This book provides an important contribution to the economic history of
modern China. It examines the history of the coal mining industry - one
of China's largest and most important - from the beginnings of
modernisation around 1895 to the start of the Sino-Japanese War in 1937.
It addresses questions of both economic and socio-political history and
contributes to our knowledge of many aspects of early twentieth-century
Chinese history. It examines the slow growth of the modern sector of the
Chinese economy and considers the effects of foreign investment and
ownership, the supply of capital, the technology of production, the
availability of local entrepreneurship and compares the evolution of the
Chinese coal industry with development elsewhere. This book will be of
interest to those concerned with the problems of industrial growth in
general as well as to specialists on modern China.