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| Acknowledgments | p. xv |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| From Transition to Development | p. 3 |
| The Distance Traveled | p. 4 |
| The Dual Transition | p. 5 |
| China's Growth Performance | p. 6 |
| Becoming a "Normal" Country | p. 8 |
| China to the Future | p. 10 |
| Using This Textbook | p. 12 |
| Bibliography | p. 13 |
| Legacies and Setting | ... MOREp. 15 |
| The Geographical Setting | p. 17 |
| Landforms | p. 18 |
| Climate and Water | p. 20 |
| Provinces and Regions | p. 22 |
| Mineral Resources | p. 28 |
| Conclusion: Regional Differentiation | p. 29 |
| Bibliography | p. 31 |
| The Chinese Economy Before 1949 | p. 33 |
| The Traditional Chinese Economy, 1127-1911 | p. 34 |
| High-Productivity Traditional Agriculture | p. 34 |
| The Commercialized Countryside | p. 36 |
| Sophisticated Institutions | p. 36 |
| Competitive Markets | p. 37 |
| Small-Scale, "Bottom-Heavy" Economy | p. 37 |
| Crisis of the Traditional Economy? | p. 38 |
| The Failed Response to the West and Japan | p. 40 |
| The Beginnings of Industrialization, 1912-1937 | p. 43 |
| Industry | p. 43 |
| Evaluation: How Broad Was Development in the 1912-1937 Period? | p. 45 |
| War and Civil War, 1937-1949 | p. 47 |
| The Rise and Fall of a Japan-Centered East Asian Economy | p. 47 |
| The Rise of Manchuria | p. 48 |
| Increased State Intervention | p. 49 |
| Inflation | p. 49 |
| Legacies of the Pre-1949 Economy | p. 50 |
| Legacy for the Socialist Era (1949-1978) | p. 50 |
| Legacy for the Post-1978 Market Economy | p. 51 |
| Bibliography | p. 53 |
| The Socialist Era, 1949-1978: Big Push Industrialization and Policy Instability | p. 55 |
| The Big Push Development Strategy | p. 56 |
| The Command Economic System in China | p. 59 |
| Policy Instability | p. 62 |
| Economic Recovery, 1949-1952 | p. 64 |
| 1953 and 1956: The Twin Peaks of the First Five-Year Plan | p. 65 |
| Retrenchment: The "Hundred Flowers" of 1956-1957 | p. 67 |
| The Great Leap Forward, 1958-1960 | p. 69 |
| Retrenchment: Crisis and "Readjustment," 1961-1963 | p. 72 |
| Launch of the Third Front, 1964-1966: New Expansion Hijacked by Radicalism | p. 73 |
| Retrenchment: The Cultural Revolution, 1967-1969 | p. 74 |
| The Maoist Model: A New Leap in 1970 | p. 75 |
| Retrenchment: Consolidation and Drift, 1972-1976 | p. 76 |
| The Leap Outward: 1978 and the End of Maoism | p. 77 |
| A Final Turning Point: The Third Plenum and the Beginning of Economic Reform | p. 79 |
| Legacies of the Socialist Period | p. 79 |
| The Legacy of Policy Instability | p. 79 |
| The Shortcomings of the Development Strategy | p. 80 |
| Human Capital Base | p. 82 |
| Bibliography | p. 83 |
| Market Transition: Strategy and Process | p. 85 |
| The Chinese Approach to Transition | p. 86 |
| How Did Reforms Start? The Initial Breakthrough in the Countryside | p. 88 |
| A Two-Phase Framework of Economic Reform | p. 90 |
| Elements of China's Transition Through 1992 | p. 91 |
| Dual-Track System | p. 91 |
| Growing Out of the Plan | p. 92 |
| Particularistic Contracts | p. 94 |
| Entry | p. 94 |
| Prices Equating Supply and Demand | p. 94 |
| Incremental Managerial Reforms Instead of Privatization | p. 95 |
| Disarticulation | p. 95 |
| Initial Macroeconomic Stabilization Achieved Through the Plan | p. 96 |
| Continued High Saving and Investment | p. 96 |
| Conclusion of First-Phase Reforms | p. 97 |
| The Tiananmen Interlude | p. 98 |
| The Second Phase of Reform, 1993-Present | p. 100 |
| Prerequisites | p. 101 |
| Market Reunification | p. 101 |
| Recentralization | p. 101 |
| Macroeconomic Austerity | p. 102 |
| Regulatory Approach and Administrative Restructuring | p. 102 |
| Fiscal and Tax System | p. 103 |
| Banking and Financial System | p. 103 |
| Corporate Governance | p. 104 |
| External Sector: Membership in the World Trade Organization | p. 104 |
| Outcomes | p. 105 |
| From Inflation to Price Stability | p. 105 |
| State Enterprise Restructuring and Downsizing | p. 105 |
| Privatization | p. 106 |
| Reform with Losers | p. 106 |
| Contemporary Challenges | p. 107 |
| Bibliography | p. 110 |
| The Urban-Rural Divide | p. 113 |
| A Dualistic System: The Division Between Urban and Rural | p. 114 |
| Origins of the Urban-Rural Divide | p. 114 |
| The Urban Economic System | p. 116 |
| The Danwei | p. 116 |
| Urban Property Rights | p. 118 |
| The Rural Economic System | p. 119 |
| Rural Collectives | p. 119 |
| Rural Property Rights | p. 119 |
| "Fuzzy" Property Rights and Land-Use Disputes | p. 121 |
| The Evolution of the Rural and Urban Systems During Market Transition | p. 122 |
| Invisible Walls: Administrative Barriers Today | p. 124 |
| Urbanization | p. 126 |
| Rural-Urban Migration | p. 129 |
| Overview of Migration | p. 129 |
| Characteristics of Migrants | p. 131 |
| Economic Consequences of the Urban-Rural Divide | p. 131 |
| Living Standards and Restrictions on Mobility | p. 132 |
| Addressing the Urban-Rural Divide | p. 134 |
| Conclusion | p. 134 |
| Bibliography | p. 135 |
| Patterns of Growth and Development | p. 137 |
| Growth and Structural Change | p. 139 |
| Growth | p. 140 |
| Data and the Measurement of Growth | p. 140 |
| Growth in Comparative Perspective | p. 142 |
| Instability in Growth | p. 143 |
| Investment | p. 143 |
| Structural Change: Common Patterns | p. 148 |
| Structural Change in China: Labor | p. 151 |
| Structural Change in China: GDP | p. 153 |
| Structural Change and Globalization | p. 156 |
| Conclusion | p. 157 |
| Bibliography | p. 158 |
| Population Growth and the One-Child Family | p. 161 |
| The Demographic Transition | p. 161 |
| China's Demographic Transition | p. 164 |
| The Role of Government Policy | p. 167 |
| Consequences of the One-Child Policy | p. 170 |
| Changing Age Structure of the Population | p. 172 |
| Conclusion | p. 177 |
| Bibliography | p. 177 |
| Labor and Human Capital | p. 179 |
| The Institutional Transformation of Chinese Labor | p. 180 |
| The Labor Force | p. 180 |
| Employment: Ownership and Labor Mobility | p. 181 |
| Employment, Unemployment, and State-Sector Downsizing | p. 185 |
| The Informal Sector: Emerging Dualism Within Urban Labor Markets | p. 189 |
| Rural Labor Markets | p. 191 |
| How Well Do Labor Markets Function in China Today? | p. 192 |
| Returns to Education | p. 192 |
| Human Capital and Educational Attainment | p. 195 |
| Other Attributes | p. 198 |
| The Migration Decision | p. 199 |
| Labor Markets Concluded | p. 201 |
| Social Security | p. 202 |
| Conclusion | p. 206 |
| Bibliography | p. 206 |
| Living Standards: Incomes, Inequality, and Poverty | p. 209 |
| Income Growth | p. 210 |
| Poverty | p. 212 |
| Rural Poverty | p. 212 |
| Official Poverty Line | p. 212 |
| World Bank Internationally Comparable Poverty Line | p. 212 |
| Explaining Poverty Trends | p. 214 |
| Urban Poverty | p. 216 |
| Overall Poverty | p. 216 |
| Inequality | p. 217 |
| Accounting for All Income Sources | p. 220 |
| Physical Quality of Life Indicators | p. 221 |
| Life Expectancy at Birth | p. 222 |
| Other Health-Related Indicators | p. 222 |
| Education | p. 223 |
| Human Development Index | p. 223 |
| Income, GDP per Capita, and Purchasing Power Parity Once Again | p. 225 |
| Conclusion | p. 226 |
| Bibliography | p. 227 |
| The Rural Economy | p. 229 |
| Rural Organization | p. 231 |
| The Chinese Village | p. 231 |
| Agricultural Collectives | p. 233 |
| Features of the Agricultural Collectives | p. 234 |
| Discussion of Collectives | p. 236 |
| The Agricultural Policy Environment of the Collectives: "Grain First" | p. 239 |
| The Second Revolution in the Countryside: Rural Reforms, 1979-1984 | p. 240 |
| Production Surges in the Wake of Rural Organizational Change | p. 242 |
| The Side-Effect of Reform: Rural Public Services Decline | p. 243 |
| The Emergence of Rural Land Markets | p. 246 |
| Bibliography | p. 248 |
| Agriculture: Output, Inputs, and Technology | p. 251 |
| Overview of Post-1949 Agriculture | p. 252 |
| Technology Choice and Technical Innovation in Agriculture | p. 254 |
| The Green Revolution | p. 258 |
| Irrigation | p. 258 |
| Agricultural Chemicals | p. 260 |
| Seeds | p. 261 |
| Motive Power in the Countryside | p. 263 |
| Output and Yields: The Challenge of Intensification | p. 265 |
| Diversification and the Challenge of the Future | p. 266 |
| Genetically Modified Organisms | p. 267 |
| Globalization | p. 268 |
| Bibliography | p. 269 |
| Rural Industrialization: Township and Village Enterprises | p. 271 |
| Origins of the TVEs | p. 272 |
| The Golden Age of TVE Development | p. 274 |
| Causes of Rapid Growth | p. 275 |
| Diverse Regional Models of TVE Development | p. 282 |
| The Southern Jiangsu (Sunan) Model | p. 282 |
| The Wenzhou Model | p. 283 |
| The Pearl River Delta Model | p. 284 |
| Failed or Absent TVE Development | p. 284 |
| The Transformation of TVEs in the New Century | p. 285 |
| The Changing Economic Environment of TVEs | p. 285 |
| TVE Restructuring: The Great Privatization | p. 286 |
| National Policy and Local Models | p. 288 |
| Market Conditions and Privatization | p. 288 |
| Insider Privatization | p. 289 |
| Local Variation in the Privatization Process | p. 291 |
| Emergence of New Forms of Rural Industry in the Twenty-First Century | p. 292 |
| Bibliography | p. 293 |
| The Urban Economy | p. 295 |
| Industry: Ownership and Governance | p. 297 |
| Ownership Change: A Diverse Industrial Base | p. 298 |
| Ownership Change in the First Period of Transition | p. 299 |
| Ownership Change from 1996 Through the Present | p. 301 |
| Industrial Finance | p. 304 |
| Transforming Corporate Governance in the State Sector | p. 308 |
| Creating Corporate Governance: Transition A | p. 310 |
| Creating Corporations: Transition B | p. 313 |
| Corporatization and the Company Law: Objectives and Principles | p. 314 |
| The Chinese System in Practice | p. 316 |
| Typology of Corporate Governance Systems | p. 319 |
| Privatization and Hybrid Ownership | p. 323 |
| Conclusion | p. 325 |
| Bibliography | p. 326 |
| Structural Change: Industry, Energy, and Infrastructure | p. 329 |
| Growth and Structural Change in Manufacturing | p. 329 |
| Regional Growth Patterns | p. 333 |
| Energy | p. 333 |
| Energy Efficiency of the Economy | p. 336 |
| The Three Main Energy Sectors | p. 338 |
| Coal | p. 338 |
| Oil and Gas | p. 339 |
| Electric Power | p. 341 |
| Energy Security, Diversification, and Imports | p. 341 |
| Telecommunications | p. 343 |
| Common Features: Infrastructure Investment | p. 345 |
| Conclusion | p. 347 |
| Bibliography | p. 347 |
| Technology Policy and the Knowledge-based Economy | p. 349 |
| Pursuing Critical Technologies: The R&D Effort | p. 351 |
| The Trajectory of China's Technology Effort | p. 353 |
| Strategies of R&D Investment | p. 356 |
| Do It Yourself | p. 356 |
| Buy It | p. 357 |
| Bargain for It | p. 357 |
| Seed It | p. 358 |
| Encourage Spin-offs | p. 359 |
| Open Up to Foreign Direct Investment | p. 360 |
| Support Domestic Entrepreneurship | p. 360 |
| Human Capital Resource Base | p. 361 |
| The Output of the R&D Effort | p. 363 |
| Redefining Government Technology Policy in the Twenty-First Century | p. 365 |
| Aligning Incentives in Favor of High-Technology Development | p. 366 |
| Deeper Integration into Global Production Networks | p. 368 |
| Conclusion | p. 371 |
| Bibliography | p. 372 |
| China and the World Economy | p. 375 |
| International Trade | p. 377 |
| Background | p. 379 |
| Initial Reform Steps | p. 381 |
| Liberalizing the Foreign-Trade System | p. 382 |
| A Dualist Trade Regime: The Export-Processing System | p. 386 |
| Toward an Open Economy | p. 388 |
| Currency Convertibility | p. 388 |
| World Trade Organization Membership | p. 389 |
| Openness Revisited | p. 391 |
| Outcomes: Rapid Growth and Structural Change | p. 392 |
| Exports | p. 393 |
| Imports | p. 394 |
| High Technology Trade | p. 394 |
| Regional Composition of Trade Within China | p. 396 |
| Conclusion | p. 398 |
| Bibliography | p. 399 |
| Foreign Investment | p. 401 |
| FDI in the Chinese Economy | p. 402 |
| "Zones": The Gradual Liberalization of the Investment Regime | p. 406 |
| The Investment Regime Today | p. 410 |
| Sources of Investment in China | p. 413 |
| The China Circle | p. 416 |
| FDI in Context | p. 419 |
| Sectoral Composition of FDI: The WTO Impact | p. 419 |
| Modes of Capital Inflow | p. 420 |
| Conclusion | p. 422 |
| Bibliography | p. 423 |
| Macroeconomics and Finance | p. 425 |
| Macroeconomic Trends and Cycles | p. 427 |
| Trends in National Saving | p. 428 |
| The Fiscal System and Fiscal Reform | p. 430 |
| Reversing Fiscal Erosion | p. 433 |
| Broadening the Tax Base: Horizontal Equity | p. 433 |
| Restructuring Central-Local Relations | p. 434 |
| The Fiscal System Today | p. 436 |
| Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations: Principles | p. 436 |
| Inadequacy of Local Government Revenue in Rural Areas | p. 437 |
| Extrabudgetary Funds, Levies, and Charges | p. 438 |
| Abolishing Local Taxes and Stepping Up Transfers | p. 439 |
| Arbitrary Nature of Transfers | p. 440 |
| Fiscal Deficits and Fiscal Policy | p. 441 |
| Inflation and Macroeconomic Cycles | p. 442 |
| Monetary Policy | p. 444 |
| Conclusion | p. 445 |
| Bibliography | p. 446 |
| Financial System | p. 449 |
| The Financial System in the Planned Economy and under Reform | p. 451 |
| The Banking System | p. 454 |
| State-Owned Commercial Banks | p. 454 |
| Joint-Stock Commercial Banks | p. 456 |
| City Banks | p. 457 |
| Other Banks | p. 457 |
| Policy Banks | p. 457 |
| Rural Credit Cooperatives | p. 458 |
| The Fringe | p. 458 |
| Central Bank and Regulatory Apparatus | p. 460 |
| Weakness of the Banking System | p. 460 |
| Measures to Reduce the Stock of Nonperforming Loans | p. 462 |
| The "Flow" Problem: Ensuring Good Lending Decisions | p. 464 |
| Current Bank-Reform Program and Prospects for the Future | p. 466 |
| Stock Markets: Learning to Crawl? | p. 467 |
| Birth of the Market: Raising Funds for the State Sector | p. 468 |
| Characteristics of the Market | p. 469 |
| Circulating and Noncirculating Shares | p. 469 |
| Low Contestability | p. 471 |
| Rationing of Listing Opportunities | p. 471 |
| Thin Markets | p. 471 |
| Weak Disclosure and Regulation; Multiple Related-Party Transactions | p. 472 |
| Policy-Driven Market | p. 473 |
| Insider Control and Manipulation | p. 473 |
| Reform Initiatives: Selling Down the State Share: Changing the "Split Share Structure" | p. 474 |
| Institutional Investors | p. 475 |
| Comparative Evaluation of China's Stock Market | p. 476 |
| Bond Markets | p. 477 |
| Other Financial Markets | p. 478 |
| Conclusion | p. 478 |
| Bibliography | p. 481 |
| Conclusion: China's Future | p. 485 |
| Environmental Quality and the Sustainability of Growth | p. 487 |
| Pollution | p. 489 |
| Air Pollution | p. 490 |
| Water Pollution | p. 491 |
| Costs of Pollution | p. 493 |
| Pollution Control | p. 494 |
| Sustainability | p. 495 |
| Broad Impact of Pollution and Global Warming | p. 495 |
| Sustainability of Land and Water Resources | p. 497 |
| Desertification | p. 498 |
| Forests and Grasslands | p. 499 |
| Water Availability | p. 500 |
| Conclusion | p. 502 |
| Bibliography | p. 503 |
| Index | p. 505 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |