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Historical Background. The People's Republic of China developed from:The Soviet central-planning system. with its information, incentive, and inflexibility problems.. Historical Background. The People's Republic of China developed from:2. Cultural confusion and economic disaster stemming from Mao Zedong.
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1. CHINA The Great Awakening
2. Historical Background The People’s Republic of China developed from:
The Soviet central-planning system…
3. …with its information, incentive, and inflexibility problems. First of all, I would like to say that Boris is a drunk fool, and that Russia has so much more potential then his feeble mind could understand.
In terms of reform, the government is the first place to start, and since I am at the head,I believe I can make some great changes.
One of the biggest challenges remaining in Russia, is reform of the legal system. Commercial laws designed to hold business partners to their promises are essential to sustained foreign investment. I have repeatedly pledged sweeping reform of Russia's corrupt and complex judicial system but this is difficult to achieve.”
Problem: Authorities charge companies different tax rate according to their desires.
Answer: Companies having tax disputes with local authorities may take some comfort in the fact that, under the new criminal-procedure code I have overseen, a court order is needed to arrest foreign executives. Up until now, prosecutors could decide the fate of the unsuspecting business traveler.
Concerning the WTO, I see the best hope for a prosperous Russia lies in its integration into Western-led institutions, including NATO and the WTO. To do this, Russia will have to form a better relationship with the West. One possible solution to this could be our vast supply of crude oil resources which I will refer to later.
First of all, I would like to say that Boris is a drunk fool, and that Russia has so much more potential then his feeble mind could understand.
In terms of reform, the government is the first place to start, and since I am at the head,I believe I can make some great changes.
One of the biggest challenges remaining in Russia, is reform of the legal system. Commercial laws designed to hold business partners to their promises are essential to sustained foreign investment. I have repeatedly pledged sweeping reform of Russia's corrupt and complex judicial system but this is difficult to achieve.”
Problem: Authorities charge companies different tax rate according to their desires.
Answer: Companies having tax disputes with local authorities may take some comfort in the fact that, under the new criminal-procedure code I have overseen, a court order is needed to arrest foreign executives. Up until now, prosecutors could decide the fate of the unsuspecting business traveler.
Concerning the WTO, I see the best hope for a prosperous Russia lies in its integration into Western-led institutions, including NATO and the WTO. To do this, Russia will have to form a better relationship with the West. One possible solution to this could be our vast supply of crude oil resources which I will refer to later.
4. Historical Background The People’s Republic of China developed from:
2. Cultural confusion and economic disaster stemming from Mao Zedong
5. China Under Communism: 1949-1978
The Great Leap Forward, 1958-1960
Mao’s version of Soviet Style Central Planning
Forced industrialization
A steel mill in every back yard
Disappearing tools and famine
6. China Under Communism: 1949-1978
The Cultural Revolution
Deng chief of the “capitalist roaders”
Red Guards and permanent revolution
Movement to the countryside
8. The Reforms of Deng Xiaoping
Phase 1: Reform the Countryside, 1974-1978
Private plots and state farms in agriculture
Higher state procurement prices
Quota at state prices, excess for market prices
Sale of surplus for cash
9. The Reforms of Deng Xiaoping
Phase 2: Financial and Enterprise Reform
1983, SOEs must meet negotiated targets, but can then sell in markets.
Managers set wages, make investments, retain profits.
10. The Reforms of Deng Xiaoping An “open door policy” announced 1979
Four “Special Economic Zones” were created with
Tax incentives
Foreign exchange provisions
Lack of regulations
Markets function!
11. SEZs located in: Guangdong Province
Fujian Province
Hainan Province
Hunchun
Pudong Development Zone (Shanghai)
13. The Purposes of SEZs As a laboratory to provide experience for
inland regions’ economic reform and
development.
Promote Inflows of foreign investment,
technology, and managerial techniques
14. Policies in the SEZs Domestic decentralization, no planning or regulation from center
Tax incentives to foreign investors
15. The Result: an Example Shenzhen, a small border town, changed into a modern city
In the early years, the average annual growth rate was over 80 percent
16. The Result: an Example Per capita GDP was 7 times the nation’s average
Foreign investment and exports have been the primary engines of economic growth
18. The Reforms of Deng Xiaoping
Phase 2: Financial and Enterprise Reform
The economic boom continued, but…
There was political rebellion (Tiananmen Square, 1989) and subsequent retrenchment
19. But Communistic Legacies Remain The State-owned enterprises remain a part of contemporary China, and they need reforms.
The Communist Party of China remains and needs reforms.
Authoritarian methods and bureaucratic traditions likewise remain.
20. SOEs and their Reform
21. What Causes The Problems?
Central economic planning rather than market economics
State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) need shutting down: they serve a social (employment) function rather than an economic function
22. Where is China at Today? The Asian Crisis after the mid-1990s slowed the economy down
Incredible growth rates become more difficult to sustain with growing maturity.
24. The Old Guard: Passing from the Scene?
25. The Party Today
26. The Current Scene China has retained an open economy
There has been a long period of sustained, rapid economic growth
The huge market is a magnet for investments and trade
27. The Current Scene The global economy puts tremendous pressures on China’s political system.
Change is gradual, since the party wishes to perpetuate its own power, but change does go on.
Reforms are tentative, the party is not moving quickly toward price liberalization, currency convertibility, or reduction of subsidies.
28. The Bureaucracy Although bureaucracy constrains the devolution of power, the decline of the party’s power was made possible through the person of the general secretary.
Since Deng, we have not seen dramatic individual leadership, but plodding, collective leadership.
29. Political Leadership Since Deng The current regime feels fairly secure in having demonstrated peremptorily at Tiananmen Square a willingness to assume a “comply or die” stance.
30. Leadership Since Deng As a result, the party has probably guaranteed that those favoring political liberalization will never again give support freely. It is not highly probable that the CPC will be a part of a peaceful evolution all the way to democratic government.
31. Political Environment Since Deng The process of democratization began at the same time as the economic reforms, and modest progress has been made since.
Officials falling out of favor are retired rather than executed.
Retirement permits promotion of younger officials resulting in more harmonious government.
32. Political Environment Since Deng Purges no longer occur
The National People’s Congress has been strengthened
The legal system has been reformed to prevent any further cultural revolutions.
Individual acts of selective repression by the party continue, but mass repression has been absent since the Tiananmen Square debacle.
33. Political Environment Since Deng With the passage of time, stronger market and international forces will press the party for further human rights progress.
The world’s focus on the Olympic Games of 2008 will encourage progress.
34. Unpremeditated Devolution Greater independence of the Special Economic Zones made the retention of central control more difficult for Beijing.
In 1993, Beijing attempted to enforce economic austerity, but the policy failed mostly because of the resistance of the more prosperous provinces that were earlier the SEZs.
35. What is China’s Future?What is the Future of China’s Market? Proposition:
The planning system constrains market development and growth.
China’s bureaucracy, “colossal even before central planning was adopted,” continues to function (or hinder functioning).
36. Authoritarian Controls still needed? The Party believes that the process of economic development will require authoritarian leadership for some time to come. Dissent will have to be managed while painful reforms are administered to the SOEs and their hundreds of millions of employees, millions of which will likely have to be sent into unemployment.
37. Building Markets Over Time But the state now controls less than half the economy and owns less than a quarter of it.
The abrupt elimination of plan and party in the Soviet Union left no time for market institutions to be developed.
The Chinese have been developing markets and market competence gradually.
38. Building Markets Over Time
Functioning markets require much management: banking and finance institutions, labor legislation, regulation of industry, environmental regulation, regulation of competitive activities, and of international trade.
39. Jiang ZeMin Reforms
40. Economic Reforms Effort to reduce labor hoarding
Substitution of a contract system for life-time employment guarantees
Development of a wider wage distribution as an incentive for labor
41. Economic Reforms Reforms have also attempted to:
Allow management greater decision-making prerogatives
Impose greater accountability for the bottom line on enterprise management
Promote greater labor discipline on the shop floor.
42. Chinese Communist Party StatementJuly 1, 2001
43. Market or Market Planning? The market continues to coexist with the plan. The SOEs continue to exist at great cost. Planners make managerial decisions without information available at the enterprise level.
44. The SOEs and Unemployment
45. The SOEs and Unemployment
46. Market or Market Planning? Central planning destroys incentives, isolates the planned economy from world markets, produces technological stagnation, brings mining and manufacturing to the brink of ecological disaster, and taints the economic future with destructive legacies.
47. Market or Market Planning? The Soviets dropped planning to rebuild from nothing, corruption filled the vacuum. In China, we wait for the other shoe to drop. When will central planning be dropped from the core economy.
The last party congress promised it would be, but offered no published time plan.
48. Market or Market Planning? Will China simply gravitate toward a typically statist planning similar to other major countries in Asia, e.g., Japan and Korea?
Those systems have been struggling since the Japanese depression and the Asian Crisis broke out.
49. Market Regulation Learning to design and implement regulatory measures may be as difficult for China as it is currently to control corruption or collect taxes. Such implementation requires a complex set of administrative agencies and policy enforcement mechanisms.
Nor is keeping regulation at reasonable levels a simple task.
50. Can market and plan be combined? Overall economic direction includes protection of inefficient industries, fixing the value of the yuan, and statist planning at the regional level.
Picking industries, subsidizing, and protecting them has been common. There has been a tendency to pick identical industries and generate excess capacity.
51. Can market and plan be combined? But Chinese gradualism may prove less painful than the Soviet transition. It can begin to learn how to promote, manage, and regulate markets even before the planning sector disappears.
52. Schumpeter and Social Groups The roles played by particular groups, such as managerial and academic leaders, was addressed by Josef Schumpeter.
Social leaders, the professional and technical classes, will articulate the demand for material, educational, and other improvements.
53. Schumpeter and Social Groups Surveyed Chinese managers have expressed their preference for the development of market structures and democratic initiatives as the country modernizes. They seek more
personal freedom,
individualism,
autonomy and
self-responsibility
54. Another Chinese advantage:An Open Economy Deng’s early desire to link to the global economy was much more far-sighted than the autarky that crippled the Soviets over their entire existence.
As early as 1980, China renewed its membership with the IMF and the World Bank.
55. China and the WTO After more than a decade attempting to gain admission to the WTO, China officially joined on December 11, 2001
China became the 143rd member.
56. The WTO The WTO was created in 1995 from the former GATT, General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
Main purposes:
Develop rules of trade with minimal negative side effects
57. The WTO Main purposes:
Serve as an international forum for further trade negotiations
Handle trade disputes among nations
58. Membership Benefits to China’s Economy China obtains stable access to foreign markets
Foreign investors will continue to be active in China
59. Benefits to China’s Economy Long-Term benefits
Reward efficient firms which become competitive
Weed out weak firms, using their resources more effectively elsewhere
60. “Let China sleep, for when it wakes, it will shake the world.” -Napoleon