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-List Of Titles -The big four in China: hegemony and counter-hegemony in the development of the accounting profession in China

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/175414

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Title
The big four in China: hegemony and counter-hegemony in the development of the accounting profession in China
Related
Australasian Digital Theses
Publisher
Australia : Macquarie University
Date
2011
Author/Creator
Gillis, Paul Leonard
Description
"June 2011"
Description
"A thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)"
Description
Thesis (PhD) -- Macquarie University, Macquarie Graduate School of Management, 2011.
Description
Bibliography: p. 268-304.
Description
1. Introduction -- 2. Theoretical foundations -- 3. Research design -- 4. The big four -- 5. Building foundations -- 6. FDI and capital markets as hegemonic projects -- 7. Maintaining hegemony -- 8. Counter-hegemony -- 9. Analysis and conclusions -- 10. Implications and topics for further research.
Description
This study is a historical critical analysis of the role of the transnational professional services firms known as the Big Four in the development of the accounting profession in China. China emerged in the early 1980s after decades of seclusion and began an economic transformation that would make it the world?s second largest economy by 2010. China did not have an accounting profession after the founding of the People?s Republic of China in 1949 until the accounting profession restarted in 1980 as the country opened up to foreign investment. The Big Four, as members of the globalizing transnational capital class came to dominate the accounting profession in China with the support of other members of the transnational capital class including investment bankers, international lawyers, and transnational institutions such as the World Trade Organization. Grounded in Marxist theories of class struggle, particularly in Gramsci?s theory of hegemony, this study explores how ideology, expressed as normative roles for independent accountants, enabled the Big Four to dominate the market. Using mixed research methods with archival and interview data, this study finds that the Big Four achieved its dominant position through three hegemonic projects: foreign direct investment, the reform of State-owned enterprises through international capital markets, and the enabling of private enterprise to access international capital markets. This study also explains how indigenous accounting firms followed Dutschke?s counter-hegemonic strategy of a “long march through the institutions” that reformed the domestic accounting profession and gave it access to the coercive power to the state to challenge the hegemony of the Big Four. This study finds that the globalization of accounting markets leads to regulatory holes, gaps in the transnational regulation of accounting firms. This study provides recommendations to the Big Four, indigenous firms, and local and transnational regulators.
Description
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Description
xxxii, 306 p
Subject Keyword
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Subject Keyword
Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu
Subject Keyword
Ernst & Young
Subject Keyword
KPMG Peat Marwick
Subject Keyword
Accounting firms -- China
Subject Keyword
Accounting -- China
Resource Type
Thesis PhD
Organisation
Macquarie University. Macquarie Graduate School of Management

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/175414
Identifier
1610428
Language
eng
Rights
Copyright disclaimer: http://www.copyright.mq.edu.au
Rights
Copyright Paul Gillis 2011
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