This paper investigates the institutional reason underlying the change in the trajectory of economic growth in post-reform China, and argues that the trajectory of growth was much more normal during the period of 1978-89 than in the post-1989 era. In the former period, growth was largely induced by equality-generating institutional change in agriculture and the emergence of non-state industrial sector. In the latter period, growth was triggered by the acceleration of capital investments under authoritarian decentralized hierarchy within self-contained regions. Such a growth trajectory accelerates capital deepening, deteriorating total factor productivity and leads to rising regional imbalance. This paper further argues that the change in the trajectory of growth is the outcome of changes in political and inter-governmental fiscal institutions following the 1989 political crisis.
- Publisher:
-
UNU-WIDER
- Series:
- WIDER Research Paper
- Volume:
- 2008/33
- Title:
- China’s Economic Growth: Trajectories and Evolving Institutions
- Authors:
- Jun Zhang
- Publication date:
- April 2008
- ISSN Web:
- 1810-2611
- ISBN 13 Web:
- 9789292300791
- Copyright holder:
- © UNU-WIDER
- Copyright year:
- 2008
- Keywords:
- economic growth, political institutions
- JEL:
- H83, P26
- Project:
-
Southern Engines of Global Growth
- Sponsor:
- The governments of Denmark (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Finland (Ministry for Foreign Affairs), Norway (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Sweden (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency—Sida) and the United Kingdom (Department for International Development).
- Format:
- online