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DTSTART:20210314T070000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210610T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210610T210000
DTSTAMP:20260429T153518
CREATED:20210520T205835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210604T140354Z
UID:469-1623355200-1623358800@jposs.org
SUMMARY:Yu Jin Woo (Waseda University)\, Ikuo Kume (Waseda University)\, "Taking Gains from Trade (More) Seriously: The Effects of Consumer Perspective on Free Trade in Contemporary Japan"
DESCRIPTION:U.S. EDT: June 10 (Thu)\, 8 – 9 PM \nJST: June 11 (Fri)\, 9 – 10 AM \nNOTE: Registration required! Link. \nAbstract: \nHow did the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) persistently pursue the TPP negotiations without harming its overall public support? In understanding individuals’ preferences toward trade liberalization\, the traditional literature on international political economy has typically examined their comparative advantage as producers\, which arises from their specific or general skill level or employment concerns. What needs to be taken into account\, however\, is that their economic preferences are constructed based upon their intertwined identities as both producers and consumers. Using a unique survey design\, we conducted an experiment in Japan (2015) that shows that consumer effect reduces individuals’ concerns on income level or employment when they are exposed to consumer and employment primings simultaneously. Furthermore\, our subgroup analyses reveal that the consumer effect remains powerful even for economically fragile individuals while the LDP supporters are particularly susceptible to the consumer priming. In sum\, our findings speculate that the LDP enjoyed a sustained public support due to Japanese people’s increasing price sensitivity\, which is especially strong among pro-LDP individuals. \nPaper is available here. \nPresenter: Yu Jin Woo (Waseda University). \nDiscussants: Eddie Hearn (Musashi University)\, Soo Yeon Kim (National University of Singapore). \nChair: Christina L. Davis (Harvard University).
URL:https://jposs.org/event/woo-6-10-21/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210624T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210624T210000
DTSTAMP:20260429T153518
CREATED:20210604T200229Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210620T012947Z
UID:490-1624564800-1624568400@jposs.org
SUMMARY:Hiroki Takeuchi (Southern Methodist University)\, "Global Value Chains and Domestic Politics Response to Trade: China\, Japan\, and the United States Compared"
DESCRIPTION:U.S. EDT: June 24 (Thu)\, 8 – 9 PM \nJST: June 25 (Fri)\, 9 – 10 AM \nNOTE: Registration required! Link. \nAbstract: \nDuring the 1990s\, the nature of globalization began to change. Fragmentation of manufacturing led to the development of global value chains (GVCs) by multinational corporations\, and it has become common practice for different stages of manufacturing production to be located in different countries. GVCs based intra-industry trade requires a different kind of rule-making for international trade\, and it has changed the political economy of domestic response to international trade agreements. Domestic politics of foreign economic policy differs depending on the state’s domestic political and economic institutions as well as the nature of the international economic agreement. Interestingly\, the free trade agreements for GVCs based trade such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership–which is now the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership–tend to be intrusive\, which require the signatories to commit to politically sensitive domestic economic reforms–such as the state-owned enterprise reform in China. This paper explores how the spread of GVCs has changed political economy of domestic response to international trade. Its scope is limited to an analysis of China\, Japan\, and the United States\, as lessons from these three countries could translate to other countries. \nPaper is available here. \nPresenter: Hiroki Takeuchi (Southern Methodist University). \nDiscussants: Patricia Maclachlan (University of Texas at Austin)\, Ka Zeng (University of Arkansas). \nChair: Phillip Lipscy (University of Toronto).
URL:https://jposs.org/event/takeuchi-6-24-21/
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