The History of Corporate Ownership in China: State Patronage, Company Legislation, and the Issue of Control
50 Pages Posted: 3 Aug 2004
Date Written: June 2004
Abstract
This paper examines the emergence of corporate ownership in China from the final decades of the Qing empire in the late 19th century to the early Republican period in the 1910s and 1920s. By analyzing the actual process of incorporation, the development of the legal and financial environment, in particular the role of the state, we ask whether the top-down approach, in which the central government established a legal framework for corporate enterprise based on Western models and the assumption that it would work as it did for Western firms and markets, was a viable approach to the modernization of a financial system traditionally dominated by family businesses and economic state patronage. Using business records from turn-of-the-century Chinese corporate companies, this paper argues that the government's top-down approach, while clearly well-intentioned, created a framework which only insufficiently promoted the system of corporate capitalism in pre-war China.
JEL Classification: G15, N25
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
By William N. Goetzmann, Andrey Ukhov, ...
-
By William N. Goetzmann, Andrey Ukhov, ...
-
British Investment Overseas 1870-1913: A Modern Portfolio Theory Approach
By William N. Goetzmann and Andrey Ukhov
-
British Investment Overseas 1870-1913: A Modern Portfolio Theory Approach
By Andrey Ukhov and William N. Goetzmann
-
That's Where the Money Was: Foreign Bias and English Investment Abroad, 1866-1907
-
The Global Rise of the Value-Weighted Portfolio
By Utpal Bhattacharya and Neal Galpin
-
The Global Rise of the Value-Weighted Portfolio
By Utpal Bhattacharya and Neal Galpin