保存 发表于 2025-3-25 03:50:51
The Chinese Response to Competition: Rubber and Pineapple, the expanse between western markets and the South-East Asian peasant population who were ultimately responsible for most of the commodity production in the region. The sharp rise of rubber, however, from the early twentieth century impacted heavily on this long-standing pattern of production and trade.免费 发表于 2025-3-25 09:07:48
Marketing and the Textile Trade: An Indian Success,se competition. The focus, however, takes too little account of the important developments taking place within South-East Asia and the diversity of the region’s markets. What follows is a more complex picture, in which the role of marketing strategy and structure is shown to have been decisive in the fight for competitive advantage.值得尊敬 发表于 2025-3-25 15:09:24
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2946-8701and political developments in the region. It focuses on three questions. Why was indigenous capitalism so weak in colonial South East Asia? What were the institutional weaknesses in an otherwise dominant Chinese capitalist class, and why did it fail to transform itself into a modern industrial elit光亮 发表于 2025-3-25 23:09:11
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The Growth of Trade, Trading Networks and Mercantilism in Pre-Colonial South-East Asia, question is more easily answered for the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Modern South-East Asia has a coherence which was thrust upon it by colonialism, the Japanese occupation, and the post-colonial alliances. For the pre-colonial era, historians have identified trends drawing this region together from as early as the fourteenth century..单挑 发表于 2025-3-26 17:02:23
The Strength of Western Capital: The Teak Industry,upport of the British colonial government in Burma, and 2) the high levels of investment British companies were prepared to make. Western capital also dominated the petroleum industry in South-East Asia for the same reasons, but teak has been chosen as illustration for the reason that petroleum has been very well covered by other historians..