Publication:
Doing business in China: Special rules on setting up trading companies in China

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Publisher link

Rights

This article has been published in the journal: NZLawyer. Used with permission.

Abstract

In general, an overseas company may set up a company in China as a wholly foreign-owned enterprise, an equity joint venture, or a contractual joint venture. The three basic statutes on foreign-invested enterprises, namely, the Law on Wholly Foreign-invested Enterprises 1986, the Law on Sino-Foreign Equity Joint Ventures 1979, and the Sino-Foreign Contractual Joint Ventures Law (1988), provide for the general requirements and set-up procedures. However, if the company is to be set up for trading (rather than processing or manufacturing) activities, its setting up must also comply with some special rules.

Citation

Liao, Z. (2013). Doing business in China: Special rules on setting up trading companies in China. NZLawyer, 201, 12-13.

Series name

Date

Publisher

LexisNexis NZ Limited

Degree

Type of thesis

Supervisor

Link to supplementary material

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Collections