Explaining the Persistence of State-ownership in China


Autoria(s): Imai, Ken'ichi
Data(s)

25/07/2006

25/07/2006

01/06/2006

Resumo

In the recent decade China witnessed an upsurge of privatization of small and medium state-owned enterprises (SOEs). In contrast to the consequent sharp reduction in the number of firms, however, the estimated share of broadly-defined SOEs that includes limited liabilities companies controlled by the State has shown virtually no sign of decline. We explain the backgrounds of this seemingly paradoxical persistence of state-ownership by looking into two distinctive types of large SOEs: traditional SOEs that remain dominant in oligopolistic industries and manager-controlled SOEs surviving in competitive industries. The two types exemplify several factors constraining further progress of SOE reform such as, financing the costs of restructuring, redefining the role of the State as the single dominant shareholder, and balancing the interests of the State and managers as entrepreneurs. Sorting these issues out will take time, which means that instabilities associated with state corporate ownership will remain in place in the foreseeable future in China.

Formato

433382 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

IDE Discussion Paper. No. 64. 2006.6

http://hdl.handle.net/2344/130

IDE Discussion Paper

64

Idioma(s)

en

eng

Publicador

Institute of Developing Economies, JETRO

日本貿易振興機構アジア経済研究所

Palavras-Chave #State-owned enterprise #Corporate governance #China’s economic reform #Public enterprises #Small and medium-scale enterprises #Industrial management #China #国有企業 #経済改革 #コーポレートガバナンス #公企業 #中小企業 #企業経営 #中国 #335.7 #AECC China 中国 #L29 - Other #L32 - Public Enterprises #P26 - Political Economy; Property Rights #658.115
Tipo

Working Paper

Technical Report