Product Description
China has undergone a remarkable transition over the past thirty years from a centrally-planned economy to a more market oriented one. The transformation of business in China has been correspondingly evident. This book gives an interdisciplinary analysis of the evolution of business development in China and the 'marketization' of industry during this period within a complex framework of legal, political, and economic reform aims. The book includes twelve original business case studies to provide industry-specific analysis of the overarching macroeconomic and legal developments. It examines both domestic enterprise reform in China and the evolving treatment of foreign firms in the context of both corporate laws and economic policies, and how business is likely to evolve as economic and legal reforms rapidly increase during the twenty-first century, notably with regard to China's increasing global integration.
About the Author
Linda Yueh is a fellow in economics at Oxford University, a senior fellow at the London Business School, and an economics broadcast commentator. She directs the China Growth Centre at St. Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, is an associate at the Centre for Economic Performance and the I.D.E.A.S. research centre at the London School of Economics, and a fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts. Dr. Yueh's recent books include Macroeconomics (co-authored with Graeme Chamberlin) which is a recommended textbook of the U.K. Government Economic Service, The Economy of China, Globalisation and Economic Growth in China (co-edited with Yang Yao), The Law and Economics of Globalisation: New Challenges for a World in Flux, and The Future of Asian Trade and Growth: Economic Development with the Emergence of China. Dr. Yueh has been an advisor to, among others, the World Economic Forum (W.E.F.) in Davos, Asian Development Bank (A.D.B.), and Economist Intelligence Unit (E.I.U.).