Jump-starting stock markets in transition economies has proved difficult. These countries lack effective legal governance structures and face severe information problems. Yet not all financial markets failed because of adverse conditions. Using China's initial stock market development as a case study, this article suggests that administrative governance can substitute for formal legal governance. At the core of this governance structure was the quota system. It created incentives for regional competition and decentralized information collection at the IPO stage. It was also used to punish regions and responsible officials when companies from their regions failed, as evidenced herein.link_to_subscribed_fulltex
This dissertation argues that the institutional framework within transition economies, including the...
The author examines corporate governance qualitatively and applies corporate governance principles t...
China has sought to improve enterprise performance not through privatisation as in other transition ...
Jump-starting stock markets in transition economies has proved difficult. These countries lack effec...
Plagued by a notoriously weak legal system, China has developed an alternative governance system bas...
textabstractCorporate governance in transition economies does not fit in the dominant normative mode...
Throughout the 1990s, China’s stock market was developed as a tool of industrial policy. It was used...
The financial market development in China has been plagued by a notoriously weak legal system. Howev...
This chapter explores the institutional conditions for the development of financial markets in emerg...
The Chinese regulatory decentralization has evolved since regulation was introduced in the transitio...
With the signing of an agreement with the United States easing China=s entrance into the World Trade...
Having grown to one of the largest in the world in just over two decades, China’s stock market is ci...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Risk management and oversight have long been re...
While corporate governance continues to play an important role in economic development, corporate go...
The negative relationship between economic growth and stock market return is not an anomaly accordin...
This dissertation argues that the institutional framework within transition economies, including the...
The author examines corporate governance qualitatively and applies corporate governance principles t...
China has sought to improve enterprise performance not through privatisation as in other transition ...
Jump-starting stock markets in transition economies has proved difficult. These countries lack effec...
Plagued by a notoriously weak legal system, China has developed an alternative governance system bas...
textabstractCorporate governance in transition economies does not fit in the dominant normative mode...
Throughout the 1990s, China’s stock market was developed as a tool of industrial policy. It was used...
The financial market development in China has been plagued by a notoriously weak legal system. Howev...
This chapter explores the institutional conditions for the development of financial markets in emerg...
The Chinese regulatory decentralization has evolved since regulation was introduced in the transitio...
With the signing of an agreement with the United States easing China=s entrance into the World Trade...
Having grown to one of the largest in the world in just over two decades, China’s stock market is ci...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Risk management and oversight have long been re...
While corporate governance continues to play an important role in economic development, corporate go...
The negative relationship between economic growth and stock market return is not an anomaly accordin...
This dissertation argues that the institutional framework within transition economies, including the...
The author examines corporate governance qualitatively and applies corporate governance principles t...
China has sought to improve enterprise performance not through privatisation as in other transition ...