Accumulation, Centralization and Decentralization of Chinese Capital
摘要
This chapter examines how international capital shaped the accumulation, centralization, and decentralization of Chinese capital in the late Qing and Republican periods. It argues that foreign investment was not merely an external “pressure” but entered domestic circuits through treaty-port commerce, banking, public debt, and foreign-exchange mechanisms, thereby steering Chinese capital toward commercial and fiscal channels. Section 12.1 clarifies why “foreign” and “local” capital were often intertwined and identifies the common policy requirements shared by competing imperialist powers. Sections 12.2–12.4 distinguish capitalist accumulation from primitive accumulation and show that, in the absence of a strong industrial base, accumulation and centralization proceeded largely through commerce, land rent, usury, banking, and state finance, while decentralization took the form of speculative reallocations (land, real estate, public debt, gold and foreign exchange) rather than productive industrial investment. The chapter concludes that the overall movement of Chinese capital carried a predominantly commercial–financial imprint, helping explain the weakness of industrial accumulation and recurrent pressures for monetary reform.