Paying for Progress in China

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Central Government
China Youth Development Foundation
Chinese Communist Party
Chinese fiscal policy
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Equitable Development Strategy
fiscal
FISDEP
Gdp Share
goods
High School
Intergovernmental Fiscal System
intergovernmental transfers
Interpersonal Inequalities
investments
Kuznets Curve
projects
public
Public Goods Investment
Public Goods Projects
public sector reform China
rebates
regional inequality economic policy
rural development studies
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Senior High School
Social Health Insurance
Social Security Schemes
social stratification China
subsidies
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Tax Rebates
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780415422543
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Mar 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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China’s stunning record of economic development since the 1970s has been marred by an increasingly obvious gap between the country’s ‘haves’ and its ‘have-nots’. While people living in some parts of the country have enjoyed dramatically improved conditions of life, those in other districts and regions have slipped ever further behind in terms of access to health, wealth, education, security and opportunity.

Paying for Progress in China is a collection of essays which trace the causes of this growing inequality, using new data including surveys, interviews, newly available official statistics and in-depth fieldwork. Their findings expose the malfunctioning of China’s ‘broken’ intergovernmental fiscal system, which has exacerbated the disequalizing effects of emerging market forces. Whilst the government’s deliberately ‘pro-poor’ development policies have in recent years sought to reduce the gap between rich and poor, both markets, and also state institutions and policies, are continuing to create perverse equity outcomes across the country, confounding hopes for better-balanced and more inclusive growth in China.

The interdisciplinary approach of this collection, incorporating work by economists, sociologists and political scientists, makes it a valuable resource for students of contemporary Chinese political economy and social development.

Vivienne Shue is the Leverhulme Professor and Director of the Contemporary China Studies Programme at Oxford University.

Christine Wong is the Henry M. Jackson Professor of International Studies at the University of Washington.