From Workshop to World Factory: Business History of Modern China
MTA
Entrepreneurs, state enterprises, and global integration from 1949 to today
2nd Edition
*From Workshop to World Factory* provides a comprehensive business history of modern China, tracing its evolution from a socialist planned economy (1949–1978) into a sophisticated global manufacturing powerhouse. The book begins by examining the foundational role of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and the *danwei* system, which established an industrial skeleton of vertical integration and political negotiation. This inherited structure provided the institutional DNA for subsequent reforms, where pragmatic adaptation became the core managerial competency for navigating the transition from central planning to market-driven competition.
The middle section of the narrative details the rise of "Village Capitalism" through Township and Village Enterprises and the pivotal role of Special Economic Zones like Shenzhen. These experiments allowed China to integrate into global supply chains via original equipment manufacturing (OEM) and foreign joint ventures. By serving as a low-cost assembly hub for textiles, toys, and later electronics, Chinese firms underwent a "learning by doing" phase, internalizing international standards of quality and logistics while the state simultaneously restructured the "giants" of heavy industry to survive in a market environment.
As the book moves toward the 21st century, it highlights the transition from simple assembly to higher-value activities, including indigenous branding (OBM), design, and a massive digital leap driven by e-commerce and fintech platforms. The rise of global champions in the automotive, semiconductor, and telecommunications sectors reflects a move toward technological self-reliance and strategic innovation. This growth is supported by a complex financial ecosystem of state banks, capital markets, and local government financing vehicles, all operating under the persistent guidance of industrial policy.
In its final chapters, the book addresses contemporary pressures, including rising labor costs, environmental constraints, and heightening geopolitical trade frictions. It explores how Chinese firms are redrawing the "map of production" through the Belt and Road Initiative and "China Plus One" strategies in Southeast Asia. The narrative concludes with a look at future transitions under the banners of "Dual Circulation" and "Common Prosperity," suggesting that the world factory is currently retrofitting itself for a new era defined by automation, green energy, and a more resilient, domestically anchored economic model.
May 4, 2026
69,716 words
4 hours 53 minutes
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