Book contents
- Endorsements
- Global Shareholder Stewardship
- Global Shareholder Stewardship
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Part I Foundations
- Part II Jurisdictions
- 4 Shareholder Stewardship in the Netherlands
- 5 Capitalist Stakeholders
- 6 Institutional Investor Stewardship in Italian Corporate Governance
- 7 The Danish Stewardship Code
- 8 Stewardship Norwegian-Style
- 9 Stewardship and Shareholder Engagement in Germany
- 10 The Japanese Stewardship Code
- 11 Korea’s Stewardship Code and the Rise of Shareholder Activism
- 12 The Assessment of Taiwan’s Shareholder Stewardship Codes
- 13 Stewardship in the Hong Kong International Financial Centre
- 14 Singapore’s Embrace of Shareholder Stewardship
- 15 Institutional Investor Stewardship in Malaysia
- 16 The Thai Institutional Investors Stewardship Code and Its Implementation
- 17 Shareholder Stewardship in India
- 18 Institutional Investors in China
- 19 Stewardship and Collective Action
- 20 Stewardship Principles in Canada
- 21 The Uncertain Stewardship Potential of Index Funds
- 22 Encouraging Sustainable Investment in South Africa
- 23 Stewardship in Kenya
- 24 The Brazilian Stewardship Framework
- Part III Comparisons
- Index
18 - Institutional Investors in China
An Autochthonous Mechanism Unrelated to UK-cum-Global Stewardship
from Part II - Jurisdictions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 April 2022
- Endorsements
- Global Shareholder Stewardship
- Global Shareholder Stewardship
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Part I Foundations
- Part II Jurisdictions
- 4 Shareholder Stewardship in the Netherlands
- 5 Capitalist Stakeholders
- 6 Institutional Investor Stewardship in Italian Corporate Governance
- 7 The Danish Stewardship Code
- 8 Stewardship Norwegian-Style
- 9 Stewardship and Shareholder Engagement in Germany
- 10 The Japanese Stewardship Code
- 11 Korea’s Stewardship Code and the Rise of Shareholder Activism
- 12 The Assessment of Taiwan’s Shareholder Stewardship Codes
- 13 Stewardship in the Hong Kong International Financial Centre
- 14 Singapore’s Embrace of Shareholder Stewardship
- 15 Institutional Investor Stewardship in Malaysia
- 16 The Thai Institutional Investors Stewardship Code and Its Implementation
- 17 Shareholder Stewardship in India
- 18 Institutional Investors in China
- 19 Stewardship and Collective Action
- 20 Stewardship Principles in Canada
- 21 The Uncertain Stewardship Potential of Index Funds
- 22 Encouraging Sustainable Investment in South Africa
- 23 Stewardship in Kenya
- 24 The Brazilian Stewardship Framework
- Part III Comparisons
- Index
Summary
This Chapter demonstrates that institutional investors have become an important vector in China’s autochthonous corporate governance model, which can no longer be ignored. To accurately understand the role of institutional investors in Chinese corporate governance and how effective they are in improving corporate governance in China, these developments must be understood on their own terms – in China’s unique political-economic context in which the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has ultimate control. The same is true for understanding how Chinese companies and institutional investors fit into the CCP’s broad-based campaigns to address social inequality and improve the environment. The Chapter concludes that to see these developments as part of a UK-inspired ‘global shareholder stewardship’ movement, would make Western pundits seem like the proverbial woman who only has a hammer and sees everything as a nail. In arriving at this conclusion this Chapter reveals how the CCP has actively and gradually promoted the growth of domestic institutional investors, in terms of types and size, through relaxation of policies and law reforms to improve corporate governance and stabilize the stock market, while limiting the influence of foreign institutional investors. It further analyzes all the Activist Campaigns undertaken by institutional investors in China and maps the network of government bodies, regulations, and tactics that the CCP has developed to directly and indirectly control State-Owned Institutional Investors (SOIIs) and Private-Owned Institutional Investors (POIIs) for the purpose of policy channelling.
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- Global Shareholder Stewardship , pp. 379 - 416Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
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