Book Details

The Making of the State Enterprise System in Modern China
Bian offers a new theory of institutional change that explains the formation of China’s state enterprise system as the outcome of the sustained systemic crisis triggered by the Sino–Japanese war. This groundbreaking work combines critical analysis of government policies with case studies of little-studied enterprises in heavy industries and the ordnance industry. Drawing on extensive research in previously unavailable archives, Bian adds a valuable historical perspective to the current debate on how to reform China’s sluggish and unprofitable state-owned firms.
Morris L. Bian is Associate Professor of History at Auburn University.
1 Development of the Ordnance Industry
2 Expansion of Heavy Industries
3 Enterprise Governance Structure
4 Enterprise Management and Incentive Mechanisms
5 Enterprise Provision of Social Services and Welfare
6 Danwei Designation of State-Owned Enterprises
7 Nationalist Ideology of the Development State
Conclusion
Appendix: Table
Abbreviations
Notes
Index
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