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Commerce and capitalism in Chinese societies by Gary G. Hamilton. [Electronic resource] /

By: Hamilton, Gary G.
Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : Routledge, 2006Description: Electronic resource.ISBN: 9780415157049; 9780203645956 (ebook).Subject(s): Capitalism -- China | Capitalism -- China -- History | Comparative economics | China -- Commerce | China -- Commerce -- History | China -- Economic conditions | China -- Foreign economic relationsDDC classification: 330.951 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction: rethinking the economic sociology of East Asian capitalism -- China's pre-industrial economy in comparative perspective -- Civilizations and the organization of economies -- Why no capitalism in China: negative questions in comparative historical sociology -- Chinese consumption of foreign commodities -- Commerce and the organization of China's late imperial economy (with Chang Wei-An and Lai Chi-Kong) -- Chinese capitalism in Asia -- Hong Kong and the rise of capitalism in Asia -- A reassessment of the "Asian miracle": U.S. retailers and Asian manufacturers (with Misha Petrovic and Robert C. Feenstra) -- Reflexive manufacturing: Taiwan's integration in the global economy (with Kao Cheng-Shu) -- Asian business networks in transition, or what Alan Greenspan does not know about the Asian financial crisis -- Reciprocity and control: the organization of Chinese family-owned conglomerates -- Competition and organization: a reexamination of Chinese business practices -- Ethnicity and capitalist development: the changing role of the Chinese in Thailand (with Tony Waters).
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: rethinking the economic sociology of East Asian capitalism -- China's pre-industrial economy in comparative perspective -- Civilizations and the organization of economies -- Why no capitalism in China: negative questions in comparative historical sociology -- Chinese consumption of foreign commodities -- Commerce and the organization of China's late imperial economy (with Chang Wei-An and Lai Chi-Kong) -- Chinese capitalism in Asia -- Hong Kong and the rise of capitalism in Asia -- A reassessment of the "Asian miracle": U.S. retailers and Asian manufacturers (with Misha Petrovic and Robert C. Feenstra) -- Reflexive manufacturing: Taiwan's integration in the global economy (with Kao Cheng-Shu) -- Asian business networks in transition, or what Alan Greenspan does not know about the Asian financial crisis -- Reciprocity and control: the organization of Chinese family-owned conglomerates -- Competition and organization: a reexamination of Chinese business practices -- Ethnicity and capitalist development: the changing role of the Chinese in Thailand (with Tony Waters).

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