Reorganization of Guilds and State Control of Small Business: A Case Study of the Teahouse Guild in Early 1950s Chengdu

Di Wang

PDF(310 KB)
PDF(310 KB)
Front. Hist. China ›› 2012, Vol. 7 ›› Issue (4) : 529-550. DOI: 10.3868/s020-001-012-0031-2
research-article
research-article

Reorganization of Guilds and State Control of Small Business: A Case Study of the Teahouse Guild in Early 1950s Chengdu

Author information +
History +

Abstract

This paper attempts to investigate the decline of Chinese guilds in the early 1950s and to show how political change altered economic life in China. Although the socialist transformation of private ownership started in 1954, the new government used state power to gradually weaken private ownership far before that time, building a foundation for the full-scale socialist transformation later. The reorganization of the Teahouse Guild in Chengdu reflected the general policies of the Communist Party that changed traditional social and economic organizations. The new guild almost became a representative of the government in the teahouse profession, which no longer maintained the nature of the traditional guilds. Actually, the guilds existed in name only after the reorganization of the early 1950s, and the teahouse guild disappeared after 1953. The death of the guild was a result of decline among social organizations and the growing strength of state power.

Keywords

Teahouse Guild / Chengdu / state control / early socialist transformation

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Di Wang. Reorganization of Guilds and State Control of Small Business: A Case Study of the Teahouse Guild in Early 1950s Chengdu. Front Hist Chin, 2012, 7(4): 529‒550 https://doi.org/10.3868/s020-001-012-0031-2

RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS

2014 Higher Education Press and Brill
PDF(310 KB)

Accesses

Citations

Detail

Sections
Recommended

/