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Completing China's Move to the Market
Author(s) -
Dwight H. Perkins
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
the journal of economic perspectives
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.614
H-Index - 196
eISSN - 1944-7965
pISSN - 0895-3309
DOI - 10.1257/jep.8.2.23
Subject(s) - china , luck , property rights , economic reform , autonomy , state (computer science) , market economy , economics , foreign direct investment , investment (military) , agriculture , business , economic policy , international trade , international economics , economic system , political science , macroeconomics , ecology , philosophy , theology , algorithm , politics , biology , computer science , law , microeconomics
Beginning in late 1978, by luck as much as design, China arrived at a strategy for market-oriented economic reform that combined substantial reform with rapid growth in GDP and exports. The sequencing of reform began with the 'easy to reform' sectors, agriculture and foreign trade, and then took up the more difficult task of reforming the large state-owned enterprises. With respect to agriculture, small-scale industry, and foreign investment, China found ways of introducing meaningful property rights into the increasingly marketized system. A partially unreformed financial system and inadequate autonomy of large state enterprises accounts, however, for the current stop-go nature of Chinese development.

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