How China Escaped the Poverty Trap

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A01=Yuen Yuen Ang
adaptive systems
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Ancient China
Asian history
Author_Yuen Yuen Ang
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bottom-up reform
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=KCP
China
China's economic development
ChinaaEUR(TM)s rise
China’s rise
Chinese bureaucracy
chinese economic policy
Chinese history
Communist Party
complex systems
Confucius
COP=United States
Cultural Revolution
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Deng Xiaoping
development economics
development strategy
directed improvisation
economic conditions in china
economic development in china
economic history
economic sociology
economic transformation
Economics
emerging markets
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Far East
global development
governance innovation
growth and institutions
history of chinese economy
institutional change
institutional economics
Language_English
market creation
modernization theory
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policy adaptation
political economy
poverty trap
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SN=Cornell Studies in Political Economy
softlaunch
state-led capitalism
Yuen Yuen Ang

Product details

  • ISBN 9781501700200
  • Weight: 907g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Sep 2016
  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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WINNER OF THE 2017 PETER KATZENSTEIN BOOK PRIZE
"BEST OF BOOKS IN 2017" BY FOREIGN AFFAIRS
WINNER OF THE 2018 VIVIAN ZELIZER PRIZE BEST BOOK AWARD IN ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY

"How China Escaped the Poverty Trap truly offers game-changing ideas for the analysis and implementation of socio-economic development and should have a major impact across many social sciences."
― Zelizer Best Book in Economic Sociology Prize Committee

Acclaimed as "game changing" and "field shifting," How China Escaped the Poverty Trap advances a new paradigm in the political economy of development and sheds new light on China's rise.

How can poor and weak societies escape poverty traps? Political economists have traditionally offered three answers: "stimulate growth first," "build good institutions first," or "some fortunate nations inherited good institutions that led to growth."

Yuen Yuen Ang rejects all three schools of thought and their underlying assumptions: linear causation, a mechanistic worldview, and historical determinism. Instead, she launches a new paradigm grounded in complex adaptive systems, which embraces the reality of interdependence and humanity's capacity to innovate.

Combining this original lens with more than 400 interviews with Chinese bureaucrats and entrepreneurs, Ang systematically reenacts the complex process that turned China from a communist backwater into a global juggernaut in just 35 years. Contrary to popular misconceptions, she shows that what drove China's great transformation was not centralized authoritarian control, but "directed improvisation"-top-down directions from Beijing paired with bottom-up improvisation among local officials.

Her analysis reveals two broad lessons on development. First, transformative change requires an adaptive governing system that empowers ground-level actors to create new solutions for evolving problems. Second, the first step out of the poverty trap is to "use what you have"-harnessing existing resources to kick-start new markets, even if that means defying first-world norms.

Bold and meticulously researched, How China Escaped the Poverty Trap opens up a whole new avenue of thinking for scholars, practitioners, and anyone seeking to build adaptive systems.

Yuen Yuen Ang is an Andrew Carnegie Fellow and the inaugural recipient of the Theda Skocpol Prize for Emerging Scholar, awarded by the American Political Science Association.