Type | Journal Article |
Title | Founding, building and breaking enterprises: Indian family-business in Malaysia in the mould of the joint-family model |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2002 |
URL | http://www.asianettverket.uio.no/pdf00-03/hidle.pdf |
Abstract | Indian migrants in Malaysia have engaged in trading and entrepreneurship in the country for centuries. This paper advances a transactional analysis as a framework for understanding the pattern of the Malaysian Indian enterprises. Fieldwork, and observations made by the entrepreneurs themselves, reveals that enterprises are seldom long lived. A common saying is that the third generation will break the enterprise. This pattern conforms to the model of the joint family, which is also the usual organizational pattern for the various business establishments. An entrepreneur rallies support from his family to establish an enterprise; the second generation continues the enterprise as a joint estate. In the third generation the enterprise, and the joint family, disintegrates due to the divisive pressure built up by the conflicting interests of member households for independence. |
» | Malaysia - Population and Housing Census 1991 |