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Zouping in Transition : Process of Reform in Rural North China

Walder, Andrew G.(Edited by)
Part of the Harvard Contemporary China S. series
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Zouping offers important general lessons for the study of China's rural transformation.

The authors in this volume, all participants in a field research project undertaken from 1988 to 1992, address questions that are far from simple and about which there is some controversy.

The questions are grouped around two issues. The first is the role of local governments as economic actors.

What is this role, how have they played it, and how can we explain their behaviour?

Have they dominated rural economies through public ownership of industry and local planning, or has the role of local governments diminished with the rise of market transactions and private ownership?

The second issue is market reform and inequality. Have rural cadres enjoyed income advantages in the new market environment?

Has the provision of such collective services as education and health care declined, leading to new forms of inequality?

The chapters on the role of local government all point to a single conclusion: one cannot explain the rapid development of Zouping without reference to the role of local governments and of local government officials as economic actors. Scholarly writings about the "transitional economies" have often been ignored or distorted this aspect of China's reform experience.

On the second issue, changes in inequality owing to market reform, the authors present mixed findings but contribute new data to the research on this issue.

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Product Details
Harvard University Press
0674968557 / 9780674968554
Hardback
330.951
08/07/1998
United States
English
240p. : ill.
24 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More