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Statism with Chinese Characteristics offers a fresh perspective on the Chinese economy and its impact on the world. By diving into details and data such as the private nature of rural enterprises, early financial reforms, and the critical role of initial political openness, Yasheng Huang challenges the popular view that credits China's success to a unique blend of government interventions and autocratic governance. Huang shows how China's growth was driven by private entrepreneurship and gradual liberalization, not by infrastructural development, statist finance, and meritocratic autocracy. He confronts assumptions regarding the conventional wisdom about the Chinese economy, explicitly engaging with the policy pivot from the 1980s to the 1990s and infrastructure as a crucial factor behind China's growth. Underscoring the significant role of politics in shaping economic outcomes, this second edition explores the challenges facing the Chinese economy today, emphasizing how political changes dictate economic reforms, rather than the opposite.
China took off in the 1980s on the strength of its rural entrepreneurship, facilitated by financial liberalization. Politics was trending liberal, providing space and flexibilities for bottom-up reforms. China was still an autocracy but it was a frictional autocracy, an autocracy in which an autocrat faced obstacles in implementing his ideas. That changed dramatically after 1989. A new leadership team, the Shanghai technocrats, came into power and promptly reversed many political reforms instituted in the 1980s and recentralized China’s finance and taxation. A statist development model replaced the directionally liberal model of the 1980s. China ushered in an era of the China Model, which was rooted in urban bias and anchored on statist finance and autocracy.
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