Publication:
ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN CHINA: INSTITUTIONS, ORGANISATIONAL IDENDITY AND SURVIVAL. EMPIRICAL RESULTS FROM TWO PROVINCES

dc.contributor.author Krug, Barbara en_US
dc.contributor.author Hendrischke, Hans en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2021-11-25T14:29:51Z
dc.date.available 2021-11-25T14:29:51Z
dc.date.issued 2002 en_US
dc.description.abstract The literature on transaction costs concentrates on established firms in established markets, while the literature on industrial ecology concentrates on new firms in given markets. It is contested in the following that the picture looks differently if the analysis concentrates on establishing new firms in new markets, such as e-commerce or the new private sector in the formerly socialist economies. A new market is defined by high uncertainty. First, the general knowledge of expertise in a society is low, so that young entrepreneurs find it hard, and costly, to acquire the necessary know-how. Second, institutions, might these be the law, business practices, or intermediaries, are poor and underdeveloped. It will be argued that in China therefore entrepreneurship depends crucially on the ability to establish firms, i.e. to find organisational forms for business ventures that facilitate long-term business relations within and around a firm, that is to say, individual entrepreneurship depends on mechanisms for co-ordinating individual or organisational behaviour of firms. These mechanisms were lacking under socialist planning. The legacy of the planned economy was an environment of weak economic institutions in which state-socialist institutions uneasily coexisted with market institutions, and newness of private exchange added to uncertainty. In this environment, economic actors depended on collective action to create their own institutions, driven by the need to agree on rules of conduct in business relations and on sanctions against violation of these rules. The study will concentrate on two essential components of (private) entrepreneurship. One is the search for organisational forms conforming to the situational constraints; the other is the formation of business practices that enable individual entrepreneurship to become a viable and sustainable course of action. In other words, we will attempt to show how the transaction cost advantage of organisational forms and co-ordination mechanisms can compensate entrepreneurs for the disadvantage they face with respect to the lack of clearly defined property rights. Based on extensive fieldwork in two provinces where 100 firms were interviewed the study can show that as predicted by approaches in industrial ecology both experimentation and selection were crucial in shaping the new private business sector; on the individual level the performance-orientation of Chinese culture allowed entrepreneurs to combine rational decision making with tradition. Both factors can explain why for example the family in China but not in Chinese overseas communities is no longer the natural base for private firms, why networks are assessed by their expected performance, or why Chinese firm do not care about building up a core business. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1959.4/42689
dc.language English
dc.language.iso EN en_US
dc.publisher Erasmus Research Institute of Management (ERIM) en_US
dc.rights CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 en_US
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/au/ en_US
dc.source Legacy MARC en_US
dc.title ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN CHINA: INSTITUTIONS, ORGANISATIONAL IDENDITY AND SURVIVAL. EMPIRICAL RESULTS FROM TWO PROVINCES en_US
dc.type Report en
dcterms.accessRights metadata only access
dspace.entity.type Publication en_US
unsw.accessRights.uri http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_14cb
unsw.publisher.place Rotterdam, The Netherlands en_US
unsw.relation.faculty Arts Design & Architecture
unsw.relation.ispartofreportnumber ERS-2002-14-ORG en_US
unsw.relation.originalPublicationAffiliation Krug, Barbara en_US
unsw.relation.originalPublicationAffiliation Hendrischke, Hans, Languages & Linguistics, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, UNSW en_US
unsw.relation.school School of Humanities & Languages *
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