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Informal Privatization Through Internationalization: The Rise of Nomenklatura Capitalism in China's Offshore Businesses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2000

X. L. DING
Affiliation:
SOSC, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

Abstract

China's remarkable business expansion abroad since the mid-1980s cannot be explained simply by applying existing theories, which focus on conventional international businesses from capitalist systems. Many puzzling phenomena in Chinese investments abroad become intelligible only when we introduce a key variable–illicit privatization through internationalization. So far only advantageously-placed nomenklatura members and their kin have had access to crossborder ownership, but many of them are accumulating sizeable private wealth at the cost of nationalized property. Contrary to an impression held by many in the West, the Chinese economy under Communist rule experiences spontaneous privatization parallel to what has happened in European postcommunist nations–though with a few Chinese characteristics. An examination of informal privatization in China's multinationals adds a new dimension to our understanding of the shift from state socialism to market capitalism.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2000 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

Fieldwork for this article was sponsored by the Research School of Pacific & Asian Studies, The Australian National University and the Division of Social Science, Hong Kong University of Science & Technology. The author highly appreciates comments and support from Jon Unger, Ben Kerkvliet, Albert Weale, two anonymous reviewers of the Journal, Shain-Dow Kung, Ting Pang-Hsin, Hsi-sheng Ch'i, Sofia Su and Ting Ting Koo.