Weak Law v. strong ties: An empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in China
Based on a large-scale survey of Chinese entrepreneurs, our study explores how legal and political institutions influence investment decisions made by private companies. The study finds that, consistent with the conventional view, a more effective legal system is correlated with short-term general i...
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sg-smu-ink.sol_research-42382017-09-13T03:00:50Z Weak Law v. strong ties: An empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in China ZHANG, Wei LI, Ji Based on a large-scale survey of Chinese entrepreneurs, our study explores how legal and political institutions influence investment decisions made by private companies. The study finds that, consistent with the conventional view, a more effective legal system is correlated with short-term general investment, and that the judiciary is important mainly because of its restraint over the state. The role of effective courts, however, diminishes when private entrepreneurs consider making long-term investment. We find a positive association between the entrepreneurs' political backgrounds and their R&D investment, suggesting that Chinese courts, in spite of decades of reform, are not yet viewed as reliable to protect long-term private investment from expropriation, policy instability, and a hostile regulatory environment. Rather, informal political connections constitute the premise for the protection of long-term investment. We also find evidence indicating that political ties are expensive resources to accumulate and maintain, so Chinese entrepreneurs tap into them only when substantial long-term interests are at stake. The findings contribute to the literature on law and economic development. 2017-03-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2286 info:doi/10.1515/rle-2014-0008 Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Transnational Law |
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Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Transnational Law ZHANG, Wei LI, Ji Weak Law v. strong ties: An empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in China |
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Based on a large-scale survey of Chinese entrepreneurs, our study explores how legal and political institutions influence investment decisions made by private companies. The study finds that, consistent with the conventional view, a more effective legal system is correlated with short-term general investment, and that the judiciary is important mainly because of its restraint over the state. The role of effective courts, however, diminishes when private entrepreneurs consider making long-term investment. We find a positive association between the entrepreneurs' political backgrounds and their R&D investment, suggesting that Chinese courts, in spite of decades of reform, are not yet viewed as reliable to protect long-term private investment from expropriation, policy instability, and a hostile regulatory environment. Rather, informal political connections constitute the premise for the protection of long-term investment. We also find evidence indicating that political ties are expensive resources to accumulate and maintain, so Chinese entrepreneurs tap into them only when substantial long-term interests are at stake. The findings contribute to the literature on law and economic development. |
format |
text |
author |
ZHANG, Wei LI, Ji |
author_facet |
ZHANG, Wei LI, Ji |
author_sort |
ZHANG, Wei |
title |
Weak Law v. strong ties: An empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in China |
title_short |
Weak Law v. strong ties: An empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in China |
title_full |
Weak Law v. strong ties: An empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in China |
title_fullStr |
Weak Law v. strong ties: An empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in China |
title_full_unstemmed |
Weak Law v. strong ties: An empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in China |
title_sort |
weak law v. strong ties: an empirical study of business investment, law and political connections in china |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2017 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2286 |
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1772829451598430208 |