Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T01:21:35.320Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Managing Market, Hierarchy, and Network: The Jiuda Salt Industries, Ltd., 1917–1937

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2015

Abstract

As China underwent industrialization during the Republican period, how did companies deal with the problems of expansion, competition, and relationship with the state? Using the concept of network capitalism, this article demythologizes the “enigma” of Chinese network by analyzing the experience of the Jiuda Salt Industries, Ltd. Fan Xudong, the company’s founder, deftly managed his network portfolio for information and other resources. Kith and kin as shareholders, interlocking directorates, and cross-shareholding, as well as hierarchical management and cartels, were utilized to raise capital and manage local markets. Market, hierarchy, and network thus constitute three complementary organization principles in explaining Jiuda’s success.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2005. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliography of Works Cited

Books

Ackroyd, Stephen. The Organization of Business. Oxford, U.K., 2002.Google Scholar
Bellow, Adam. In Praise of Nepotism. New York, 2003.Google Scholar
Brinton, Mary C., and Nee, Victor, eds. The New Institutionalism in Sociology. New York, 1998.Google Scholar
Campos, J. Edgardo, ed. Corruption: The Boom and Bust of East Asia. Manila, 2001.Google Scholar
Chandler, Alfred D. Jr. Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism. Cambridge, Mass., 1990.Google Scholar
Chandler, Alfred D. Jr. The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business. Cambridge, Mass., 1977.Google Scholar
Chandler, Alfred D. Jr. and Salsbury, Stephen. Pierre S. Du Pont and the Making of the Modern Corporation. New York, 1971.Google Scholar
Chen, Deyuan (Diaopu). Yinyu ji [Essays to Attract Jade]. Tianjin, 1946.Google Scholar
Cochran, Sherman. Big Business in China: Sino-Foreign Rivalry in the Cigarette Industry, 1890–1930. Cambridge, Mass., 1980.Google Scholar
Cochran, Sherman. Encountering Chinese Networks. Berkeley, Calif., 2001.Google Scholar
Friedland, Roger, and Robertson, A. F., eds. Beyond the Market Place: Rethinking Economy and Society. Hawthorne, N.Y., 1990.Google Scholar
Fruin, Mark, ed. Networks, Markets, and the Pacific Rim. New York, 1998.Google Scholar
Gold, Thomas, et al., eds. Social Connections in China. Cambridge, Mass., 2002.10.1017/CBO9780511499579Google Scholar
Greenfeld, Liah. The Spirit of Capitalism: Nationalism and Economic Development. Cambridge, Mass., 2001.Google Scholar
Hao, Qingyuan. Zhou Xuexi chuan [A Biography of Zhou Xuexi]. Tianjin, 1991.Google Scholar
He, Lian (Franklin Ho). He Lian huiyilu [Memoirs of He Lian]. Beijing, 1988.Google Scholar
Huang, Yiping et al. Beiyang zhengfu shiqi jingji [The Chinese Economy under the Northern Warlord Government]. Shanghai, 1995.Google Scholar
Kang, David C. Crony Capitalism. New York, 2001.Google Scholar
Kwan Man, Bun. Jindai Tianjin yanshang yu shehui [The Salt Merchants of Tianjin]. Tianjin, 1999.Google Scholar
Kwan Man, Bun and Jin, Zhao, eds. Yong-Jiu-Huang qiye tuanti shiliao huibian [Selected Archival Materials from the Yong-Jiu-Huang Group]. Forthcoming.Google Scholar
Lan, Changyun, ed. Jindai Tianjin ziming qiye jingying guanli [Management of Leading Industrial Enterprises in Modern Tianjin]. Tianjin, 1995.Google Scholar
Leibenstein, Harvey. Inside the Firm: The Inefficiencies of Hierarchy. Cambridge, Mass., 1987.Google Scholar
Lipartito, Kenneth, and Sicilia, David B., eds. Constructing Corporate America. Oxford, U.K., 2004.10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199251902.001.0001Google Scholar
Menkhoff, Thomas, and Gerke, Solvay, eds. Chinese Entrepreneurship and Asian Business Networks. London, 2002.Google Scholar
Rauch, James E., and Casella, Alessandra, eds. Networks and Markets. New York, 2001.Google Scholar
Redding S., Gordon. The Spirit of Chinese Capitalism. Berlin, 1990.Google Scholar
Sheehan, Brett. Trust in Troubled Times. Cambridge, Mass., 2003.Google Scholar
Slikker, Marco, and Nouweland, Anne van den. Social and Economic Networks in Cooperative Game Theory. Norwell, Mass., 2001.Google Scholar
Thompson, Grahame F. Between Markets and Hierarchy. Oxford, U.K., 2003.Google Scholar
Tzeng, Rueyling, and Uzzi, Brian, eds. Embeddedness and Corporate Change in a Global Economy. New York, 2000.Google Scholar
Williamson, Oliver E. Markets and Hierarchies: Analysis and Antitrust Implications. New York, 1975.Google Scholar
Windoff, Paul. Corporate Networks in Europe and the U.S. Oxford, U.K., 2002.Google Scholar
Xu, Jiajun et al., eds. Zhou Zuomin yu Jincheng yinhang [Zhou Zuomin and the Jincheng Bank]. Beijing, 1993.Google Scholar
Zhang, Hongxiang. Jindai Zhongguo tongshang kou’an yu zujie [Treaty Ports and Foreign Concessions in Modern China]. Tianjin, 1993.Google Scholar
Zhang, Pengyuan. Lixianpai yu Xinhai geming [The Constitutionalists and the 1911 Revolution]. Taibei, 1969.Google Scholar
Zhang, Tongyi. Fan Xudong chuan [Biography of Fan Xudong]. Changsha, 1987.Google Scholar
Zhang, Zhongmin. Jiannan de bianqian [Difficult Transitions]. Shanghai, 2002.Google Scholar
Zhang, Zhongmin, and Xinglong, Lu, eds. Qiye fazhan zhong de Zhidu bianqian [Institutional Change in Enterprise Development]. Shanghai, 2004.Google Scholar
Zhongguo renmin yinhang Shanghaishi fenhang Jinrong yanjiushi, comp. Jincheng yinhang shiliao [Archival Materials of the Jincheng Bank]. Shanghai, 1983.Google Scholar
Zhongguo shehui kexueyuan Jindaishi ziliao bianjibu, comp. Minguo renwu beichuanji [Biographies of Republican China]. Chengdu, 1997.Google Scholar

Articles and Essays

Achrol, Ravi S. “Forms of Network Organization.” In Business Networks in Asia, ed. Richter, Frank-Jurgen. Westport, Conn., 1999, pp. 3–37.Google Scholar
Amaral, L. A. N., et al. “Classes of Small-World Networks.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 97 (Oct. 2000): 11149–52.Google Scholar
Barabasi, Albert Laszlo, and Eric Bonabeau. “Scale-free Networks.Scientific American 288 (May 2003): 60–70.Google Scholar
Ben, Bai. “Jiuda jingyan gongsi chuanglishi” [The Founding of Jiuda Salt Industries]. Yanmi zhuankan [Journal on Salt] 1 (Dec. 1935): 1–52.Google Scholar
Ben, Bai. “Zhen bu ke jie” [Really Incomprehensible]. Yanzheng congkan [Journal on Salt Administration] 2 (Nov. 1931): 13–17.Google Scholar
Biggart, Nicole W., and Hamilton, Gary G.. “On the Limits of a Firm-Based Theory to Explain Business Networks: The Western Bias of Neoclassical Economics.” In Networks and Organizations, ed. Nohria, Nitin and Eccles, Robert G.. Cambridge, Mass., 1992, pp. 471–90.Google Scholar
Boisot, Max, and John Child. “From Fiefs to Clans and Network Capitalism: Explaining China’s Emerging Economic Order.Administrative Science Quarterly 41 (Dec. 1996): 600–628.Google Scholar
Carruthers, Bruce G., and Brian Uzzi. “Economic Sociology in the New Millennium.Contemporary Sociology 29 (May 2000): 486–94.Google Scholar
Chen, Diaopu. “Yongli jianchang fendou huiyilu” [Remembering the Struggle of Yongli Alkali Company]. Wenshi ziliao xuanji [Selected Historical Materials] 10 (Oct. 1960): 1–26.Google Scholar
Chen, Xinwen. “Zhongguo huagong rencai de yaolan” [A Training Ground for Chemical Industries in China]. Reprinted in Huagong xiandao Fan Xudong [Fan Xudong, a Pioneer in Chemical Industry], comp. Huagong xiandao Fan Xudong bianjizu. Beijing, 1987, pp. 136–47.Google Scholar
Gargiulo, Martin, and Mario Benassi. “The Dark Side of Social Capital.” In Corporate Social Capital and Liability, ed. Th. A. Roger J. Leenders, and Gabbay, Shaul M.. Norwell, Mass., 1999, pp. 298–322.Google Scholar
Ge, Peilin. “Yang Du yu Tianjin” [Yang Du and Tianjin]. Tianjin shizhi [History of Tianjin] 1 (Feb. 1998): 29–32.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Gary G. “Patterns of Asian Network Capitalism.” In Networks, Markets, and the Pacific Rim, ed. Fruin, Mark. New York, 1998, pp. 181–99.Google Scholar
“Ji Niuyue tongren huanying Zhou Zoumin xiansheng wanhui” [Report on Zhou Zoumin’s Reception in New York]. Haiwang [Neptune]20 (May 1948): 411. Google Scholar
John, Richard. “Elaborations, Revisions, Dissents: Chandler, Alfred D., Jr.’s The Visible Hand after Twenty Years.” Business History Review 71 (1997): 151–200.Google Scholar
Kirby, William C.China Unincorporated: Company Law and Business Enterprise in Twentieth-Century China.Journal of Asian Studies 54 (Feb. 1995): 43–63.Google Scholar
Kleinfeld, Judith S.The Small World Problem.Society 39 (Jan.–Feb. 2002): 61–66.Google Scholar
Thorelli, Hans B.Networks: Between Market and Hierarchies.Strategic Management Journal 7 (Jan.–Feb. 1986): 35–71.10.1002/smj.4250070105Google Scholar
Williamson, Oliver E. “The New Institutional Economics: Taking Stock, Looking Ahead.Journal of Economic Literature 37 (Sept. 2000): 595–613.Google Scholar
Wright, Tim. “The Spiritual Heritage of Chinese Capitalism: Recent Trends in the Historiography of Chinese Enterprise Management.” In Using the Past to Serve the Present: Historiography and Politics in Contemporary China, ed. Unger, Jonathan. Armonk, N.Y., 1993, pp. 205–38.Google Scholar
Xie, Xianzhi. “Jiuda yanye gongsi shimo” [A History of Jiuda Salt Industries]. Tanggu wenshi ziliao [Historical Materials of Tanggu] 3 (Jan. 1992): 69–81.Google Scholar
Xu, Fuqi. “Huiyi huaxue gongyejia Fan Xudong” [Fan Xudong the Chemical Industrialist]. Jiangsu wenshi ziliao xuanbian [Selected Historical Materials of Jiangsu Province] 25 (June 1988): 24–46.Google Scholar
Xu, Guomao. “Zhou Zuomin yu Jincheng yinhang” [Zhou Zuomin and the Jincheng Bank]. In Zhou Zuomin yu Jincheng yinhang [Zhou Zuomin and the Jincheng Bank], ed. Jiajun, Xu et al. Beijing, 1993, pp. 39–70.Google Scholar
Zhang, Jian. “Wanqing zikai shangbu shulun” [Ports of Trade Declared in Late Qing Dynasty]. Jindaishi yanjiu [Studies on Modern History] 83 (Sept. 1994): 73–88.Google Scholar

Unpublished and Online Sources

“Bian Baimei riji” [Diary of Bian Baimei]. Library of the Tianjin Political Consultation Conference, Tianjin.Google Scholar
Kwan Man, Bun. “Patriotic and Network Capitalism: The Yongli Chemical Co., Ltd. and the Imperial Chemical Industries, 1917–1937.” Paper prepared for the annual meeting of the Association for Asian Studies, 2004.Google Scholar
Lamoreaux, Naomi R., Raff, Daniel M. G., and Temin, Peter. “Beyond Markets and Hierarchies: Toward a New Synthesis of American Business History.” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper no. 9029. 2002.Google Scholar
The Small World Project. URL: http://smallworld.columbia.edu Google Scholar
Wang, Pang. “Dagongbao de zijin yu gufen biandong qingkuang” [Changes in Capitalization and Shareholders of Dagongbao]. URL: http://wwwpeople.com.cn/gb/shizeng/252/8397/8400/20020607/747102.Google Scholar
Zhu, Yin’gui. “Lun jindai Zhongguo gufenzhi qiyezhong zhidu de Zhongxi jiehe.” [Convergence of the East and the West in the Joint-Stock Company of Modern China]. Paper presented at the International Conference on Corporate Structure, Entrepreneurial Spirit, and Urban Economy. Shanghai, 2002.Google Scholar

Archival Sources

Changlu Division Archives, Hebei Provincial Archives, Shijiazhuang, China.Google Scholar
Institute of Modern History Archives, Academia Sinica, Taibei, China.Google Scholar
Jincheng yinhang Papers [Archives of the Jincheng Bank], Shanghai Municipal Archives, Shanghai, China.Google Scholar
Jincheng yinhang Papers [Archives of the Jincheng Bank], Tianjin Municipal Archives, Tianjin, China.Google Scholar
Tianjin, jianchang [Tianjin Alkali Works] Archives, Tanggu, China.Google Scholar
Yongli-Jiuda Chemical Industries, Ltd. Papers, Archives of the former Ministry of Chemical Industries, Beijing, China.Google Scholar