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Sustaining the growth of China's SMEs through ICT

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

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Sustaining the growth of China's SMEs through ICT. / Brown, David; Wang, Qi.
2009. Paper presented at International Conference on Sustainable Development in China, Fudan Shanghai, China.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Brown, D & Wang, Q 2009, 'Sustaining the growth of China's SMEs through ICT', Paper presented at International Conference on Sustainable Development in China, Fudan Shanghai, China, 16/04/09 - 17/04/09.

APA

Brown, D., & Wang, Q. (2009). Sustaining the growth of China's SMEs through ICT. Paper presented at International Conference on Sustainable Development in China, Fudan Shanghai, China.

Vancouver

Brown D, Wang Q. Sustaining the growth of China's SMEs through ICT. 2009. Paper presented at International Conference on Sustainable Development in China, Fudan Shanghai, China.

Author

Brown, David ; Wang, Qi. / Sustaining the growth of China's SMEs through ICT. Paper presented at International Conference on Sustainable Development in China, Fudan Shanghai, China.

Bibtex

@conference{c747ba84700349ea838fc006c56f5a6f,
title = "Sustaining the growth of China's SMEs through ICT",
abstract = "In the narrative of China{\textquoteright}s three decades of growth the role of non SOEs, and in particular the importance of the collective and private enterprises including Township and Village Enterprises (TVEs), is well documented. Until recently there was considerable confusion over the classification of enterprises but the non state sector, which is effectively the private sector, now contributes some 70 per cent of the economy. The ability of China to achieve sustainable growth of 8 per cent is crucially dependent on this sector. The Government recognises this and productivity increases from improved technology, especially the role of ICT or {\textquoteleft}informatization{\textquoteright}, is a central strand of their policy for the promotion of SMEs. It is in this context that the paper explores Chinese Government ICT policy initiatives for SMEs and the reality of their implementation. The findings suggest that China{\textquoteright}s policy for SMEs is at an early stage and is characterised by supply-push initiatives. The reliance on intermediaries for policy implementation poses a particular challenge for the Government and its ability to manage this will directly impact on the rate at which SMEs adopt and make effective use of ICT for sustainable productivity gains. Key Words: SMEs, ICT, informatization, ICT policy, ICT implementation, training, ",
keywords = "SMEs and ICT policy, Informatisation, China",
author = "David Brown and Qi Wang",
note = "This Conference was co-0rganised bt the Lancaster China Management Centre and Fudan University, School of Management; International Conference on Sustainable Development in China ; Conference date: 16-04-2009 Through 17-04-2009",
year = "2009",
month = apr,
day = "16",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Sustaining the growth of China's SMEs through ICT

AU - Brown, David

AU - Wang, Qi

N1 - This Conference was co-0rganised bt the Lancaster China Management Centre and Fudan University, School of Management

PY - 2009/4/16

Y1 - 2009/4/16

N2 - In the narrative of China’s three decades of growth the role of non SOEs, and in particular the importance of the collective and private enterprises including Township and Village Enterprises (TVEs), is well documented. Until recently there was considerable confusion over the classification of enterprises but the non state sector, which is effectively the private sector, now contributes some 70 per cent of the economy. The ability of China to achieve sustainable growth of 8 per cent is crucially dependent on this sector. The Government recognises this and productivity increases from improved technology, especially the role of ICT or ‘informatization’, is a central strand of their policy for the promotion of SMEs. It is in this context that the paper explores Chinese Government ICT policy initiatives for SMEs and the reality of their implementation. The findings suggest that China’s policy for SMEs is at an early stage and is characterised by supply-push initiatives. The reliance on intermediaries for policy implementation poses a particular challenge for the Government and its ability to manage this will directly impact on the rate at which SMEs adopt and make effective use of ICT for sustainable productivity gains. Key Words: SMEs, ICT, informatization, ICT policy, ICT implementation, training,

AB - In the narrative of China’s three decades of growth the role of non SOEs, and in particular the importance of the collective and private enterprises including Township and Village Enterprises (TVEs), is well documented. Until recently there was considerable confusion over the classification of enterprises but the non state sector, which is effectively the private sector, now contributes some 70 per cent of the economy. The ability of China to achieve sustainable growth of 8 per cent is crucially dependent on this sector. The Government recognises this and productivity increases from improved technology, especially the role of ICT or ‘informatization’, is a central strand of their policy for the promotion of SMEs. It is in this context that the paper explores Chinese Government ICT policy initiatives for SMEs and the reality of their implementation. The findings suggest that China’s policy for SMEs is at an early stage and is characterised by supply-push initiatives. The reliance on intermediaries for policy implementation poses a particular challenge for the Government and its ability to manage this will directly impact on the rate at which SMEs adopt and make effective use of ICT for sustainable productivity gains. Key Words: SMEs, ICT, informatization, ICT policy, ICT implementation, training,

KW - SMEs and ICT policy

KW - Informatisation

KW - China

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - International Conference on Sustainable Development in China

Y2 - 16 April 2009 through 17 April 2009

ER -