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Explore the structural reasons behind China's development, drawing lessons from Hungarian reforms. Analyze the divergence and evolution of post-socialist transformations, the impact of political decisions, and the influence of party-state dynamics on reforms and transformations.
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Structural reasons of learning from and surpassingthe Hungarian reform model in China Dr. Maria Csanádi Institute of Economics Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Sporadic comments from yesterday • Divergence of transformationsinpost-socialistcountries • Mistaken top reformistleadershipcausingthedissolution of thesystem • Gorbachevmaking a politicalmistake • Collusion of western and dissidentforces • Party-toparty relations, should be separatedfromstate-tostate relations • System change is an issue of politicaldecisonifthesystem is notsuitable • Is Chinadeveloping a capitalistsystem, or is a developingsocialistsystem M. Csanádi
Transitologist discussions • Origin: should they be intoduced from above or should the spread from below • Speed: Should they be introduced gradually or simultaneously as a shock-therapy • Sequence: should economic or political reforms come first? • Political conditions: are reforms more efficient if introduced in an authoritarian or in a democratic political regime M. Csanádi
Theoretical questions • Can these reforms be put on common grounds no matter which party-states we compare? • Are these reforms indeed alternatives? • Do the kind and sequence and timing of reforms depend solely on strategic choice? • If yes, than why did the EE countries choose the “wrong alternative”? • To what extent and why Hungarian style reforms could be implemented in China from mid 1980s? • What was the reason why Chinese reforms deviated from the Hungarian from the early 1990s? • In what way did this cause the differences in the transformation process? M. Csanádi
Institutional instead of historical approach • IPS modelexplains the structure and dynamics of operation and transformation of party-states in general, • Points to the structural background of their different operation and transformation • Answers to the above theoretical an strategic questions M. Csanádi
Structural background of self-similarities • Case-studies in Hungary over the decision-making process – dependency and interest promotion among party-state and economic decision-makers • Power network with different bargaining capacities of participating actors • Self-similarities (time, space, aggregation) • Main elements • Main connecting and operating principles • How does it reproduce itself • What are the main traps of self-reproduction leading to transformation M. Csanádi
The simplified network Shortcuts missing
Structural background of differences (time, space, aggregation) • Different dependencies within the network within and accross party and state hierarchies • Different administrative levels of resource extraction and distribution • Different resource attracting and resisting capacities to intervention of actors (level of integration into the network) • Bring about differences in the distribution of power of the network: • Different instruments of resource extraction and distribution (forced extraction, reforms within the network reforms outside the network) • Pattern-dependent ways of operation and paths of transformation M. Csanádi
System transformation The party-state network is retreating as a social system from monopolized sub-spheres, and The sub-spheres of a new social system are emerging Retreating party-state network Emerging new system
Differences among patterns in transformation • Transformation is pattern-dependent • different sequence • different speed • different conditions • the political conditions of economic transformation • the economic conditions of political transformation
Transformation of self-exploiting pattern (e.g. Romania): Sequence - Overlapping transformations Speed-Abrupt collapseof the net attached to all subfields • Conditions – • uncertain political outcome • longlasting and deep economic crisis M. Csanádi 11
Transformation of self-disintegrating pattern Sequence - Political transformation is first Speed – retreat and emergence is gradual • Conditions - • political transformation under economic crisis • economic transformation under democratic regime Emergent field Retreat of the net M. Csanádi 12
Nature of system transformation in China (the self-withdrawing pattern) Sequence - economic transformation is first Speed - retreat and emergence is gradual • Conditions – • economic transformation under authoritarian regime, • macroeconomic growth Emergent field Retreat of the net
Theoretical conclusion • Different patterns should not be confunded • Not all patterns implement reforms • Speed, origin, sequence, political conditions of reform and transformation is not an issue of choice • Patterns determine the main character of reforms: either within the network, or external to it. • Patterns determine the sequence speed and conditions of transformation • Neither pattern-conforming reforms, nor pattern-conforming transformations are alternative choices • They are instead characteristic of structural (pattern) constraints. • Room for manouvere of economic policy is within these constraints M. Csanádi
Conclusions on Chinese and Hungarian reforms • What China learned from Hungary was the gradual decentralizing reforms within the network, however it proved to be insufficient • Deviation of the Chinese system occurred due to pattern constraints: the need of further sources through reforms leaping out of the network • Escalating reforms external to the network were politically rational determined macroeconomic growth and economic transformation first and thereby political stability in China • Keeping, moreover escalating reforms within the net in Hungary was also due to pattern constraints • Escalating decentralizing reforms and resource distribution within the net was politically rational, but brought about recession and political delegitimation – and thereby political transformation first and economic transformation second • Pattern constraints did not allow transformation by learning M. Csanádi
Reflection to sporadic issues of yesterday • Patterns explain the divergence of transformations • Pattern-conforming transformation rather than mistaken top strategies • Gorbachev’s mistake: not considering pattern constriants, trying to counter the pattern sequence • Collusion of western and dissident forces: made a lot of mistakes confunding patterns • Party-and state relations cannot be separated in such an intertwined, politically monopolized network • System change is not an issue of political decison if the system is not suitable • China is a transforming communist system with pattern characteristics (economic transformation first) M. Csanádi