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Summarizes the great achievements and shortcomings of China's
reform and opening-up over the past 40 years Analyzes the changes
in China's economic structure from 1953 to 2016 and those in the
livelihood of the Chinese people from 1978-2016 Introduces the
differences between the economic development of China and that of
the world's major economies from 1960 to 2016 Analyzes the
evolution, status quo and causes of the income distribution pattern
of Chinese residents over the past 40 years Analyzes the changes in
China's education level and residents' health level in the past 70
years and their impact on China's economy
In revisiting the forty year history of reforms to China's
state-owned enterprises (SOE), the book assesses the experiences of
this process of reform and scrutinizes how this has helped advance
the country's economy overall. The author finds that China's SOE
reform not only commits to institutional innovation within the
corporation in terms of operating mechanisms, management structure,
legal organization and the economic system of the enterprise; but
that it is also underpinned by a series of policies that highlight
an increasing market orientation. The measures have given rise to a
benign interaction between enterprise reform and market
development, while switching the SOE's role from appendages of
government organs under a planned economic system to more
autonomous entities that integrate public ownership and the market
economy. In this regard, SOE reform's success in constructing a
modern enterprise system serves as the micro-foundation and core of
an improved socialist market economic system. The book will appeal
to academics and students interested in political economy and the
Chinese economy, with particular reference to SOE reform and the
recent economic transition in China.
This book investigates cross-border mergers and acquisitions
(M&A) conducted by Chinese enterprises seeking to evaluate the
pivotal factors that influence the results of this dominant form of
China's outbound direct investment. In contrast to previous
studies, the author places a particular focus on the provenance of
the supply side as a determinant of overseas M&A, comparing
acquisitions where target companies originate from developed and
developing countries. Other major indices identified include
cultural and industrial differences between targets and buyers,
enterprise ownership, deal payment forms, types of consolidation
and the market environment. Based on investment theories,
quantitative analyses and several in-depth case studies, the book
elucidates how these factors synergistically determine the success
or failure of an acquisition attempt and the short- and long-term
performance of Chinese companies' M&A undertakings. This work
will be a practical reference for M&A practitioners as well as
academics interested in transnational corporations and mergers,
capital market and international investment.
Focusing on the interconnection of tariff structure, international
trade and welfare evaluation, the book investigates the
characteristics of tariff structures of China and the U.S. in
recent years and measures the impact of the Sino-U.S. trade
friction that started in 2018. The first part of the book discusses
levels and evolution trends of tariff systems of China and the U.S.
from 2000 to 2014 and makes a comparison between the two countries'
tariff structures. The second part centers on the Sino-U.S. trade
friction in 2018, analyzing its development, overall impact on
welfare, and relevant impact mechanisms. The author draws on the
quantitative analysis method currently prevailing in the field of
international trade, taking global value chains, intermediate
goods, and variable markup into consideration. In contrast to the
research conclusion applying standard trade theory, the result
indicates that either unilateral imposition of additional tariffs
or bilateral tariff friction will give rise to the deteriorated
welfare level of both countries. The book will appeal to academics
and policy makers interested in international trade, China-U.S.
relation and the trade friction.
Demonstrates the imbalanced integration as the main character of
China's urban-rural economic relationship since reform and opening
up. Reveals the critical logic underlying the evolution of China's
urban-rural economic relationship since 1949. Puts forward an
alternative therectical framework based on political economy.
Offers a perspective to investigate the interaction between
political culture and diplomatic strategy in the United States.
Offers a historical review on how the interaction between American
political culture and its foreign strategy evolved, highlighting
the Significance of contemporary transformation of American
political culture that was unprecedented in American history.
Provides a prognosis on the prospects of American politics.
Published in 2018, the Chinese version has sold over 3,000 copies
and won recognition both within and outside Chinese academia.
From a Marxist philosophical perspective, this collection of essays
investigates the maturing self-consciousness and self-assertion of
Chinese academia, especially within the humanities and social
sciences, permitting more penetrating insights and critical
engagement with the social reality of China. The author elaborates
on the relationship between Hegel and Marx's philosophy and their
concepts of reality, thereby accounting for the historic and
philosophical conditions for the autonomy of Chinese academia.
Drawing on intellectual resources from both Eastern and Western
archives, including phenomenology, philosophical hermeneutics,
Western Marxism, and China's pacifist tradition, the book refutes
Huntington's speculation about Chinese imperialism and delineates
how China's development can contribute to a fundamental critique of
capitalist civilisation and a new paradigm of global governance. In
addition, the book challenges the thinking of Chinese neo-liberals
and nationalist-conservatives and their understandings of the
history and social reality of China. Hence, the author advocates a
reconstruction of the spiritual and intellectual realm within
society based on Marxism, in order to counter Sinophobia,
neo-liberalism, and nationalism at the same time. The book will
appeal to readers interested in social and political philosophy,
philosophy of history, Marxism, and China studies.
In revisiting the forty year history of reforms to China's
state-owned enterprises (SOE), the book assesses the experiences of
this process of reform and scrutinizes how this has helped advance
the country's economy overall. The author finds that China's SOE
reform not only commits to institutional innovation within the
corporation in terms of operating mechanisms, management structure,
legal organization and the economic system of the enterprise; but
that it is also underpinned by a series of policies that highlight
an increasing market orientation. The measures have given rise to a
benign interaction between enterprise reform and market
development, while switching the SOE's role from appendages of
government organs under a planned economic system to more
autonomous entities that integrate public ownership and the market
economy. In this regard, SOE reform's success in constructing a
modern enterprise system serves as the micro-foundation and core of
an improved socialist market economic system. The book will appeal
to academics and students interested in political economy and the
Chinese economy, with particular reference to SOE reform and the
recent economic transition in China.
This book investigates cross-border mergers and acquisitions
(M&A) conducted by Chinese enterprises seeking to evaluate the
pivotal factors that influence the results of this dominant form of
China's outbound direct investment. In contrast to previous
studies, the author places a particular focus on the provenance of
the supply side as a determinant of overseas M&A, comparing
acquisitions where target companies originate from developed and
developing countries. Other major indices identified include
cultural and industrial differences between targets and buyers,
enterprise ownership, deal payment forms, types of consolidation
and the market environment. Based on investment theories,
quantitative analyses and several in-depth case studies, the book
elucidates how these factors synergistically determine the success
or failure of an acquisition attempt and the short- and long-term
performance of Chinese companies' M&A undertakings. This work
will be a practical reference for M&A practitioners as well as
academics interested in transnational corporations and mergers,
capital market and international investment.
Focusing on the interconnection of tariff structure, international
trade and welfare evaluation, the book investigates the
characteristics of tariff structures of China and the U.S. in
recent years and measures the impact of the Sino-U.S. trade
friction that started in 2018. The first part of the book discusses
levels and evolution trends of tariff systems of China and the U.S.
from 2000 to 2014 and makes a comparison between the two countries'
tariff structures. The second part centers on the Sino-U.S. trade
friction in 2018, analyzing its development, overall impact on
welfare, and relevant impact mechanisms. The author draws on the
quantitative analysis method currently prevailing in the field of
international trade, taking global value chains, intermediate
goods, and variable markup into consideration. In contrast to the
research conclusion applying standard trade theory, the result
indicates that either unilateral imposition of additional tariffs
or bilateral tariff friction will give rise to the deteriorated
welfare level of both countries. The book will appeal to academics
and policy makers interested in international trade, China-U.S.
relation and the trade friction.
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