1st Edition

Commercial Networks in Modern Asia

By Linda Grove, Shinya Sugiyama Copyright 2001
    287 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    This volume brings together an international team of scholars who examine the development of commercial networks in Asia from the 18th century to the 20th century on a stage that stretches from Yokohama and Pusan to Istanbul. The studies, based on extensive archival research, focus on the trading firms and merchant groups that were the chief actors in the creation of the commercial networks that crisscrossed Asia, linking the various Asian economies to each other and to Europe and the Americas. While some of this work has been available in Japanese, Chinese and Dutch, this is the first time that such a broad range of essays has been made available to an English-speaking audience.
    The thirteen essays can be roughly divided into two groups. The first group includes essays that look at the development of large scale networks and plot the competition between competing indigenous and foreign merchant groups in the trade in such products as sugar and cotton yarn in China, cotton goods in Japan, silk in Iran, Japanese manufactures in Dutch Indonesia and rice and cotton in India. The second group of essays focuses on the activities of specific firms as a way to explore the development of trading networks. This group includes essays that look at the activities of Chinese and Japanese merchants in Korea, at the growth of a commercial empire built on the sale of patent drugs in Southeast Asia and at the activities of European trading firms in Asia.
    The book should appeal to a wide-range audience. Most directly concerned are economic historians

    Introduction , S. Sugiyama, Linda Grove; Chapter 1 Who Marketed Imported Textiles: The Japanese Case, Tanimoto Masayuki; Chapter 2 Japanese Business Networks in Prewar Korea: The Case of the Enterprises of Kameya Aisuke, Kimura Kenji; Chapter 3 Overseas Chinese Financial Networks and Korea, Hamashita Takeshi; Chapter 4 Inchon Trade: Japanese and Chinese Merchants and the Shanghai Network, Furuta Kazuko; Chapter 5 International Trade and the Creation of Domestic Marketing Networks in North China, 1860–1930, Linda Grove; Chapter 6 Decline or Prosperity? Guild Merchants Trading Across the Taiwan Straits, 1820s–1895, Man-houng Lin; Chapter 7 Marketing and Competition in China, 1895–1932: The Taikoo Sugar Refinery, S. Sugiyama; Chapter 8 Lineage Ties and Business Partnership: A Hong Kong Commercial Network, K.C. Fok; Chapter 9 Intra-Asian Marketing: Aw Boon-haw’s Commercial Network, 1910–1937, Sherman Cochran; Chapter 10 Trust and Status in a Dual Regional Economy: Dutch Trading Companies in Japan’s Prewar Trade with Southeast Asia, Peter Post; Chapter 11 Up-country Purchase Activities of Indian Raw Cotton by T?y? Menka’s Bombay Branch, 1896–1935, Kagotani Naoto; Chapter 12 The English East India Company and Indigenous Trading Systems: The Grain Trade in Early Colonial Bengal, Miki Sayako; Chapter 13 Trading Networks in Western Asia and the Iranian Silk Trade, Sakamoto Tsutomu; Chapter 14 Commentaries, Ian Brown; Chapter 15 Historical Evaluation of English Trading Firms, S.D. Chapman; Chapter 16 Asian Trade Networks, Anthony Reid;

    Biography

    Authored by Grove, Linda; Sugiyama, Shinya

    'An important contribution to the economic history of Asia.' - China Perspectives