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Property Rights and Economic Reform in China (Paperback)
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Property Rights and Economic Reform in China (Paperback)
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China's rapid economic growth during the past two decades has
occurred without the systematic privatization programs once urged
upon the former Communist regimes of Europe and the USSR. Some
observers have argued that this shows that changes in property
rights are not important in reforming a command economy; others
insist that in China a facade of public ownership hides a variety
of ownership forms that are essentially private in nature. This
volume seeks to adjudicate these opposing views by clarifying
conceptually and factually the pattern of property rights changes
in the contemporary Chinese economy.
The contributors to this volume, from the fields of anthropology,
economics, political science, and sociology, have all conducted
fieldwork in China on specific economic sectors or enterprise
types. Working with a common definitional framework derived from
the work of the institutional economist Harold Demsetz, they seek
to establish which actors exercise what kinds of rights in practice
over what kinds of economic assets, documenting changes through
time. Most of the essays examine the rural industrial economy--the
fastest-growing sector--or the "spin-off" economic enterprises and
activities of public enterprises and institutions.
The research presented in this volume supports several specific
conclusions. First, industrializing rural regions have emerged with
diametrically opposed property rights regimes: in one kind of
region public ownership only marginally different in form from that
of the Mao years has predominated; in other regions wholly new
forms of private household and foreign-funded enterprise have
arisen. Second, the regimes of all the examined regions and sectors
have evolved continually since the outset of reform, and in recent
years change has accelerated because of the increased pressures of
competitive markets. Third, in the evolution of property rights the
distinction between public and private is not crucial in
differentiating the key arrangements; instead, a more finely
differentiated set of gradations from "public" to "private" prove
central to the story of the Chinese economy.
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