光华讲坛——社会名流与企业家论坛第3617期
主 题:The past, present, and future of foreign banks inChina
主讲人:Jeroen G. Kuilman
主持人:袁松阳 副处长
时 间:2015年4月1日 下午1点30分
地 点:柳林校区经世楼B105
主办单位:国际交流与合作处 科研处
主讲人简介:
Jeroen G. Kuilman, Associate Professor, Tilburg University.
PREVIOUS POSITIONS
l Assistant Professor, Department of Management, HKUST, 2007-2009
l Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Management, HKUST, 2006-2007
l Post-Doctoral Researcher, RSM Erasmus Univ., 2005-2007
FORMAL EDUCATION
Ph.D. in Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, 2005
Dissertation title: “The Re-Emergence of Foreign Banks in Shanghai: An Ecological Analysis”
Visiting student at Stanford University, Spring 2005.
M.Sc. in International Business Studies, University of Maastricht 2001
Concentration: Strategy and Organization
PUBLICATIONS
Kuilman, J.G., & H. van Driel. 2013. “Even You, Brutus? Naming Patterns and Form Demise in Dutch Warehousing, 1871-2007” Industrial and Corporate Change, 22 (2):511-548.
Also included in the 2009 AOM Best Paper Proceedings, Chicago, IL.
Page 2 of 7
Bruggeman, J., I Vermeulen, D. von Grunow, & J.G Kuilman. 2012. “The Shifting Effects of Niche Overlap” Industrial and Corporate Change, 21 (6):1451-1477.
Kuilman, J.G. & J.T. Li. 2009. “Grades of Membership and Legitimacy Spillovers: Foreign Banks in Shanghai, 1847-1935.” Academy of Management Journal, 52:229-245.
Kuilman, J.G., J.T. Li & I. Vermeulen. 2009. “The Consequents of Organizer Ecologies: A Logical Formalization.” Academy of Management Review, 34(2), 253-272.
Also included in the 2008 AOM Best Paper Proceedings, Anaheim, CA.
Kuilman, J.G., & J.T. Li. 2006. “The Organizers' Ecology: An Empirical Study of Foreign Banks in Shanghai.” Organization Science 17(3), pp. 385-401.
内容提要:
IsChina, with one of the world’s fastest growing economies, indeed the market that offers foreign firms high returns and quick profits - as the popular press and communis opinio seem to suggest? In this lecture I argue for a more moderate perspective as the intricacies of the local market in the past might frequently have been underestimated by these foreign firms. Based on a detailed historical analysis of the foreign banking industry in Shanghai, it is shown that as more and more foreign banks set up operations in Shanghai, competition among them is intensifying to the extent that it is deterring the entry of new foreign banks in Shanghai. Foreign banks furthermore face a number of hurdles before they can start providing banking services and, in addition, their profitability is affected by a growing and thriving local banking sector. The case of foreign banks inShanghaigives rise to broader questions. For instance, doesChina's thriving economy really need foreign banks in the first place? And what is the future of foreign banks inChina, relative to the domestic banks?