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Between Politics and Markets: Firms, Competition, and Institutional Change in Post-Mao China (Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences)

Between Politics and Markets: Firms, Competition, and Institutional Change in Post-Mao China (Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences)

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Yi-min Lin
Cambridge University Press, 1/24/2002
EAN 9780521771306, ISBN10: 0521771307

Hardcover, 270 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

Between Politics and Markets examines how the decline of central planning in post-Mao China was related to the rise of two markets - an economic market for the exchange of products and factors, and a political market for the diversion to private interests of state assets and authorities. Lin reveals their concurrent development through an account of how industrial firms competed their way out of the plan through exchange relations with one another and with state agents. He argues that the two markets were mutually accommodating, that the political market grew also from a decay of the state's self-monitoring capacity, and that economic actors' competition for special favors from state agents constituted a major driving force of economic institutional change.

List of tables and figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Economic market and political market
1. Chinese factories
organization, institutional change, and performance variation
2. Central planning and its decline
3. Survival of the fittest in power-leveraged competition
4. Referee as player
menaces and opportunities for industrial firms
5. Hierarchies and markets in the 'Local Inc.'
a tale of two localities
6. Favor-seeking and relational constraints
7. Competition, economic growth and latent problems
Conclusion
Appendices.