Feedback About wiseGEEK Login
Category: 
What Is a Comprador?
Article Details
  • Written By: Allegra J. Lingo
  • Edited By: C. Wilborn
  • Copyright Protected:
    2003-2012
    Conjecture Corporation
Free Widgets for your Site/Blog
The average American spends 87% of his or her time indoors.  more...

May 28 ,  1999 :  Da Vinci's "The Last Supper" went back o  more...

A comprador is an intermediary or go-between. It is derived from the Latin comparare meaning "to procure," and in Portuguese means "buyer." Today, the word is used in international business, primarily in East Asia, to describe a native individual managing European interests in China.

The term "comprador" was first used to describe a native servant in a European household in southern China. The comprador's primary duty was going to market to barter his employer's wares for needed goods. As Europeans began to develop industry and open financial institutions, the title evolved to mean a native Chinese person working for a European trading company. This employee was responsible for overseeing the native Chinese staff of guards, currency-experts, interpreters, and other needed services. The comprador position was highly coveted and open only to individuals with a great amount of education.

Due to the managerial nature of the position, compradors often became wealthy entrepreneurs and started their own firms and businesses. One of these men was Tong King-sing, who worked for the Jardine Matheson Company in the mid-1800s as a salesman. Drawing upon his knowledge and experiences, he published a six-volume manual titled "The Chinese Instructor" in 1862. Another notable comprador was Zhang Jiaao, who assisted in revolutionizing the Chinese banking industry in the 1920s. He later published books on railroad development and became a research fellow at Stanford University.

With the rise of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and nationalist socialism in the mid-1900s, the term "comprador bourgeoisie" was used to define merchant-class individuals who were compliant with and sympathetic to foreign economic interests. This was a contrast to the "national bourgeoisie," who were also members of the merchant class but worked towards building and strengthening the national economy. Many of the people who were working as compradors during this time fled China, worked in secret, or were imprisoned by the Red Guard.

When international business and trade regained strength in China in the 1980s and 1990s, compradors returned as well. Today, they are native managers of the East Asian offices of foreign companies and oversee all aspects of the Chinese staff. The term is now used worldwide as firms expand their business interests. Bilingualism, an understanding of culture, and managerial skills are key components to the position in this global environment. Placements are found in a wide variety of industries, including banking, mining, and manufacturing, and in countries such as Brazil, India, and Mexico.

Related Videos

Discuss this Article

browncoat
Post 3

@pleonasm - I actually read a book once which focussed on a comprador who worked for a British family a short while before one of the revolutions in China. I'm not sure if it was communism though, I think it might have been one before that.

At any rate, I think the author managed to capture what it could have been like. The job would have been coveted because of the opportunities it held, but foreigners were not universally well regarded, and were often considered "less than" Chinese.

So, sometimes this would rub off on the comprador as well. I think the folk of the lower classes were particularly resentful, and of course this carried over when they did have the communism revolution.

Of course, I'm generalizing from the book I read, but it seemed very well researched.

pleonasm
Post 2

It must have been an absolutely fascinating job to be a comprador back in times where it wasn't so easy to find out the differences between countries.

Imagine, living in a country that had been insular for so long, and then managing to get a job working for people who were completely alien to you and have the chance to learn their customs.

I know that the values people had about other countries back then might have made this a miserable job, but still the opportunity to learn strange new things would have been incredible.

I know, as well that it must have been a very desirable job, just because of the many perks that would go with it.

croydon
Post 1

I think we have pretty much got to the stage where there are reverse compradors as well. I know that one of the things I was told at high school was that studying Chinese was a good idea, just because it would open up international job opportunities for me.

There are quite a few people from other countries who are now working in China. Or, alternatively, there are people who are hired by Chinese companies to be their liaisons in other countries. So, while there are still Chinese who act as go betweens for companies in China that are run by internationals, there are also internationals who do the same for Chinese companies in foreign lands.

Post your comments

Post Anonymously

Login

username
password
forgot password?
or connect with facebook

Register

username
password
confirm
email