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The Chinese and Indian corporate economies: a comparative history of their search for economic renaissance and globalization

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Routledge studies in the growth economies of Asia; 135Publication details: Routledge 2017 New YorkDescription: xvii, 471 p. Includes bibliographical references and indexISBN:
  • 9780367175559
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.740951 B7C4
Summary: This is a compelling analysis of the corporate economies of China and India, which are having a huge impact not just on the international economy, but also in the geopolitical and international strategy sphere as a result of an accelerated globalisation by these two countries, which is unleashing powerful economic challenges to corporate structures, economic institutions and law worldwide. The big question is how after centuries of underdevelopment China and now India are emerging powerfully and pulling ahead of Western European economies. Analysing the role of the state and the adroit use of law, and their impact on the corporate evolution of both China and India, provides greater clarity and insight into why China has evolved as a manufacturing nation utilizing cheap abundant labour while India has not exploited such advantages but instead focused on IT and higher value industries, even abroad as Tata has demonstrated in the motor industry in Europe. Again while Chinese corporations have expanded abroad as an arm of the state into Asia, Middle East, Africa, Europe, Latin America and parts of the southern states of the USA, India has pushed principally into Europe through the efforts of powerful minority capitalists of Parsi and Gujerati background, overcoming technological gaps and differences through acquisitions and absorptions of existing corporations in particular industries, especially in steel, automobiles and textiles. In China, state owned corporations have been dominant. In India, though state owned enterprises have been powerful since 1951, it has been private capitalists with an established stronghold since the colonial period and even under the Socialist period from 1951-1991 who have been the more productive main actors both in India and abroad. https://www.routledge.com/The-Chinese-and-Indian-Corporate-Economies-A-Comparative-History-of-their/Brown/p/book/9780367175559
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Item type Current library Item location Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Vikram Sarabhai Library Rack 23-A / Slot 941 (0 Floor, East Wing) Non-fiction General Stacks 338.740951 B7C4 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out 03/10/2025 202688

Table of Contents

1.Two major Asian peripheries, China and India, and their distinct corporate economies: The silent tongue of "one Asia or many"
2.The restructuring of China's state-owned enterprises since 1978
3.Chinese retailers abroad and Chinese consumption patterns at home: The prosperous age of Prada and a sorcery of branded luxury
4.The silent vulgar tongue: Guanxi and trust in Chinese corporations
5.Financial reform in China: Banking, state and efficiency
6.The development of the Chinese stock market and globalization of China's corporations and financial markets
7.The role of labour in agrarian and industrial dynamics of change
8.Utilitarian blindness to innovation mistaken for sight in China's search for and acquisition of Western magic pagodas
9.China and globalization: Strategy and scope
10.Corporate institutions and law in India: State, space and the capitalists
11.Tata & Sons: Appropriating and keeping the state in space
12.Indian financial institutions: Law, renaissance, illusions and realities
13.Rethinking the corporate and financial institutions of Islam through the moral economy of the waqf
14.From empire to independence to economic liberalism and globalization: Indian labour's journey
15.The Chinese and Indian corporate economy: A radical construction of law, the state and corporations.

This is a compelling analysis of the corporate economies of China and India, which are having a huge impact not just on the international economy, but also in the geopolitical and international strategy sphere as a result of an accelerated globalisation by these two countries, which is unleashing powerful economic challenges to corporate structures, economic institutions and law worldwide. The big question is how after centuries of underdevelopment China and now India are emerging powerfully and pulling ahead of Western European economies. Analysing the role of the state and the adroit use of law, and their impact on the corporate evolution of both China and India, provides greater clarity and insight into why China has evolved as a manufacturing nation utilizing cheap abundant labour while India has not exploited such advantages but instead focused on IT and higher value industries, even abroad as Tata has demonstrated in the motor industry in Europe. Again while Chinese corporations have expanded abroad as an arm of the state into Asia, Middle East, Africa, Europe, Latin America and parts of the southern states of the USA, India has pushed principally into Europe through the efforts of powerful minority capitalists of Parsi and Gujerati background, overcoming technological gaps and differences through acquisitions and absorptions of existing corporations in particular industries, especially in steel, automobiles and textiles. In China, state owned corporations have been dominant. In India, though state owned enterprises have been powerful since 1951, it has been private capitalists with an established stronghold since the colonial period and even under the Socialist period from 1951-1991 who have been the more productive main actors both in India and abroad.

https://www.routledge.com/The-Chinese-and-Indian-Corporate-Economies-A-Comparative-History-of-their/Brown/p/book/9780367175559

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