ABSTRACT

Chinese state banks, which were considered technically insolvent in the 1990s, are at present among the largest and most important banks in the world. This book, based on the author’s research and also on his extensive experience of working in Chinese banks, explores how Chinese banks’ technical efficiency and organisational flexibility have been achieved whilst ownership and control by the Chinese Communist Party have continued. The author reveals a distinctly non-Western approach to corporate governance, but one that has nevertheless worked very well.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

part I|61 pages

System structure

chapter 2|29 pages

Political control and corporate governance

chapter 3|30 pages

Economic reform and corporate governance

part II|90 pages

System function

part III|37 pages

System integration

chapter 7|29 pages

The nature of corporate governance

chapter 8|6 pages

Conclusion