Howard and Chunway (1988) and Vasavada and Chambers (1986) applied the model to the US agricultural industry These studies used a dynamic factor demand system to test the existence of adjustment costs and dynamic interaction between factor demands. These studies showed that the dynamic factor demand model can deliver factor adjustments responding to changing economic environments This is very important in accurately analyzing the impacts of industrial policy of the government on factor investment.

The dynamic factor demand
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