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The gradual encroachment of an idea: large enterprise groups in China

Abstract:
This article illuminates the ideational foundations of China's 'large enterprise strategy', an early experiment in China's efforts to employ industrial policy to cultivate a group of state-controlled business groups. Based on archival research, the author argues that Chinese policymakers believed the development of state-owned large enterprises would bring several kinds of benefits, both economic and political. Drawing eclectically from Marxian economics and the history of capitalist development in East Asia, they argued that large enterprises could serve as both engines of domestic development and as safeguards and vanguards in the context of China's re-entry to the global marketplace. These enterprise groups were also seen as key elements in a market-conforming model of state control that senior officials began to envision and plan for as early as the late 1980s. The archival documents also shed light on internal debate in the 1980s and 1990s about the pros and cons of promoting monopolies, the substance of which anticipates much of the current heated discussion about China's 'monopoly industries' (longduan hangye垄断行业).
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
SSD
Department:
OSGA
Sub department:
Area Studies
Oxford college:
Lady Margaret Hall
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Copenhagen Business School
Journal:
Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies More from this journal
Volume:
31
Issue:
2
Pages:
5-22
Publication date:
2013-01-01
EISSN:
2246-2163
ISSN:
1395-4199


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:432532
UUID:
uuid:a54707ec-83b6-4447-8fc6-b531661658e1
Local pid:
pubs:432532
Source identifiers:
432532
Deposit date:
2013-12-13

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