Chinese-Point — Reading list

The Library

A curated selection of books, papers, and reports for anyone working seriously with China. Selected for practical relevance over academic completeness — each entry earns its place by changing how you see something you will actually encounter.

16 resources across 4 categories

Essential reading

4 resources
  1. Book 2004

    Mr. China

    Tim Clissold

    The definitive account of what happens when Western capital and Chinese operating reality collide at full speed. Clissold’s story of losing — and nearly losing — a fortune across multiple joint ventures is not a cautionary tale about China specifically. It is a precise diagnosis of the assumptions about contracts, partners, and institutional reliability that Western operators bring in and discover, expensively, do not apply. Read this before you sign anything.

  2. Book 2009

    Poorly Made in China

    Paul Midler

    Midler spent years working as an intermediary between Western importers and Chinese manufacturers and emerged with the clearest account available of how quality problems actually develop — not through malice but through a systematic set of incentive misalignments, communication failures, and tolerance philosophies that neither side fully understands. The chabuduo concept is lived on every page. Essential for anyone in procurement or supply chain.

  3. Paper 2003

    The Chinese Negotiation

    John L. Graham & N. Mark Lam — Harvard Business Review

    A compact, practically oriented account of the structural differences between Chinese and Western negotiating behaviour — covering the role of personal relationships, the function of concessions, the significance of silence, and why Western negotiators consistently misread Chinese signals. The analysis of why a signed contract does not mean what Western parties think it means remains the best short treatment of that subject available. Freely available; worth reading twice.

  4. Book 2005

    One Billion Customers

    James McGregor

    McGregor’s account of doing business in China across two decades of Wall Street Journal reporting is the best overview available of how the Chinese market actually works — the role of government relationships, the dynamics of joint ventures, the mechanics of market entry, and the specific ways that Western assumptions about competition, intellectual property, and regulatory fairness meet Chinese reality. A foundational text for anyone considering serious China engagement.

Negotiation & strategy

4 resources
  1. Book c. 500 BCE

    The Art of War

    Sun Tzu — trans. various

    The most cited strategic text in Chinese business culture, and the most misunderstood in Western business culture. Stripped of its aphoristic packaging, Sun Tzu’s core argument is about information asymmetry, the cost of direct confrontation, and the superiority of winning through positioning before the contest begins — a logic that maps precisely onto how educated Chinese counterparts approach commercial negotiation. Read it as a diagnostic text for the bīngfǎ patterns you will actually encounter.

  2. Book c. 1600s — compiled

    The Thirty-Six Stratagems

    Anon. — trans. various

    The companion to Sun Tzu in Chinese strategic culture: a collection of thirty-six strategic principles derived from historical military and diplomatic practice, organised by situation type. Several are in active commercial use — stratagem 4 (wait at leisure while the enemy labours) underlies delay tactics; stratagem 11 (sacrifice the plum to save the peach) governs concession strategy. The most direct route into the strategic vocabulary your Chinese counterpart is drawing on.

  3. Book 1999

    Chinese Business Negotiating Style

    Tony Fang

    The most rigorous academic treatment of how Chinese negotiating behaviour actually works, grounded in both Confucian social philosophy and Sun Tzu’s strategic tradition. Fang’s “PRC negotiator” model — the interplay of Confucian gentleman, Sun Tzu-influenced strategist, and pragmatic deal-maker — remains the most accurate framework for understanding why the same counterpart can appear simultaneously warm, patient, and strategically sophisticated. Dense but definitively worth it for practitioners in high-stakes negotiations.

  4. Book 1992

    Chinese Negotiating Style

    Lucian W. Pye

    Pye’s analysis of Chinese negotiating behaviour from the perspective of political psychology remains influential for its account of why Chinese negotiators use specific tactics — the role of shame, the use of moral pressure, the exploitation of the foreign party’s eagerness. The observation that Chinese negotiators treat the signing of a contract as the beginning rather than the end of negotiation was stated clearly here three decades before it became widely discussed. The historical depth provides context that more recent practitioner accounts often lack.

Culture & society

4 resources
  1. Book 2003

    The Geography of Thought

    Richard E. Nisbett

    A cognitive psychologist’s account of how East Asian and Western minds literally perceive and process the world differently — from attention and categorisation to logic and social reasoning. Nisbett’s experimental evidence for these differences is the best scientific grounding available for the observation that Chinese and Western counterparts are not just using different norms but operating from different cognitive frameworks. The most important single book for understanding why cross-cultural miscommunication is structural rather than incidental.

  2. Book 2008

    Factory Girls

    Leslie T. Chang

    Chang’s immersive account of young women from rural China working in Dongguan’s factories is not primarily a supply chain book — it is a portrait of individual ambition, family obligation, and identity formation in a society undergoing fundamental transformation. For anyone who manages or sources from Chinese manufacturing workers, it replaces the abstraction of “factory labour” with specific, fully realised human beings whose motivations and constraints are not what Western managers typically assume. Changes how you read every factory floor you walk.

  3. Book 2010

    Country Driving

    Peter Hessler

    The third of Hessler’s China trilogy, and the one most directly relevant to the business reader: its central section follows the establishment of a small factory in a rural Zhejiang town, documenting the relationships between entrepreneur, workers, officials, and foreign buyer in granular, specific detail. The informal dynamics Hessler observes — the negotiation of face, the management of hierarchy, the role of shared meals in business relationships — are the same dynamics this site attempts to systematise. The most readable fieldwork on Chinese commercial culture in print.

  4. Book 1976

    Beyond Culture

    Edward T. Hall

    Hall’s foundational work on high-context and low-context communication cultures provides the theoretical scaffolding for understanding why Chinese communication is so consistently misread by Western counterparts. The high-context model — in which meaning is carried by context, relationship, and implication rather than by explicit verbal content — is the intellectual framework behind everything this site calls hánxù. An older text that remains the clearest explanation of why the same sentence can mean entirely different things depending on who says it, to whom, and in what setting.

Supply chain & operations

4 resources
  1. Book 2006

    China CEO

    Juan Antonio Fernandez & Laurie Underwood

    Based on interviews with twenty-two foreign CEOs running major China operations, this is the most systematic account available of what actually works — and what consistently fails — when Western executives try to lead Chinese organisations. The sections on managing hierarchy, building teams across the guanxi network, and handling the relationship between local management and headquarters address exactly the friction points that practitioners report most frequently. Practical, specific, and grounded in executive experience rather than theory.

  2. Book 2013

    How Asia Works

    Joe Studwell

    Studwell’s account of why some Asian economies industrialised successfully and others did not turns on a specific analysis of state-directed manufacturing development — the conditions under which export-discipline produces globally competitive industries. For the China supply chain practitioner, the book explains the policy and structural logic behind the manufacturing capabilities they rely on: why China’s factories are as capable as they are, and what that capability is and is not built on. The essential economic context for anyone sourcing from China at scale.

  3. Book 2007

    Operation China

    Jimmy Hexter & Jonathan Woetzel

    A McKinsey-originated framework for how multinational companies should structure their China operations — covering localisation, talent, government relations, and the organisational design questions that become pressing once market entry is complete. The analysis of how to manage the tension between local adaptation and global standards addresses a structural problem that every foreign company operating in China eventually confronts. More useful at the operational design stage than at initial entry; valuable for anyone managing an established China presence.

  4. Book 2011

    The End of Cheap China

    Shaun Rein

    Rein’s analysis of China’s transition from low-cost manufacturing base to consumer economy is, despite its timing, a useful framework for understanding the cost and capability dynamics that now shape sourcing decisions. The argument that Western companies were systematically miscalibrating their China strategies — treating it as a cost play rather than a market — explains many of the supply chain vulnerabilities that became visible in the following decade. The supply chain context has shifted since publication; the strategic framework for thinking about that shift has not.