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Chapter 5 turns to the economic sphere, with special attention to the emergence of the modern economic corporation, as a competitor par excellence. I examine its origins in medieval antecedents, how post-revolutionary US was the ideal environment for its initial cultivation and elaboration, and its subsequent development in Europe and beyond. The economic firm is in many ways the ‘ideal type’ of the modern corporate actor, but I am concerned to show in the next two chapters that new corporate actors in the political and ideological/cultural spheres are also crucial to the general domestication of competition in liberal societies.
Since the profits from pawnbrokers’ loans fell into relatively few hands, many Huizhou merchants came to rely on commercial partnerships, the formal and informal, to expand their pool of investment capital and the operation of their businesses. Chapter 5 investigates in detail the development of three distinct varieties of these partnerships for both Ming and Qing merchants in general and for Huizhou merchants in particular. Attention is paid to the distinctive principles of each of these types of commercial partnership, which seem to have grown out of specific regional conditions in China and the commercial needs of its itinerant merchants both before and during the Ming. In addition, this chapter explains the Huizhou merchants’ solutions to such common problems of business governance as bankruptcy and a merchant’s access to his committed investments during the contracted period of investment
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