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Managing international business in relation-based versus rule-based countriesShaomin Li.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: [New York, N.Y. (222 East 46th Street, New York, NY 10017) : Business Expert Press, (c)2009.Edition: first editionDescription: 1 electronic text (viii, 144 pages) : digital fileContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781606490853
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HD62 .M363 2009
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Chapter 2. Distinguishing rule-based and relation-based countries: how to measure governance environment -- Chapter 3. Market structure in relation-based societies -- Chapter 4. How much do we trust disclosed information: investment protection in relation-based markets -- Chapter 5. Mafia boss or modern manager: management and working relationships in relation-based firms -- Chapter 6. Friction between information and communication technology and relation-based governance -- Chapter 7. Efficiency-enhancing corruption: corruption in relation-based societies -- Chapter 8. The greatest leap forward: the transition from relation-based to rule-based governance -- Notes -- References -- Index.
Abstract: This book summarizes the research in the past 10 years on how different governance environments at the national level affect business operations and management. Its primary audience includes executives who manage business across borders. Readers interested in international political economy and comparative culture may also find it intriguing. A country's governance environment includes the political, economic, and social systems that facilitate or constrain the way firms and individuals govern their social exchanges and business activities. This book distinguishes and examines the two major governance environments in the world, the rule-based system (conventionally called the "Western way") and the relation-based system (the "Asian way"), and demonstrates that the Asian way does not come from cultural heritage, but rather it is a result of the particular stage of political and economic development in which public rules are not fair and effective. The author argues that contrary to the conventional view that dismisses the relation-based way as backward, it may be efficient under certain conditions. This book further shows that the success of the relation-based way is not primarily based on the family but on a more extended informal social network beyond the family.
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Chapter 1. Introduction: rule-based versus relation-based systems -- Chapter 2. Distinguishing rule-based and relation-based countries: how to measure governance environment -- Chapter 3. Market structure in relation-based societies -- Chapter 4. How much do we trust disclosed information: investment protection in relation-based markets -- Chapter 5. Mafia boss or modern manager: management and working relationships in relation-based firms -- Chapter 6. Friction between information and communication technology and relation-based governance -- Chapter 7. Efficiency-enhancing corruption: corruption in relation-based societies -- Chapter 8. The greatest leap forward: the transition from relation-based to rule-based governance -- Notes -- References -- Index.

This book summarizes the research in the past 10 years on how different governance environments at the national level affect business operations and management. Its primary audience includes executives who manage business across borders. Readers interested in international political economy and comparative culture may also find it intriguing. A country's governance environment includes the political, economic, and social systems that facilitate or constrain the way firms and individuals govern their social exchanges and business activities. This book distinguishes and examines the two major governance environments in the world, the rule-based system (conventionally called the "Western way") and the relation-based system (the "Asian way"), and demonstrates that the Asian way does not come from cultural heritage, but rather it is a result of the particular stage of political and economic development in which public rules are not fair and effective. The author argues that contrary to the conventional view that dismisses the relation-based way as backward, it may be efficient under certain conditions. This book further shows that the success of the relation-based way is not primarily based on the family but on a more extended informal social network beyond the family.

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