Aims to provide an outline of current transportation conditions to prepare companies considering entry to the Chinese market for the realities they will inevitably confront there. The transportation sector has not kept up with China′s rapid economic growth. Transportation has become a major bottleneck to further development of foreign business operations in China. As reforms have freed the economy, more goods are being shipped for longer distances. Railways, highways and shipping are now swamped beyond their capacity. In addition to inadequate infrastructure, transport companies, mostly state owned, operate inefficiently under near monopolistic conditions. Bureaucratic inefficiency and corruption make the movement of products even more difficult. Within the last year, Beijing has finally begun to take problems in the transport sector seriously, but it will likely be decades before transport operations in China run smoothly.
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1 October 1995
Case Report|
October 01 1995
Transportation in China in the 1990s
Mark W. Speece;
Mark W. Speece
Asian Institute of Technology, Bangkok, Thailand
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Yukiko Kawahara
Yukiko Kawahara
Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, NT, Hong Kong
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-664X
Print ISSN: 0960-0035
© MCB UP Limited
1995
International Journal of Physical Distribution & Logistics Management (1995) 25 (8): 53–71.
Citation
Speece MW, Kawahara Y (1995), "Transportation in China in the 1990s". International Journal of Physical Distribution & Logistics Management, Vol. 25 No. 8 pp. 53–71, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09600039510099964
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