Administrative Monopoly In China: Causes, Behaviors, And Termination
By Sheng Hong, Zhao Nong & Junfeng Yang
- Release Date: 2015-02-27
- Genre: Political Science
Description
Administrative Monopoly in China: Causes, Behaviors, and Termination is a further work of our previous book, China's State-Owned Enterprises: Nature, Performance and Reform. This new book analyzes the SOEs with respect to monopoly, and focuses on six industries: telecommunication, petroleum, railway, salt, banking and football.
The book tells the history of how administrative monopolies were formed in China, analyzes the factors responsible for this, describes the behaviors of administrative monopoly, enterprises, and individuals against the monopolistic background, and presents data on the losses brought about by the administrative monopolies.
Contents:The Nature of Administrative MonopolyThe Formation and Cause of Administrative MonopolyThe Pervasiveness of Administrative MonopolyThe Illegality of Administrative MonopolyThe Behaviors of Administrative MonopolyThe Inefficiency and Unfairness of Administrative MonopolyEstimation of Welfare Loss and Distribution Distortions Caused by Administrative MonopolyBreaking Administrative MonopolySub Reports:Administrative Monopoly in the Telecommunications IndustryAdministrative Monopoly in the Petroleum IndustryAdministrative Monopoly in the Railway IndustryAdministrative Monopoly in the Banking IndustryAdministrative Monopoly in the Salt IndustryAdministrative Monopoly in the Football Industry
Readership: Academics, professionals, undergraduate and graduate students studying the administrative monopoly of State-Owned Enterprises in China.
Key Features:This book discusses the administrative monopolies which are different from the standard monopoliesThis book tells people why the one-party political system is conductive for the formation, maintenance and expansion of administrative monopoliesThis book shows the huge damage caused by the administrative monopolies to the society and the economy at the macro-level