Comparative Corporate Governance : A Chinese PerspectiveIn marked contrast to other regimes that have, virtually overnight, abandoned state control of enterprises and espoused Western models of corporate governance, China has pursued a gradual transition suited to its own unique traditions, culture, and customs. Although this new corporate system is still evolving, it is clear that China is now ready for a nation-wide movement of corporatisation and reform. Comparative Corporate Governance draws on the entire corpus of corporate governance theory, both East and West, and also on the experience of many countries since the 1930s, to develop a coherent model appropriate for China. In the process the author shows how various corporate mechanisms have been tentatively introduced into China's state-owned enterprises and how such experimentation has, piece by piece, provided a firm basis for a modern enterprise system. How to build an efficient and culturally appropriate governance system, both in law and in practice, on this foundation is the focus of this book. The analysis is notable for its insistence that, for a corporate governance system to work, the principles and practicalities of that system must be derived from customary cultural norms. Experience shows that imported models, although they may be enshrined in law, lead to economic stagnation unless actual practice is monitored and reformed and the laws change to reflect these necessary adjustments. Thus the model proposed here begins with the Company Law of 1994, and proceeds to show how practical experience is already providing valuable data for the task of improving the law. This process, by which law and business practice continue to "regulate" each other, is, in the author's view, the essential ingredient of a successful corporate system. The author's approach is fundamentally comparative. He discusses and analyses models that have either created globally powerful corporate economies or carried out reforms that have brought new insights to corporate development. In this connection he examines the law and experience of the UK, the USA, Germany, and Japan, as well as Chinese communities overseas and some former British Commonwealth countries. This remarkable book is of inestimable value to practitioners and academics in the field of international economic law. In addition, its often startling perspectives on the accepted models of corporate governance are sure to spark a reassessment of the nature of corporations and their role in social and economic life. |
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第 21 頁
a strong economy and a large industrial base is more capable of fully exploiting economies of scale and of operating capital - intensive industries . 58 Such an economy is more likely to nurture large corporations with numerous ...
a strong economy and a large industrial base is more capable of fully exploiting economies of scale and of operating capital - intensive industries . 58 Such an economy is more likely to nurture large corporations with numerous ...
第 45 頁
The essential point of industrial democracy is to acknowledge the importance of labour . The system of co - determination is the major reflection of the ideology of industrial democracy . There is also a consensus that corporations have ...
The essential point of industrial democracy is to acknowledge the importance of labour . The system of co - determination is the major reflection of the ideology of industrial democracy . There is also a consensus that corporations have ...
第 232 頁
... September 1990 ) Company Law Review Act 1998 ( Australia ) Company Law Review Bill 1997 ( Australia ) Constitution Act 1982 ( Canada ) Constitution of the People's Republic of China ( 1954 ) Decisions on Increasing Industrial ...
... September 1990 ) Company Law Review Act 1998 ( Australia ) Company Law Review Bill 1997 ( Australia ) Constitution Act 1982 ( Canada ) Constitution of the People's Republic of China ( 1954 ) Decisions on Increasing Industrial ...
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