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This book mobilises the theory of uneven and combined development
to uncover the geopolitical economic drivers of China's rise. The
purpose is to explain the formation and trajectory of its economic
'accumulation system' - which remains a confounding hybrid of
statist and neoliberal forms of capitalism - as the outcome of
China's geopolitical engagement of the USA during the late stages
of the Cold War, and its participation in manufacturing global
production networks (GPNs). Fear of geopolitical catastrophe drove
China to open its economy, while GPNs enabled China to generate
substantial export surpluses which could be recycled through
state-owned banks as cheap credit and subsidies to large,
vertically integrated and politically-controlled state-owned
enterprises. In this way, a synergy emerged between the
'neoliberal' and 'Keynesian-Fordist' sectors of the economy, while
the national-territorial state retained its form and expanded its
functions. The book chronicles how this reliance on export
surpluses, however, rendered China extremely vulnerable to external
shocks - prompting a dramatic monetary and fiscal stimulus response
to the crisis of 2008, even while sustaining the illusion of
economic 'decoupling' from the global economy. Finally, it examines
the growing role of the state in the current crisis-ridden economic
model, as well as China's current geoeconomic and geopolitical
expansionism in areas such as the Belt and Road Initiative and the
militarisation of the East and South China Seas.
This book mobilises the theory of uneven and combined development
to uncover the geopolitical economic drivers of China's rise. The
purpose is to explain the formation and trajectory of its economic
'accumulation system' - which remains a confounding hybrid of
statist and neoliberal forms of capitalism - as the outcome of
China's geopolitical engagement of the USA during the late stages
of the Cold War, and its participation in manufacturing global
production networks (GPNs). Fear of geopolitical catastrophe drove
China to open its economy, while GPNs enabled China to generate
substantial export surpluses which could be recycled through
state-owned banks as cheap credit and subsidies to large,
vertically integrated and politically-controlled state-owned
enterprises. In this way, a synergy emerged between the
'neoliberal' and 'Keynesian-Fordist' sectors of the economy, while
the national-territorial state retained its form and expanded its
functions. The book chronicles how this reliance on export
surpluses, however, rendered China extremely vulnerable to external
shocks - prompting a dramatic monetary and fiscal stimulus response
to the crisis of 2008, even while sustaining the illusion of
economic 'decoupling' from the global economy. Finally, it examines
the growing role of the state in the current crisis-ridden economic
model, as well as China's current geoeconomic and geopolitical
expansionism in areas such as the Belt and Road Initiative and the
militarisation of the East and South China Seas.
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