Ethnicity and the Economy: The State, Chinese Business and Multinationals in Malaysia.James V. Jesudason

1991 ◽  
Vol 97 (2) ◽  
pp. 560-561
Author(s):  
Judith Nagata
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 62-87
Author(s):  
Keun Lee

Chapter 3 elaborates on the origins of large businesses, particularly business groups, which have been leading the economic catch-up in China. The majority of firms listed on the stock markets in China are business groups, which are comparable to their counterparts in Japan (keiretsu) and in Korea (chaebols). However, the chief differences between large business groups in China and those in Korea and Japan are that the former are less diversified and are owned by the state, not by particular families (as in Korea) or commercial banks (as in Japan). Chinese business groups typically maintain a vertical structure, with the core company at the first tier and closely related companies at the second tier. Their performance in the 2000s also had strengths (high growth) and weaknesses (lower profitability) similar to those in neighboring countries, such as chaebols in the 1990s in Korea.


2003 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 507-534 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lai Si Tsui-Auch ◽  
Yong-Joo Lee

Both the proponents and critics of Asian economic organization have been preoccupied with the ideal-typical management models of family businesses, and have rarely identified their changing management structures. We, instead, identify the change and continuity in these management structures through an analysis of family-controlled business groups in Singapore and South Korea before and after the Asian currency crisis. In our view, these business groups professionalized their management, but retained family control and corporate rule before the crisis. The crisis, however, increased the pressure on such groups to relinquish family control and corporate rule. Singaporean Chinese business groups tended to loosen their tight grip on corporate rule by absorbing more professional managers into their upper echelons. The surviving Korean chaebol, however, intensified family control. Only a few chaebol, which were on the brink of bankruptcy, relinquished corporate rule to professional managers. We argue that other than the market, cultural, and institutional factors as suggested in the existing literature, state capacities and strategies do matter in shaping the changing management structures of business groups. Drawing on our analysis, researchers will be able to conduct comparative studies of family businesses across East Asian societies, of organizational imitation, and of the role of the state in influencing management models.


2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 463-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ji Yingying

Based on an in-depth case study of a business association, this article explores how private entrepreneurs are organizing for their rights and highlights contentious facets of the state–business relationship in China. In contrast to depictions common in the literature, this business association actively asserts and seeks to maintain its autonomy vis-a-vis the state and uses innovative strategies to strengthen its own organizational cohesion. It organizes collective actions to defend members’ interests and to enhance the transparency and accountability of the local government. It even advances universal values, such as equal rights to justice. Importantly, however, the initiation and effects of collective actions are contingent on the opportunities embedded in China’s fragmented governance structure. I argue that corporatist analyses characterizing Chinese business associations as lacking autonomy and as partners of the state have overlooked such associations’ potential to engage in confrontations with the state. Combining involvement in the formal institution and contentious collective actions, the association studied displays the tension between the incorporation system and social resistance in contemporary China.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 192-201
Author(s):  
Nina Plyaskina ◽  
Viktoriya Kharitonova ◽  
Irina Vizhina

The article presents an analysis of trends in the strategic priorities of the state, resource companies and subjects of the Federation at the stage of intensive development of oil and gas resources in Eastern Siberia and the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). It is shown that issues of coordinating the strategies of resource companies to ensure the comprehensiveness of the use of hydrocarbons and effective access to world markets for petrochemical products in a competitive environment come to the fore. The transformation of the strategies of resource companies is presented in the form of changing priorities in the preparation of reserves and the extent of involvement of new production areas, in the investment policy of attracting foreign investment in projects of primary and advanced processing of hydrocarbon resources in Russia or China. The change of strategic directions of cooperation of companies with Chinese business in the formation of the East-Siberian oil and gas complex (VSNGK) based on innovative technologies of organizing oil and gas services is shown. The conformity of strategic interests of companies to state priorities, the consequences of changes in the strategies of resource companies on the implementation of projects of the State Plan for the development of petrochemical and chemical clusters were evaluated.


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