Back-Alley Banking: Private Entrepreneurs in China by Kellee S. Tsai

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: July 1902
  • 328pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: July 1902
    • Publisher: Cornell University Press
    • Format: Hardcover, 328pp

    Synopsis

    Chinese entrepreneurs have founded more than thirty million private businesses since Beijing instituted economic reforms in the late 1970s. Most of these private ventures, however, have been denied access to official sources of credit. State banks continue to serve stateowned enterprises, yet most private financing remains illegal. How have Chinese entrepreneurs managed to fund their operations? In defiance of the national banking laws, small business owners have created a dizzying variety of informal financing mechanisms, including rotating credit associations and private banks disguised as other types of organizations.BackAlley Banking includes lively biographical sketches of individual entrepreneurs; telling quotations from official documents, policy statements, and newspaper accounts; and interviews with a wide variety of women and men who give vivid narratives of their daily struggles, accomplishments, and hopes for future prosperity. Kellee S. Tsai's book draws upon her unparalleled fieldwork in China's world of shadow finance to challenge conventional ideas about the political economy of development. Business owners in China, she shows, have mobilized local social and political resources in innovative ways despite the absence of statedirected credit or a welldefined system of private property rights.Entrepreneurs and local officials have been able to draw on the uncertainty of formal political and economic institutions to enhance local prosperity.

    Author Bio:Kellee S. Tsai is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Johns Hopkins University.

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