Transcript Hafsi-EN
Taïeb Hafsi, HEC Montréal
China: Thoughts About a Born Again Civilization
Presentation at the CÉRIUM’s Summer School
China Risen
How it changes and change us
A PRIMER
1. Capital: Beijing
2. Area: 9.6 million km2
3. Population: 1.3 billion (2000)
4. 56 ethnic groups (Han: 91.6%; Muslims:
21 million)
5. Communist party: 6.5 million members
6. 1840: China accounted for 1/3 of World
GDP; 2003: it was only 5% !
A PRIMER
7. 4 cities directly controlled by Central
government: Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin
and Chongqin
8. 23 provinces (Incl. Taiwan); 5
autonomous regions (incl. Tibet); 2 special
administrative regions (HK and Macao)
9. 26 are larger than France; 16 are larger
than Quebec
A PRIMER
10. The 5th largest economy in the World (2005)
GDP: US $ 2300 Billion (+9.9%)
FDI: US $ 60.3 B
RESERVES: US $ 800 +
International Trade (2005): US $ 1422.1 B (+23.2%)
US deficit with China: US $ 201 B
Over 250 M. people have been pulled out of poverty
Middle class is developing fast and is expected to reach
500 million people by 2020
HISTORICAL FACTS
A remarkable history: over 4000 years old
16 dynasties: Qin, Han, Dang, Song, Yuang, Ming and
Qing
More than 250 emperors
Yin Zheng: first to centralize feudal monarchy and unite China in
221 BC
Kublai Khan: unified China and Mongolia in 1276 AD
Yong Zheng: officially integrated Tibet into China in 1727 AD
China first republic in 1911 by Sun Yat-Sen
Popular republic in 1949
1976: Death of Mao, Zhou and Zhu
1979: Deng Xiaoping starts the economic reforms
Transitions from a centrally planned economy to a Planned
Socialistic Market Economy, and then to the Socialistic Market
Economy with Chinese Characteristics
SOCIAL HISTORY
Pictographic and hieroglyphic characters
Confucean philosophy
Taoism, Buddhism, Islam and Christianity
54 different languages (28 written) and over 2000 local
dialects
Qing (1644-1911): three official languages (Mandchu, Mandarin
and Mongolian)
Korean, Mongolian, Arabic and Tibetan official in some provinces
or regions
Hierarchical society, based on strong family values and
norms
Importance of Guanxi, dining and gift-giving
MORE PRECISELY
POPULATION
1953: 600 MILLION
2000: 1.3 BILLION
ACTIVE POPULATION
1953: 200 MILLION
1978: 400 MILLION
2001: 744 MILLION (A: 365; I: 165; S: 202)
MORE PRECISELY
GDP:2001: $ 1159M; 2004: $1600M
State firms: 42%
Foreign subs: 29%
Others: 29%
Coastal provinces: 64% of GDP, 82% of FDI
and 91% of exports in 2001
GDP per capita: 900 et ppp: 4500 in 2001; 1200
and 6000 in 2004
FDI: 1991-2005: $ 460 B of which 75% ASIA
MORE PRECISELY
EXPORTS: 6% OF WORLD TOTAL (2005)
8% ELECTRICITY/ELECTRONICS
25% TEXTILES
11% WOOD
3% FOOD PRODUCTS
3% CHEMICALS
52% ASIA
22% USA
18% EUROPE
CHINA
THOUGHTS ABOUT A BORN
AGAIN CIVILIZATION
BY
TAÏEB HAFSI
PROGRAM
1. CHINA’s HISTORY and CHARACTER
2. THE MAO PERIOD
3. THE MORE RECENT
TRANSFORMATION
4. THE CASE OF THE ELECTRICITY
INDUSTRY
CHINA IS A CIVILIZATION
More than a country, China is a civilization
A strong culture
Deeply rooted traditions
Highly institutionalized social behaviour
This is said to be the civilization that has
lasted longer
A UNIQUE CIVILIZATION
Even the pharaos cannot rival the wealth
and decorum of the Chinese emperors
The size of this civilization has given the
empire a scope unrivaled before. This may
be also explained by its longevity
Quality of life, prosperity and technological
development were considerable when the
West was just starting
A UNIQUE CIVILIZATION
IT IS HIGHLY DIFFERENTIATED
Each region is different
Geographically
In terms of population
Socially
Economically
Culturally
But the civilization held a coherent global
character, probably because of agriculture
A CIVILIZATION BUILT WITH PAIN AND
BLOOD
All the history of China is dominated by
considerable violence
Periods of violence were separated by
periods of munificent prosperity
But… almost a miracle
China remained generally united
Even if during some periods, as in Italy, it
was split between rival independent
kingdoms
DOMINANT CHARACTERISTICS
UNCEASING STRUGGLES HAVE
GENERATED THE FOLLOWING PATTERNS:
THE CENTRAL ROLE PLAYED BY EMPERORS
THE POWER OF CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
THE RELENTLESS DESTRUCTION OF ANY
RESISTANCE TO THE CENTER
DOCILE POPULATION AND LITTLE INTEREST IN
CENTRAL POWER
HOWEVER… LEADERS’ MORAL BEHAVIOUR
WAS A KEY TO STABILITY
DOMINANT CHARACTERISTICS
EMPEROR WAS A SEMI-GOD AS LONG
AS HE WAS SEEN AS BEHAVING FOR
THE GOOD OF THE PEOPLE
WHERE HE WAS NOT, IT WAS
LEGITIMATE TO REMOVE HIM
WHICH WAS OFTEN THE REASON FOR
CONTENTION BY BARONS AND
GENERALS
THE IMPORTANCE OF LEGITIMACY
TO ACT IN CHINA, YOU NEED LEGITIMACY
WHEN LEGITIMATE, EVERYTHING IS
POSSIBLE, PROBABLY BECAUSE OF THE
NUMBERS EFFECT
THIS MAY EXPLAIN THE EMPIRE
TRADITIONAL STRENGTH
THE TEST OF LEGITIMACY IS PRAGMATIC
AND CONTINUAL: THE COLLECTIVE WELLBEING OF THE POPULATION
THE INSTRUMENTS OF POWER
BESIDES LEGITIMACY WHICH COULD
EXPLAIN EVEN THE MORE EXTREME
DECISIONS
THE EMPEROR’s POWER WAS SOON
COMPLEMENTED AND SUPPORTED
THROUGH AN APPARATUS FOR MANAGING
THE CIVILIZATION WHICH INCLUDED:
THE BUREAUCRACY
RULES, LAWS AND PROCEDURES
CONFUCEAN VALUES AND SOCIAL CONTROL
SOCIAL CONTROL
TO AVOID AN ENDLESS WAR AROUND
LAND OWNERSHIP
EACH HAD TO RESPECT SOMEONE ELSE’s
LAND
EACH HAD TO REMAIN ASSOCIATED AND
ATTACHED TO THE LAND OF BIRTH
NOBODY CAN MOVE FROM ONE PLACE TO
ANOTHER WITHOUT PERMIT FROM THE
LOCAL ADMINISTRATION
THE POPULATION ITSELF DID THE
POLICING
CHINESE CHARACTER
THE CHINESE CIVILIZATION WAS
THEREFORE ONE IN WHICH:
EMPEROR IS IMPORTANT
LAW IS IMPORTANT
BUREAUCRACY IS IMPORTANT
LOCAL LIFE IS IMPORTANT
DOMINANT VALUES ARE PRAGMATISM AND GROUP
BEHAVIOUR
IT WAS AMERICA BEFORE AMERICA WAS
BORN !
AS A RESULT
A PROSPEROUS CIVILIZATION
TECHNOLOGICALLY ADVANCED
SOCIALLY STABLE
ADMINISTRATIVELY BALANCED
INDUSTRIOUS
NOT INTERESTED IN OTHER
COUNTRIES EXCEPT WHERE
THREATENING
BIASED AGAINST CHANGE
MORE RECENTLY
DOMINATED BY:
CONSIDERABLE WEAKENING OF THE
EMPOROR’S POWERS AND ITS
PROGRESSIVE DISAPPEARANCE
EMERGING WESTERN DOMINATION
JAPANESE COLONIZATION
RISE TO POWER AND DOMINATION BY THE
COMMUNISTS
MAOISM
CREATING A COUNTRY
THE COMMUNISTS
SUCCEEDED IN WINNING AGAINST
THE NATIONALISTS allied to the USA,
BECAUSE OF:
THEIR VALUES
CORRUPTION IN THE GUO-MIN-TANG
AN INSPIRED LEADERSHIP
THE VIOLENCE OF JAPANESE
COLONIZATION, WHICH HAS
CRYSTALLIZED THE IDEA OF CHINESE
CIVILIZATION AND FACILITATED
MOBILIZATION AROUND IT
COMMUNISM
WITH A STRONG AND WELL TRAINED PARTY,
PRESENT EVERYWHERE IN THE LAND
THE COMMUNISTS HAVE BEEN TEMPTED BY A
UNIFIED AND CENTRALIZED MANAGEMENT OF
CHINA
NEW EMPEROR, MAO INSPIRED BY
MARXISM PROVIDED THE IDEALS
REQUIRED
LAUNCHED PHARAONIC PROJECTS, SOME OF
WHICH WERE CATASTROPHIC
E.G.: THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD
E.G.: THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION
BUT REVEALED CHINA TO ITSELF, THUS CREATING
THE IDEA OF A NATION
COMMUNISM
BUT TOTAL CONTROL BY THE COMMUNISTS
WAS AT THE OPPOSITE OF CHINESE SOCIAL
EXPERIENCE
THE COMMUNIST PERIOD WAS ONE OF THE
ONLY ONES WHERE CHINA HAS BEEN
CENTRALIZED
CHINESE USED TO TAKE CARE OF
THEMSELVES HAVE BEEN TAKEN CARE OF
BY THE PARTY AND THE STATE
THEY HAVE BEEN FASCINATED BY MAO AND
AS USUAL HAVE NOT RESISTED
THE COMMUNIST FAILURE
AS IN ANY COMPLEX ORGANIZATION
THAT GETS CENTRALIZED
AT THE BEGINNING RESULTS WERE
ENCOURAGING
THEN STARTED A LONG AND FAST
SLIDE WHICH STOPPED ONLY WITH
MOA’s DEATH
RETURN TO TRADITIONS
DENG XIAOPING, MAO’s COMPANION,
WAS A PRAGMATIC MAN
IT WAS CLEAR THAT THE
CENTRALIZED SYSTEM DID NOT
WORK
BUT INSTEAD OF GOING TO
EXTREMES AS WAS DONE IN RUSSIA
HE DECIDED TO GO BACK TO
TRADITIONS
RETURNING TO TRADITIONS
MEANT:
THE CENTER IS IMPORTANT AND SHOULD BE
PROTECTED BY ANY MEANS
IT IS THE MASTER OF THE GAME
BUT… LOCALLY EVERYONE CAN DO WHATEVER IS
POSSIBLE TO SURVIVE
END OF SOVIET PLANNING
END OF COLLECTIVISM DOGMA
AUTORIZE DEVELOP INITIATIVES, BOTH PRIVATE AND
PUBLIC
EMPHASIZE STABILITY AND CONTINUITY: EG:
SOCIALIST MARKET !
THE AGRICULTURE AS A CATALYST
THE INITIATION WAS ATTEMPTED IN
AGRICULTURE WHERE THE STAKES WERE
HIGHEST
THE PROPERTY SYSTEM WAS RENOVATED
GIVING PEASANTS ENOUGH SPACE TO
TAKE INITIATIVES:
POSSIBLE PROPERTY OF THE LAND
USUS AND FRUCTUS GARANTEED
CHOICE OF CULTURE CONTRÔLED BUT
LIBERALIZED
LIBERLIZATION OF DISTRIBUTION AND SALES
THE FOLLOWING STEPS
1. SPECTACULAR RESULTS
AUTORIZED TO PRODUCE AND SELL
FREELY A PART OF THEIR CROP,
PEASANTS HAVE COME UP WITH A
REMARKABLE PERFORMANCE PUSHING
DEFINITELY AWAY THE SPECTER OF
FAMINE
2. REINSTATEMENT OF COMMUNISTS
WHO HAVE TAKEN AGAIN THE
INITIATIVE AND REEXAMINED THEIR
SOCIAL THEORIES
THE FOLLOWING STEPS
3. TO FACE THE NEW PROBLEMS OF
AGRICULTURE, CREATION OF VILLAGE AND
COUNTRY ENTERPRISES WITH:
EVEN MORE IMPRESSIVE RESULTS
DEVELOPMENT OF A DYNAMIC AGRIBUSINESS
4. EXPANDING THE REFORM TO THE PUBLIC
FINANCIAL SYSTEM AND TO SOEs
5. CONTROLLED LIBERALIZATION AT THE
REGIONAL AND CITY LEVELS
6. PROGRESSIVE LIBERALIZATION OF THE
ADMINISTRATIVE CONTROLS, ESPECIALLY
THOSE AFFECTING INTERNAL MIGRATION
TODAY’S PROBLEMS
1. DIFFICULTIES WITH THE FINANCIAL
SYSTEM REFORM
2. DIFFICULTIES WITH THE SOEs’ REFORM
3. IMPORTANT PROBLEMS OF
JOBLESSNESS AND ABSENCE OF A SOCIAL
NET SYSTEM
4. GRAVE SOCIAL-MEDICAL PROBLEMS
5. IMPORTANT LOCAL CONFLICTS AROUND
LAND
6. CORRUPTION
PROBLEMS FOR THE WEST
1. SOME CHINESE INDUSTRIES ARE
EXCEPTIONALLY PRODUCTIVE (E.G.,
CONSTRUCTION, MANUFACTURING)
2. THE CHINESE ECONOMY CAN BECOME
TOO POWERFUL (PCs, AUTOMOBILES,
STEEL)
3. THE EFFECT ON WESTERN ECONOMY
TRADITIONAL INDUSTRIES IS DEVASTATING
(TEXTILE-CLOTHING)
4. MULTINATIONALS ARE TOO DEPENDENT
ON CHINA AND STRONGLY ATTRACTED TO
IT !
QUESTIONS ?
FIRST ROUND OF DISCUSSION
INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE
THE CASE OF THE
ELECTRICITY INDUSTRY IN
CHINA FROM 1980 TO 2004
THE TRANSFORMATION
1980: ONE ORGANIZATION (THE STATE)
OLD AND RUNDOWN SYSTEM
INSUFFICIENT SUPPLIES
GOVERNMENT UNABLE TO INVEST MORE
POLLUTION
2004: AN ORGANIZATIONAL FIELD WITH
MORE THAN 4000 FIRMS
MODERN SYSTEM
SURPLUS OF ENERGY
MOST INVESTMENT MADE BY FOREIGNERS
SOPHISTICATED INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
THE RESEARCH QUESTION
CHINA IS A COUNTRY WITH
VALUES/IDEOLOGY THAT HAVE
TRADITIONALLY BEEN OPPOSED TO
MARKET AND FREE ENTREPRISE
STATE STRUCTURE AND SYSTEMS HAVE
BEEN PARTICULARLY RIGID BECAUSE OF
VALUES AND BECAUSE OF HISTORY,
ALL OF WHICH SUGGEST A STRONG
RESISTANCE TO CHANGE
HOW TO EXPLAIN SUCH A
TRANSFORMATION ?
THE INSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Selznick and the importance of values
The problem of values: invisible and taken
for granted
Scott and the new institutionalism: values
are internal but also external
External values are the result of rules and
regulations, norms and cognitives
orientations, all of them are also mostly
invisible and taken for granted
INSTITUTIONS
In institutionalists’ definitions, institutions
are ideas, values, cognitive orientations
which have an influence on the behaviour
of organizations. Three levels of
institutions are considered:
1. Regulations at the most practical level
2. norms, mostly professional, but also social
and societal
3. values and culture at the most abstract level
THEORETICAL QUESTIONS
HOW DO INFLUENCES OF GENERALLY
NOT VISIBLE FACTORS INTERACT
WITH THOSE OF MORE VISIBLE
FACTORS TO EXPLAIN BEHAVIOUR ?
HOW DO ACTORS BECOME AWARE OF
THESE INVISIBLE FACTORS AND HOW
DO THEY CHANGE THEM ?
THEORETICAL ISSUES
USUALLY INSTITUTIONALIST THEORIES ARE
DETERMINISTIC AND ANTI-CHANGE !
MORE RECENTLY, IT HAS BEEN
SUGGESTED THAT THE ANTI-CHANGE
INTERPRETATION OF INSTITUTIONS
SHOULD BE REVERSED
INSTITUTIONAL THEORIES CAN HELP
UNDERSTAND RESISTANCE TO CHANGE
AND THUS HELP ACHIEVE CHANGE !
RELEVANCE OF INSTITUTIONAL
THEORIES
PARTICULARLY RELEVANT FOR THE
UNDERSTANDING OF COMPLEX SYSTEMS
ALSO WHEN ONE STUDIES AN
ORGANIZATIONAL FIELD (AN INDUSTRY, A
REGION, A NATION)
ALSO WHEN HISTORY IS IMPORTANT FOR
THE UNDERSTANDING OF ORGANIZATIONAL
DYNAMICS
E.G.: Leblibici et al (1991); Dacin (1997); Holm
(1995); Hoffman (1999)
The Chinese Electricity Industry
An ideal setting for such a research
The cultural setting is rich and is normally
opposed to change
The size and importance of the industry
are such that one would expect
bureaucracy and resistance to change
THE FINDINGS IN A NUTSHELL
The transformation process follows a cycle pattern
The various levels, national, provincial, local and firm,
complement each other and take the lead at different
phases
The central government play the leading role in the
cultural-cognitive change
The provincial and local levels play a central role in the
change of industry norms and regulations, and contribute
to integrating the whole process
The firm level play the leading role in the development of
professional and managerial normes, rules and
procedures
METHODOLOGY
Burger and Luckman (1967) and Schutz (1967)
The constructs used by the social scientists are, so to
speak, constructs of the second degree, namely
constructs of constructs made by actors on the social
scene, whose behavior the scientist observes and tries
to explain in accordance with the procedural rule of his
science
Need for a phenomenological approach to discover how
« subjective meanings become objective facticities »
Historical and clinical study, sometimes adhoc
and opportunistic
CHINA
ONE OF THE OLDEST AND MOST DURABLE
HUMAN CIVILIZATION
THE IMPERIAL SYSTEM BASED ON:
THE EMPEROR, A DEMI-GOD, MANDATED BY
HEAVEN
THE BUREAUCRACY, WITH A SOPHISTICATED
SYSTEM
CONFUCIANISM
CIVIL WAR AT THE BEGINNING OF THE 20TH
CENTURY
VICTORY OF MAO AND HIS FOLLOWERS
CHINA
THE MAOIST SYSTEM WAS VERY
POWERFUL AND, FOR A FIRST TIME,
CENTRALIZED CHINA
AS A RESULT THERE WERE
REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENTS AND
SOME CATASTROPHES
THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD
THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION
CHINA
SEVERE SOCIAL CONTROL
EVERYONE BELONGS TO A DANWEI
THE DANWEI PROVIDED JOBS, SHELTER,
EDUCATION AND TRAINING, FOOD
RATIONS, CLOTHING AND FURNITURES
DANWEIs HAD NOT DIRECT CONNECTIONS
THE CENTRALITY OF THE LAW: CHINA
HAS BEEN A COUNTRY OF LAW AND
RIGHTS FOR A VERY LONG TIME
POST-MAO REFORMS
DENG REALIZED THE DIFFICULTY OF
MANAGING CHINA CENTRALLY
HE INDUCED THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
TO FOCUS ON CRITICAL ISSUES AND LEAVE
SPACE FOR LOCAL ECONOMIC CHANGE
AND EXPERIMENTATION, AS WAS DONE IN
EARLIER PERIODS !
E.G.1: Countryside and agriculture then village
and county enterprises
E.G. 2: Trade and investment systems
THE ELECTRICITY INDUSTRY
FROM THE EARLY 1980s THE
ECONOMY GREW AT AROUND A 10%
PER YEAR PACE
THE ELECTRICAL ENERGY COULD
NOT FOLLOW AND HAD TO BE
REVAMPED
THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE
ELECTRICITY SYSTEM FOLLOWS THAT
OF CHINA AS A WHOLE AND GOES
THROUGH SIMILAR DIFFICULTIES
Transformation of the electricity industry
Three phases:
1980-86: Central government «composer and
conductor», and the units as players.
The key goal was ensuring supply
1987-1996: Central government as a manager of
context, with rare direct interventions. Firms had to solve
their own problems and could enjoy a lot of autonomy
1996-2004: Greater role for firms. Central government
focused on policies and legal framework.
Goal: ensuring fair competition and the competitiveness of
firms
EXPLAINING THE TRANSFORMATION
It is the transformation of China as a whole that
showed the way
Institutions in China are strong and deep-rooted:
Law and order are important
A local perspective is essential
The Bureaucracy is legitimate
The passage to a market economy was possible
because it was already in the make up of the
Chinese
Mao was a brief abberration
EXPLAINING THE TRANSFORMATION
The process was simple and slow
Avoid chaos (a lesson from history)
Experiment first
Generalize slowly, stimulating rather than
mandating
Changes that are aimed at more profound
institutions take more time !
THE TOP-DOWN PROCESS
Phase 1: most of the change was societal in nature.
More than 6 years were needed to find a way to go
around traditional institutions
Party norms favored stability, hierarchy, conflict
avoidance, and the primacy of effectiveness over
efficiency. They were hard to discredit. There was a need
to separate the political from the economic and justify the
separation
The cultural-cognitive transformation has been mostly
incremental and had to take into account that the
provinces had differing interests
Decisions were mostly symbolic or exceptional (e.g.
Huaneng)
THE BOTTOM-UP PROCESS
Phase 2: Emphasis on normes and
regulations
Reduce the Central bureaucracy and
decentralize to provinces and cities
Introduction of fundamental laws
BUT LOCAL INITIATIVE (e.g., Listing of
Huaneng on the NYSE)
Spectacular performance
BALANCING THE WHOLE
Phase 3: adjustments and emergence of
new problems
Environment
Competition
Integration
Governance
Emphasis on professional and managerial
norms
THEORY
THREE INTERRELATED CYCLES
THE NATIONAL LEVEL CYCLE
First give all the attention to the cultural-cognitive
aspects: the market and the private could be
acceptable
Normes and regulations about financial, production
and marketing aspects
Regulation about environment and competition
THEORY
Cycle at the local level
Reconcile tradition with market and private in specific
situations
Norms and regulations about production, HRM and
Marketing
Rules an procedures for environmental protection
and competitive behaviour
Cycle at the firms level
Managing people’s values
Coordination among firms; management norms
Coordination and innovation; professional norms and
ethical behaviour
THEORY
THE INTERACTIONS AMONG CYCLES
ARE RELATED TO THE
SPECIALIZATION OF ROLES
Phase 1: Central government and Party
emphasize cognitive aspects (values, beliefs)
Phase 2: Local governments emphasize
general norms for industries and firms
Phase 3: firms and managers emphasize
managerial and professional norms for firms
and managers
CONCLUSION
IN A COMPLEX SYSTEM:
There is a specialization of roles
At the central level concern is with the system
as a whole
At the firm level, concern is with regulation, and
with adapting practices to the competitive
situation
At the local governments’ level, concern is
normative, and with reconciling the other two
levels through mediation both physical and
temporal
CONCLUSION
THE SUCCESS OF THIS CHINESE
TRANSFORMATION COMES FROM A
DELICATE RECONCILIATION OF
INSTITUTIONAL TRADITIONS AND
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT NEEDS
WILL THE CHINESE BE ABLE TO
MAINTAIN SUCH A DELICATE
BALANCE ?