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Abridged version
-
Reference no. IMD-1-0335
Published by: International Institute for Management Development (IMD)
Originally published in: 2012
Version: 16.10.2012

Abstract

This is a short version of case Industrial and Commercial Bank of China: Governance Lessons from East to West. For more details, please refer to the full-length case. In June 1999, ICBC - the largest commercial bank in China - was technically bankrupt, with a non-performing loan ratio of 47.59%. But, thanks to the united efforts of the government, the management team and its employees, the bank rose from the ashes through a transformation in its governance structure. After the third quarter of 2007, ICBC had continued to be ranked as the largest bank in the world by market capitalization, customers’ deposits and profitability. This case describes ICBC's governance model, including the inner workings of the shareholders, the board of directors, the board of supervisors, the senior management team, the communist party committee, outside monitoring and discipline. The discussions are relevant to Western companies in terms of understanding the corporate governance structure adopted by large Chinese enterprises. The success of the bank and its unique governance structure bring much inspiration from East to West.
Location:
Industry:
Size:
ICBC operating income in 2011 CNY470.6 billion (USD70.7 billion)
Other setting(s):
2000-2011

About

Abstract

This is a short version of case Industrial and Commercial Bank of China: Governance Lessons from East to West. For more details, please refer to the full-length case. In June 1999, ICBC - the largest commercial bank in China - was technically bankrupt, with a non-performing loan ratio of 47.59%. But, thanks to the united efforts of the government, the management team and its employees, the bank rose from the ashes through a transformation in its governance structure. After the third quarter of 2007, ICBC had continued to be ranked as the largest bank in the world by market capitalization, customers’ deposits and profitability. This case describes ICBC's governance model, including the inner workings of the shareholders, the board of directors, the board of supervisors, the senior management team, the communist party committee, outside monitoring and discipline. The discussions are relevant to Western companies in terms of understanding the corporate governance structure adopted by large Chinese enterprises. The success of the bank and its unique governance structure bring much inspiration from East to West.

Settings

Location:
Industry:
Size:
ICBC operating income in 2011 CNY470.6 billion (USD70.7 billion)
Other setting(s):
2000-2011

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