The Institutional Transition of China's Township and Village Enterprises: Market Liberalization, Contractual Form Innovation and Privatization (Studies on the Economic Reform of China)
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Book Details
Author(s)Hongyi Chen
PublisherAshgate Pub Ltd
ISBN / ASIN0754610500
ISBN-139780754610502
Sales Rank10,809,209
CategoryBusiness & Economics
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
An insight into China's township and village enterprises (TVEs). It views the governance structure of TVEs as effectively combining the comparative advantage of local government officials in external management and of dual firm managers in internal management to overcome imperfections in both market and government during the transitional period. Through extensive field investigation analysis and case studies, the book shows that the governance structure of TVEs has been evolving over 15 years. To adapt to the changing environment, TVEs have continuously innovated firm contractual form from a government official dominant fixed-wage form to a partnership-style profit-sharing form, then to a privatization-oriented fixed-rent form. This work develops a complete model to explain how the central government's partial reform efforts in market liberalization have become the driving force to induce the contractual form innovation, and to explicate how heterogeneity in firms' technical structures and in local economic settings may affect local government's decisions regarding contractual form innovation. Using the author's data set, the model simulations predict that the development in the whole market system will result in the diffusion of contractual form innovation and lead to an "induced privatization" in this sector. The following empirical studies show this to be a powerfl prdiction and the progress toward such "induced privatization" can be expected in China in the near future. The research provides an empirical study on China's institutional transition towards a market system, explaining how a bottom-up endogenous, rather than a top-down exogenous, property rights reform can be realized in transitional economies.
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