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Imperialism in Transition: British Business and the Chinese Authorities, 1931–37

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Extract

According to current Chinese views, in 1949 China was liberated from three major evils: feudalism, imperialism and bureaucratic capitalism. The present article takes a closer look at the relationship between the two last mentioned. The period chosen is the early and mid 1930s, which was marked by growing tensions between the powers in East Asia, by acute economic depression and subsequent recovery, and by the gradual extension of the Nanjing Government's control over the country. On the foreigner's side, the focus will be on the British experience at a time when Great Britain's political position in the Far East was being overshadowed by Japan's thrust towards hegemony. It will be argued, the widening gap between Britain's political and economic presence in China was partly bridged by increasingly close co-operation between British business and the Chinese ruling elite.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1984

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References

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52. On the export side, there was only one purchasing network that connected a British manufacturer/exporter to agricultural producers in the Chinese villages. It was operated, on a smaller scale than the major distribution networks, by the International Export Co., a firm specializing in the export of egg products from China. See Zhen, Chen (ed.), Zhongguo jindai gongye shi zilao, disiji (Beijing: Renmin chubanshe, 1961), pp. 482–83Google Scholar; Weaning, Zhang, “Zhongguo danye yanjiu,” Shangye yuebao, Vol. 15, No. 5 (05 1935), p. 3Google Scholar; Chi-tung, Wang, Eggs Industry in China (Tianjin and Shanghai: Hautes études/Université de l' Aurore, 1937), pp. 2122Google Scholar.

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81. JSSP II/2/10 Butterfield & Swire (Shanghai) to London & Lancashire Insurance Co., Ltd., 18 September 1931.

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96. FO 371/18082/F3206 Tsinan Intelligence Reportfor October 1933 to March 1934.

97. FO 371/19321/F6420 Chiang Kai-shek to Zhejiang Provincial Government, 11 June 1935 (translation). On the relationship between the New Life Movement and the narcotics question see Domes, Jürgen, Vertagte Revolution. Die Politik der Kuomintang in China, 1923–1937 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1969), pp. 555–57Google Scholar.

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102. T 188/162 Leith-Ross, memo, 22 February 1937.

103. JSSP I/3/10 Swire to Dawson, 16 December 1935.

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110. FO 371/20997/F3530 Pratt, minute, 9 July 1937.

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112. Text in Guomin zhengfu gongbao. No. 1417, 21 April 1934, pp. 1–2.

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