ABSTRACT

As China's government manages a transition away from the socialist plan, how does it build the regulatory institutions it needs to manage the new market economy? Without the correct institutions, laws and agencies that implement the laws in place, the remarkable growth witnessed in China over the last two decades will falter. Financial sector reform lies at the heart of China's economic transition and China's stock market has become critical to the reform of state-owned industry, the supply of fiscal revenues and in building a modern pension system.

The Development of China's Stockmarket takes a close look at the policy-making and regulatory institutions the government has created to manage equity development and shows how, in contrast to neo-institutional and economic theories of regulatory development, public actors have controlled institutional development.
Based on extensive field research in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing and over forty interviews with regulators and market players, The Development of China's Stockmarket provides the first detailed academic analysis of the country's stockmarket. With a comprehensive review of Chinese language literature available on the subject, this book is essential reading for all scholars with an interest in Asian Business and China's transition from socialism.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part I|43 pages

Explaining institutional change

part II|85 pages

Local institutional capture

chapter 4|13 pages

Institutional capture by local leaders

Share issuance and other problems, 1993–97

chapter 5|21 pages

Equity developmentalism unbound

The capture of secondary market institutions in Shenzhen and Shanghai, 1995–97

chapter 6|15 pages

The Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges

From local control to ‘sons of the CSRC', 1990–2002

part III|55 pages

Central institutional capture

chapter 8|20 pages

Institutional creation and development

The China Securities Regulatory Commission, 1992–98

chapter 9|15 pages

Incoherence at the centre

The State Council Securities Commission and CSRC–PBoC relations, 1992–98

chapter 10|19 pages

Drafting the Securities Law

The role of the National People's Congress in creating institutions, 1992–98

part IV|43 pages

Conclusions