1st Edition

The Governance of Economic Development Investment, Innovation, and Competition in China

By Anson Au Copyright 2024
    162 Pages 7 Color & 23 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    162 Pages 7 Color & 23 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    China is caught in the rapids of the largest policy crackdown in history. The ferocity of this far-reaching crackdown, dispersed across every market sector, has cast into scrutiny a newly emerging era of development and raised new questions about what it means for the future of Chinese governance and development. Has China abandoned its modern commitment to market-oriented reforms? Is this a reversion to the bygone days of Maoist Communism? The ongoing crackdown, this book argues, is not a break from but a continuation of the legacy of development initiated 50 years ago under Deng Xiaoping. Drawing on rich economic and developmental data, the book recasts old ideas about Chinese governance with cutting-edge insights into the economic machinery and policy regime that drive modern China. As it shows, the seemingly unconnected parts of the ongoing crackdown across China – the shadow banking network, real estate, Internet technology, entertainment, housing, private education – can all be understood in terms of a consistent, continuous economic model. It explores the social structure of this economic model, from an ideological foundation that is not political but cultural in nature, to its institutional arrangements and macroeconomic and fiscal policies. The book discusses the policy interventions and development goals motivated by these social structures, offering a major new contribution to understanding the social and economic challenges that face China today – and its next 50 years. The book will appeal to a broad academic audience, especially given the growing prominence of Chinese development in the context of development in the Asia-Pacific at large.

    1. The Modern History of China's Economic Growth' 2. China's Economic Model I: The Social Structure of Chinese Capitalism and Ideology; 3. China's Economic Model II: Overcoming Barriers to Economic Growth; 4. The Measurement of Economic Wellbeing: Poverty and Inequality; 5. Technological Innovation and Economic Development; 6. Human Capital, Technological Innovation, and Economic Development

    Biography

    Anson Au is an assistant professor of economic sociology in the Department of Applied Social Sciences at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong. Published across over 50 journal articles, his research examines capiltalllocation  processes and the non-economic contexts of economic activity, congtributing to the areas of economic sociology, social networks, digitalization, and professions and organizations.