With the opening of the establishment of new banks in the 1990s, it led to an excessive number of domestic bankers and an excessively small scale, which caused a decline in the quality of financial assets and eventually resulted in adverse selection and moral hazard under information asymmetry in the domestic cash card market, triggering a card debt crisis and serious social problems. This article examined whether the phenomenon of information asymmetry was improved after the competent authority intervened. The results highlighted the important position of the competent authority in financial institution management and made information asymmetry improved eventually.
Due to the impact of COVID-19 in 2019, the global hotel industry has been severely impacted by the disconnection of the tourism industry. However, even with the impact of the epidemic, the Japanese hotel industry’s investment in Taiwan has not stopped. What are the factors that drive the Japanese hotel industry to defy the threat of the epidemic and choose Taiwan as its destination for foreign direct investment? This is the research goal of this article. This article intends to adopt Push-Pull-Mooring (PPM)migration theory to construct the possible factors of why the Japanese hotel industry chooses Taiwan as its foreign direct investment destination. These factors consist of three effects to describe Japan Okura hotel’s migration. First, the push effect refers to factors that induce people to leave their place of origin. Second, the pull effect refers to factors that attract people to a destination. Third, the mooring effect refers to intervention variables for push and pull effects that facilitate or inhibit the determination of movement. The finding is that push and pull factors still play an active role in promoting Okura Hotel’s investment in Taiwan, even if the influence of some factors is slightly reduced due to the shift in international conditions. With the development of globalization and high technology, mooring factors are no longer the reason that hinders Japanese Okura’s investment in Taiwan. Combined with push and pull factors, PPM migration model can fully explain why the Japanese hotel industry chooses to conduct foreign direct investment in Taiwan, even if it is affected by COVID-19.It’s just that COVID-19 has not stopped so far, and the unstable situation on both sides of the strait may impact the original PPM model and affect the results of the analysis. It is worth further observation and research by subsequent researchers.
This study seeks to find an alternative strategy to cope with the impact of COVID-19. Though various measures have been adopted to respond to the threat of the pandemic, the problem remains unchanged. Undoubtedly, COVID-19 is also a crisis of knowledge, so this study explores whether the banking industry in Taiwan can apply knowledge management (KM) and fight the catastrophe of the century successfully and effectively. This study adopts an actual case to analyze the relationship between KM implementation and the banking industry; applies consistent fuzzy preference relations (CFPRs) to evaluate influential criteria including computational simplicity and guarantee the consistency of decision matrices; illustrates a decision-making model with seven criteria; and conducts pairwise comparisons, which are utilized to determine the priority weights of influential criteria amongst the outcome rankings and to formulate accurate KM strategies. The results show that predictions of success probabilities are higher than those of failure probabilities among the seven influential criteria and, in particular, the headquarters system and human resources are the most important priority indicators for implementing KM successfully during the pandemic or post-pandemic. The conclusion suggests significant policy implications for policymakers within other industries or countries in coping with COVID-19.
Thanks to the deregulation of financial regulations since the 1990s, the domestic financial institutions had ever been in excessive amounts for a long time. In order to expand their business scope and market share, they often adopted a looser or simple review mechanism, which led to a decline in the asset quality of financial institutions and an upward trend in overdue loans. As a result, the credit card debt crisis caused by the information asymmetry and the derived serious social problems ensued . Under the pressure of public opinion, the financial authority was forced to promote the debt negotiation mechanism in 2005 and even led passing the Consumer Debt Clearance Regulations in 2007. This article analyzed the statistics of consumer finance related to public and private banks, trying to explain whether the problems related to information asymmetry was reduced and whether financial institution management was effective. The result revealed that the number of valid cards, revolving interest rates, and overdue ratios fell in tandem after the financial authority intervened in the market. Especially when the credit card debt crisis and the social problem were showed under control, it was proven that financial institution management is essential and effective to reduce problems related to information asymmetry in Taiwan. JEL classification numbers: G01,G21,G28. Keywords: Financial Institution Management, Credit Cards, Card Debt Crisis, Information Asymmetry, Adverse Selection, Moral Hazard.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.