
From Click to Boom
The Political Economy of E-Commerce in China
Lizhi Liu(Author)
Princeton University Press
Published on 12. November 2024
Book
Hardback
328 pages
978-0-691-25409-8 (ISBN)
Description
How the world's largest e-commerce market highlights a digital path to development
How do states build vital institutions for market development? Too often, governments confront technical or political barriers to providing the rule of law, contract enforcement, and loan access. In From Click to Boom, Lizhi Liu examines a digital solution: governments strategically outsourcing tasks of institutional development and enforcement to digital platforms-a process she calls "institutional outsourcing."
China's e-commerce boom showcases this digital path to development. In merely two decades, China built from scratch a two-trillion-dollar e-commerce market, with 800 million users, seventy million jobs, and nearly fifty percent of global online retail sales. Contrary to conventional wisdom, Liu argues, this market boom occurred because of weak government institutions, not despite them. Gaps in government institutions compelled e-commerce platforms to build powerful private institutions for contract enforcement, fraud detection, and dispute resolution. For a surprisingly long period, the authoritarian government acquiesced, endorsed, and even partnered with this private institutional building despite its disruptive nature. Drawing on a plethora of interviews, original surveys, proprietary data, and a field experiment, Liu shows that the resulting e-commerce boom had far-reaching effects on China.
Institutional outsourcing nonetheless harbors its own challenges. With inadequate regulation, platforms may abuse market power, while excessive regulation stifles institutional innovation. China's regulatory oscillations toward platforms-from laissez-faire to crackdown and back to support-underscore the struggle to strike the right balance.
How do states build vital institutions for market development? Too often, governments confront technical or political barriers to providing the rule of law, contract enforcement, and loan access. In From Click to Boom, Lizhi Liu examines a digital solution: governments strategically outsourcing tasks of institutional development and enforcement to digital platforms-a process she calls "institutional outsourcing."
China's e-commerce boom showcases this digital path to development. In merely two decades, China built from scratch a two-trillion-dollar e-commerce market, with 800 million users, seventy million jobs, and nearly fifty percent of global online retail sales. Contrary to conventional wisdom, Liu argues, this market boom occurred because of weak government institutions, not despite them. Gaps in government institutions compelled e-commerce platforms to build powerful private institutions for contract enforcement, fraud detection, and dispute resolution. For a surprisingly long period, the authoritarian government acquiesced, endorsed, and even partnered with this private institutional building despite its disruptive nature. Drawing on a plethora of interviews, original surveys, proprietary data, and a field experiment, Liu shows that the resulting e-commerce boom had far-reaching effects on China.
Institutional outsourcing nonetheless harbors its own challenges. With inadequate regulation, platforms may abuse market power, while excessive regulation stifles institutional innovation. China's regulatory oscillations toward platforms-from laissez-faire to crackdown and back to support-underscore the struggle to strike the right balance.
Reviews / Votes
"One of the Best Books on China, China-Britain Business Council Magazine" "Winner of the Axiom Silver Medal in International Business, Globalization Category" "How did impersonal exchange flourish at such a scale, seemingly defying conventional wisdom that robust state-backed legal frameworks are prerequisites for market efficiency? Lizhi Liu's From Click to Boom: The Political Economy of E-Commerce in China offers a theoretically innovative and empirically rich answer to this question, one that holds significant implications for institutional change in the age of digital platforms."---Shuang L. Frost, Administrative Science Quarterly "Illuminating. . . . Liu's important book provides a template for understanding how platforms can shape markets and society, and it documents a remarkable transformation, but it is only the first chapter in a rapidly evolving story."---Eric Thun, The China QuarterlyMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New Jersey
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Trade binding
Illustrations
21 b/w illus. 43 tables.
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-691-25409-8 (9780691254098)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
11/2024
1st Edition
Princeton University Press
€28.99
Available for download
Person
Lizhi Liu is assistant professor at the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University, where she is also a faculty affiliate of the Department of Government. She was named one of Poets&Quants Top 50 Undergraduate Business Professors.