Twelve men on bicycles pedal across the runway to our plane and start to remove our bags – the first evidence of the non-capital intensive, low-cost enterprise we have heard so much about.
This is Chengdu, capital of Sichuan, a south-western province more populous than Germany and which 2,200 years ago propelled China towards unification.
However, with 36,000 state-owned enterprises (SOEs) – more than in any other province – it is at the centre of the greatest problem besetting China’s leaders – how to reform these enterprises without destroying the social fabric.
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