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Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments
This book brings together conceptual and empirical analyses of the causes and consequences of changing business-government relations in China since the 1990s, against the backdrop of the country's increased integration with the global political economy. More specifically, it provides an interdisciplinary account of how the dominant patterns of interactions between state actors, firms and business organizations have changed across regions and industries, and how the changing varieties of these patterns have interacted with the evolution of key market institutions in China. The contributors to this edited volume posit that business-government relations comprise a key linchpin that defines the Chinese political economy and calibrates the character of its constitutive institutional arrangements.
This book brings together conceptual and empirical analyses of the causes and consequences of changing business-government relations in China since the 1990s, against the backdrop of the country's increased integration with the global political economy. More specifically, it provides an interdisciplinary account of how the dominant patterns of interactions between state actors, firms and business organizations have changed across regions and industries, and how the changing varieties of these patterns have interacted with the evolution of key market institutions in China. The contributors to this edited volume posit that business-government relations comprise a key linchpin that defines the Chinese political economy and calibrates the character of its constitutive institutional arrangements.
The purpose of this study is to explain the rise and transformation of the developmental states, developmental strategies and economic policies in Northeast Asia, which shaped its economic performance from the 1950s to 1990s. In particular, this study is interested in how the economic miracles of Taiwan and South Korea were created and what made their economic performance different in the 1990s. The central argument is that a consistent external threat and political-economic institutions are the two fundamental forces that shaped the Northeast Asian developmentalism.
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