China's Rural Industrialization Policy
ISBN: 9781403996152
出版社: Palgrave Macmillan
出版年: 2006-8-4
页数: 360
定价: USD 150.00
装帧: Hardcover
内容简介
A comprehensive study of the special pattern of China's industrialization and economic development through the analysis of approximately one hundred policies, covering the historical period of new china since 1949. Issues examined include how China dealt with the five principal conflicts in rural industrialization, those between rural and state-owned industry, rural industry and agriculture, rural collective and private industry, rural and urban population and rural and urban economy. Looking to the policies implemented, this volume addresses what Chinese characteristics are, why rural people are China are so poor and why the 'miracle' of China's rural industry occurred.
作者简介
SHI CHENG is Research Fellow in Economics at the Japan Society for the
Promotion of Science (JSPS), Japan, and at the Jiangsu Provincial Academy
of Social Sciences, China. He is also Visiting Research Fellow at the
Graduate School of Economics, Nagoya University, Japan, where he leads
the JSPS project on the impact of the WTO on government policies and
the productivity of township and village enterprises in China.
目录
List of Tables
List of Figures
List of Abbreviations
Preface
Introduction: China's Rural Industrialization, Characteristics and Miracle
PART I: RURAL INDUSTRIALIZATION UNDER STATE MONOPOLY CONTROL
Shifting in the Land Reform Campaign
Sprouting in the Cooperative Campaign
Great Leap Forward in the People's Communization Campaign
Great Leap Backward in the Panic Famine
Recovery in the Campaign to Accelerate the Mechanization of Agriculture
PART II: RURAL INDUSTRIALIZATION IN THE TRANSITION TO ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION
Rise Under the Household Responsibility System
Great Expansion in the Disintegration of the People's Commune System
Setbacks in the Emergency Braking for a Crisis
New Great Leap Forward after the Collapse of the Soviet Union
Slowing Down in the Privatization Wave
New Century Shifting in the Campaign to Increase Farmer Income
Concluding Remarks
Notes
Bibliography
Index