Football, Business and State Power in Contemporary China
Jonathan Sullivan author Tobias Ross author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:22nd Apr '26
£139.50 was £155.00
This title is due to be published on 22nd April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Football, Business and State Power in Contemporary China investigates the evolving relationship between private enterprise and Party/state authority in the Xi Jinping era, through the lens of the Chinese football industry.
In the mid-2010s football emerged as a policy priority of the central leadership, catalysing an unprecedented boom in private investment largely channelled through collaboration with local governments. Conceptualising private-state interactions as strategic social exchange shaped by asymmetric resource dependence, this book shows how firms used football investment to gain access to government-controlled resources. Drawing on interviews with 200 stakeholders, the authors trace the sector’s rise and fall, driven by top-down ambition, opaque transactions and improvised regulation. After three decades of aspiring to professionalization and privatization, the Covid-19 pandemic exposed structural vulnerabilities in Chinese football, prompting the widespread re-entry of State-Owned Enterprises as emergency backstops. The book situates these developments within China’s political economy, where private firms, despite their outsized contribution to growth, remain embedded in a system of political oversight and strategic compliance. It highlights the role of local governments as key vectors for policy implementation as they navigate fiscal constraints and central political directives through exchanges with the private sector. Using the case of professional football, the authors illuminate how macro- and micro-level political ambition and contingent exchanges shape governance and business in contemporary China, offering insights relevant to industries beyond football.
This book will be useful for researchers, students and academics interested in political economy, business studies, political science, and the sociology of sport.
This impressive addition to the growing body of literature about men’s football in China not only tells the story of the sport’s development and of its current lowly international standing but also provides a lens through which to examine relations between the sport, Chinese business and the state. Football, Business and State Power in Contemporary China deserves to be widely read not only by fans of Chinese football and those who are interested more generally in the relationship between sport, politics and society but also, perhaps more importantly, by the people who have a direct responsibility to improve the global ranking of Chinese men’s football.
Alan Bairner, Professor of Sport and Social Theory, Loughborough University
Football, Business and State Power in Contemporary China is an eye-opener for anyone wondering why China excels in so many sports yet fails so miserably in football. For those interested in Chinese policymaking and state–business relations, it reveals how the private sector remains policy-driven, often trading political opportunity for sound business strategy. In 2015, China embarked on bold reforms to develop and professionalize football through private investment. Yet years later, the industry lies in shatters, symbolizing policy failure. This meticulous study explains why a state-driven agenda could not succeed in a political environment of guanxi, mianzi, and an opportunistic gaze on state pet projects to advance private business.
Gunter Schubert, Professor of Greater China Studies, University of Tübingen
ISBN: 9781041211624
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
194 pages