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Economic Openness and Territorial Politics in China

This book is concerned with the causes and consequences of the evolving political ties and growing economic openness in modern China.

Yumin Sheng (Author)

9781107507425, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 5 March 2015

314 pages, 11 b/w illus. 22 tables
22.8 x 15.2 x 2 cm, 0.48 kg

'Whether China's political center can maintain its strong grip over provincial governments and whether, in turn, those provincial governments can maintain their own grip over the people, is an age-old question. With this book, Yumin Sheng has become one of the scholars to whom the world should turn for answers.' The China Journal

Why and how has the Chinese central government so far managed to fend off the centrifugal forces under rising globalization that are predicted to undermine national-level political authority everywhere? When institutionally empowered by centralized governing political parties as in China, national politicians confronting the menace of economic openness will resort to exercising tighter political control over the subnational governments of the 'winner' regions in the global markets. Although its goal is to facilitate revenue extraction, redress domestic economic disparity, and prolong the rule of national leaders, regionally targeted central political control could engender mixed economic consequences. Sheng examines the political response of the Chinese central government, via the ruling Chinese Communist Party, to the territorial challenges of the country's embrace of the world markets, and the impact of the regionally selective exercise of political control on central fiscal extraction and provincial economic growth during the 1978–2005 period.

1. The territorial politics of economic openness in China
2. Globalization, institutions, and domestic territorial politics
3. Economic openness and its regional dimension
4. Central political control via the CCP
5. Global market integration and central political control
6. Consequences for fiscal extraction and economic growth
7. Globalization, single-party rule, and China's transitions.

Subject Areas: Economic history [KCZ], Political economy [KCP], International economics [KCL], Sociology [JHB]

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