British Foreign Economic Policy Towards China 1949-60
Part I will study British foreign economic policy-making on three issues: British investments in China; controls on British exports to China; and controls on imports into Britain from China.
The first two issues have been well covered by historians so are treated more briefly; the last one is given more space as it is based on new archival
research. All three show how British governments reversed a policy, which sought, despite the emergence of a Communist China, to develop Sino-British
economic relations.
Part II will compare these policies with those towards Hong Kong. There is not the space here to discuss the policy-making process with regards to Hong Kong
but I need to discuss the outcomes of policy-making towards the colony because they influenced policy-making towards China. Moreover, as foreign economic
policies towards Hong Kong differed from those towards China, the Hong Kong example will allow me to speculate on the factors influencing policy-making at
a more general level.
Part III will assess how helpful the Cain and Hopkins thesis is for explaining British foreign economic policy-making towards China.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | China, international trade, Hong Kong, Sino-British relations |
Subjects | History |
Divisions | Institute of Historical Research |
Date Deposited | 30 Jan 2012 15:10 |
Last Modified | 05 Aug 2024 19:31 |
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picture_as_pdf - Journal_of_International_History_2000_n6_Clayton.pdf
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subject - Published Version