| > prominent ex-president Hu Jintao
> Covid
> Taiwan My point was only about business (relationship between companies and the gov). > unofficial disappearances Apart from Jack Ma (I proposed an explanation), this list isn't about business: artist, actor, Interpol chief, and "A Hong Kong-based publisher who specialised in sometimes gossipy books about China’s political elite". > foreign companies have been threatened Indeed, my point was only about Chinese entrepreneurs and bosses, sorry for having neglected to state it. > they also insert CCP members at board level in companies to control their direction "The party doesn’t habitually micromanage their day-to-day operations. The firms are largely still in charge of their basic business decisions" Also: "But pressure from party committees to have a seat at the table when executives are making big calls on investment" may be in line with my hypothesis: the gov enforces respect of a strategy defined by all (AFAIK the Japanese MITI also acted this way). My point isn't about the Party's ways to enforce the strategy of a sector but about the method used to define this strategy: it seems to me that it mainly is defined by companies' bosses. There also is a real will to strictly control the political side of things, which may explain some actions, which aren't the usual way. |
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67186745
'For my friends, everything; for my enemies, the law'
China does not have rule of law, the law is used to intimidate rivals for power and applied very selectively. This is not just for people at the top, businesses at all levels feel this danger. It’s also not just for business people but anyone prominent. These are all hallmarks of a dictatorship.