State capitalism, institutional adaptation, and the Chinese miracle / edited by Barry M. Naughton, Kellee S. Tsai
- Published
- New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, [2015]
- Copyright Date
- ©2015
- Physical Description
- 1 online resource (272 pages) : illustrations
- Additional Creators
- Naughton, Barry and Tsai, Kellee S.
Access Online
- Series
- Contents
- 1. Introduction : state capitalism and the Chinese economic miracle / Kellee S. Tsai and Barry Naughton -- Section I: Evolution of the state sector. 2. State-owned business and party-state regulation in China's modern political economy / Margaret M. Pearson -- 3. The transformation of the state sector : SASAC, the market economy, and the new national champions / Barry Naughton -- Section II: Outcomes and processes. 4. Stability, asset management, and gradual change in China's reform economy / Dough Guthrie, Zhixing Xiao and Junmin Wang -- 5. The emergence and evolution of Chinese business groups : are pyramidal groups forming? / Dylan Sutherland and Lutao Ning -- 6. Competition and upgrading in Chinese industry / Loren Brandt and Eric Thun -- Section III: The big picture : historical, social, and systemic perspectives. 7. Explaining the dynamics of change : tranformation and evolution of China's public economy through war, revolution, and peace, 1928-2008 / Morris L. Bian -- 8. The evolution of a welfare state under China's state capitalism / Mark W. Frazier -- 9. Did China follow the East Asian development model? / Andrea Boltho and Maria Weber.
- Summary
- China's stunning growth rates have corresponded with the rise of "state capitalism." Since the mid-2000s, China's political economy has stabilized around a model where most sectors are marketized and increasingly integrated with the global economy; yet strategic industries remain firmly in the grasp of an elite empire of state-owned enterprises. What are the implications of state capitalism for industrial competitiveness, corporate governance, government-business relations, and domestic welfare? How does China's model of state capitalism compare with other examples of state-directed development in late industrializing countries? As China enters a phase of more modest growth, it is especially timely to understand how its institutions have adapted to new challenges and party-state priorities. In this volume, leading scholars of China's economy, politics, history, and society explore these compelling issues.--
- Subject(s)
- ISBN
- 9781316417454 (electronic book)
131641745X (electronic book)
9781139962858 (electronic book)
113996285X (electronic book)
9781316417263 (electronic book)
1316417263 (electronic book)
9781316416860 (electronic book)
1316416860 (electronic book)
9781107081062 (hardback)
1107081068 (hardback)
9781316417379
1316417379
9781316416495
1316416496
9781107440944 (paperback) - Bibliography Note
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
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