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Full Description
How did the once-secretive, isolated People's Republic of China become the factory to the world? Shelley Rigger convincingly demonstrates that the answer is Taiwan. She follows the evolution of Taiwan's influence from the period when Deng Xiaoping lifted Mao's prohibitions on business in the late 1970s, allowing investors from Taiwan to collaborate with local officials in the PRC to transform mainland China into a manufacturing powerhouse. After World War II, Taiwan's fleet-footed export-oriented manufacturing firms became essential links in global supply chains. In the late 1980s, Taiwanese firms seized the opportunity to lower production costs by moving to the PRC, which was seeking foreign investment to fuel its industrial rise. Within a few years, Taiwan's traditional manufacturing had largely relocated to the PRC, opening space for a wave of new business creation in information technology. The Tiger Leading the Dragon traces the development of the cross-Taiwan Strait economic relationship and explores how Taiwanese firms and individuals transformed Chinese business practices. It also reveals their contributions to Chinese consumer behavior, philanthropy, religion, popular culture, and law.
Contents
Preface: The Umbrella King
Acknowledgments
1 How Mao's China became the "Factory to the World"
2 Taiwan's "Economic Miracle"
3 "Second Spring": Taiwan's Traditional Manufacturers Discover Mainland China
4 From SME to ODM: Taiwan's Integration into Global Manufacturing Networks
5 The 1990s: From Umbrellas to iPhones
6 The Rise of the Red Supply Chain
7 "Borrowing a Boat to Go to Sea": Taiwanese Business Practices in China
8 Affordable Luxury: Changing the Way China Eats (and More)
9 Beyond Business: How Taiwanese Are Reshaping Chinese Society
10 The End of an Era?
References
Index