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6 - Negotiating with Chinese partners

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Xiaowen Tian
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham
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Summary

The Chinese may be less developed in technology and industrial organization than we, but for centuries they have known few peers in the subtle art of negotiating. When measured against the effort and skill the Chinese bring to the bargaining table, American executives fall short (Lucian Pye (1992, p. 74)).

To do business in China, transnational corporations have to negotiate with local Chinese partners. Many TNCs have now come to the realization that the Chinese have their own negotiation style, and that they are, though less advanced in other areas, rather good at negotiation. Without adequate understanding of the characteristics and skills that the Chinese demonstrate at the negotiation table, TNCs are unlikely to succeed in striking a desirable deal with Chinese partners and in developing business in China. The aim of this chapter is to set out how to understand the Chinese negotiation style and how to negotiate with Chinese business partners.

First a theoretical debate on negotiation is briefly introduced, with a focus on cross-cultural theory, which can serve as an analytical framework for the Chinese negotiation style. Then, in section 2, we discuss the cultural roots of the negotiation style, which helps us understand why Chinese negotiators behave the way they do. In section 3 we illustrate the main characteristics of the Chinese negotiation style, and in section 4 we highlight some general rules that may serve as broad guidelines for TNCs in their negotiations with Chinese business partners.

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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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References

Fang, T. 1999. Chinese Negotiating Style. London: Sage.Google Scholar
Graham, J. L., and Lam, N. M. 2003. ‘The Chinese negotiation’. Harvard Business Review 81 (10): 82–91.Google ScholarPubMed
Miles, M. 2003. ‘Negotiating with the Chinese: lessons from the field’. Journal of Applied Behavioral Science 39 (4): 452–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pye, L. 1992. Chinese Negotiating Style: Commercial Approaches and Cultural Principles. New York: Quorum.Google Scholar

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