Friday, August 8, 2008

Chung Thye Phin in Chinese Business in Southeast Asia: Contesting Cultural Explanations, Researching Entrepreneurship By H. Hsiao, Edmund Terence Gomez, Xinhuang Xiao, Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao

Chung Thye Phin in Chinese Business in Southeast Asia: Contesting Cultural Explanations, Researching Entrepreneurship

By H. Hsiao, Edmund Terence Gomez, Xinhuang Xiao, Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao

Published by Routledge, 2001
ISBN 0700714154, 9780700714155
205 pages


Page 21

The enterprises of a number of prominent tin miners in Malaya and Singapore, who emerged in the early part of this century, including Chung Thye Pin, Lau Pak Khuan and Leong Sin Nam, are no longer major companies.


Page 65

Among the most prominent Chinese businessmen who emerged during this period were Eu Tong Sen, Lau Pak Kuan, Chung Thye Phin, Loke Yew and Tan Kah Kee and his son-in-law, Lee Kong Chian.[4]


Page 169

[4] Chung Thye Phin started out as a revenue farmer and later ventured into the tin mining and rubber plantation sectors.

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