Blogging the Law: Dan Harris of China Law Blog

China Law Blog is the widely-read, award-winning website that covers the ins and outs of Chinese business law. Agenda struck up a conversation with founding blogger Dan Harris, name partner of international boutique law firm, Harris & Moure, tapping his insights on what it takes to do business in China.

You've dodged the "China expert" label before, but you run this blog, consult and speak frequently on China. What kind of experience enables you to do this?
I speak on only what I know and what I know are China's laws as they apply to foreign investment. I have been practicing international law for more than fifteen years and I have been assisting foreign companies in or involved with China for about ten years.

How did you start doing the blog?
I was at lunch with a non-lawyer friend of mine and was telling him of some of the mistakes I had seen by American companies going into China. He asked me why so many companies were making the same mistakes and I told him because there was so little information out there telling them what they should be doing and where they should be turning for help. At that point, he suggested I start a blog addressing these things.

Who is your main audience?
When I write a post, I usually direct it at the top tier management of a small or mid-sized Western business that is in China or doing business with China. I do not know exactly who our audience is, but I am always surprised by how many Chinese lawyers and Chinese law students read the blog and by how many foreign lawyers do also. According to the numbers that I can see, about half of our readers are in China or Hong Kong and about a quarter are in the United States. I would estimate about half of our readers have some sort of legal training or legal connection, but that is just a guess.

How does the site complement your work at Harris & Moure?
One of the things I am always touting about blogs is how much they teach the blogger. I really had no idea this would end up being the case but the blog complements my work at Harris & Moure in large part by what it teaches me that is relevant to my work. It truly gives me a pulse on what is going on and that better enables us to serve our clients.

How would you describe the government's present attitude towards foreign investment?
China's attitude towards foreign investment ebbs and flows. If I were to describe China's attitude towards foreign investment right now in one word, it would be "neutral." If your project is going to contribute good jobs for China and you are going to go in correctly, which means you are following the various laws, then your chances of securing the proper approvals are extremely high. If you think you can just waltz in because you are bringing in 100 mediocre jobs, you will likely fail.

Why are joint ventures so troublesome?
We are not fans of joint ventures in China, or anywhere for that matter, because the local party almost always ends up holding a much better hand and on top of that, it's their country. In mostinstances, everything that the potential joint venture parties seek to do can be accomplished just as well without doing a joint venture. The American company goes to China and comes back talking "joint venture" but when that same company goes to England they come back talking about "establishing a long term relationship" or "doing deals together." In most instances, they should be talking this way about China too. I love the expression, "same bed, different dreams." We have been involved with some joint ventures that have worked beautifully and truly stood the test of time, but those are rare.

Guanxi (relationships) is a much talked about, much written about subject. How big of a role does it really play?
Shockingly little. I have met many people who have real power in China but virtually none of them really do rely on their relationships with people to take care of business. Our lead China lawyer, Steve Dickinson, has been living in China and doing business there about half his life. His spoken and written Mandarin are better than your average educated Chinese person. Steve knows a ton of people in China, yet he would never claim to have pull there nor would he ever advocate taking a shortcut because of pull. I cannot tell you how many times I have heard of or seen a Western company believe it did not need to follow the rules because it had sufficient pull to get away with doing things outside of the lines, only to face major issues for having operated outside of the law. The problem with guanxi is that there is always going to be someone higher up than your contact and that person higher up may at some point call you to account for your failure to follow the laws to the letter. Also, and I have seen this happen more times than I can count, your contact may be removed and then the person who takes your contacts place may remove you as an example of how things will operate under the new regime.

What are the most common challenges that foreign companies face here?
From a legally oriented perspective, I would say that the most difficult challenge is for them to stay up on all of the laws that apply to them.

The problem with Chinese laws and laws everywhere is that unless you are a massive organization that can afford to have multiple attorneys in-house, you cannot realistically expect to be able to pay your lawyers enough to monitor every law that applies to your particular business. You are going to have to do much of that yourself and that is extremely difficult. Smaller companies often ask my firm to help them handle their various required employment and other taxes and I always tell them they need to find a good Chinese bookkeeper to help them with that sort of thing because using a law firm for that is just not cost effective.

I definitely sympathize though because my law firm is small and we have to hire out for just about everything, ranging from payroll to bookkeeping, to local taxes, etc., and it is very difficult to stay on top of all that is required and that is on my home turf with my native language.

And the pervading misconceptions?
Two things. That business in China is nothing like business anywhere else. Business is business – a good deal is a good deal and a bad deal is a bad deal. That the law in China is just like the law everywhere else. Far too often, Western companies go head first into China assuming the laws there are pretty much just like they are at home.

A classic example of this is in the area of trademarks. In the United States, the first to use a trademark generally gets it. In China (and most countries in the world) it is the first to file for the trademark who gets it. American companies will manufacture something in China for five years using their United States trademark and yet never register it in China. Then some Chinese company who has actually registered the trademark will go to the American company and tell them to cease using their (the Chinese company's) trademark or else pay the Chinese company to license it. The American company will then try to hire my firm to sue the Chinese company for having "stolen" the American company's trademark. I then have to tell them that just because they own the trademark in the United States does not mean they also own it in China and in fact they do not. They are never happy when I tell them that instead of hiring us to sue the Chinese company over the trademark, they should hire us to negotiate purchasing the trademark or securing a license to use it.

This problem and so many others stem from the assumption that Chinese law is the same as the law back home or, even worse, that the law back home actually applies in China.

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