Did China follow the East Asian development model?

China is located in East Asia and, just as Japan, Taiwan or (South) Korea at earlier stages of their development, has now grown very rapidly for some three decades. That is not enough, however, for it to qualify for membership of the club. The East Asian development model has a number of additional...

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Main Authors: Boltho, Andrea, Weber, Maria
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università Carlo Cattaneo LIUC 2009-12-01
Series:The European Journal of Comparative Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eaces.liuc.it/18242979200902/182429792009060206.pdf
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spelling doaj-780a1df78a0942fa8fb65719ab7183852020-11-24T21:38:23ZengUniversità Carlo Cattaneo LIUCThe European Journal of Comparative Economics1824-29792009-12-0162267286Did China follow the East Asian development model?Boltho, AndreaWeber, MariaChina is located in East Asia and, just as Japan, Taiwan or (South) Korea at earlier stages of their development, has now grown very rapidly for some three decades. That is not enough, however, for it to qualify for membership of the club. The East Asian development model has a number of additional and important characteristics. Four are selected for discussion: the almost constant encouragement given to investment, the manufacturing sector and external competitiveness, and pursued via a variety of fairly interventionist industrial, trade and financial policies; a concomitant belief in the virtues of intense domestic (Japan and Taiwan) and foreign (Korea) competition; a set of broadly sensible and appropriate macroeconomic policies; and a number of favourable (pre-)conditions, such as the presence of a homogeneous population, a relatively high stock of human capital, reasonable income equality and fairly authoritarian governments. China, since reforms began in the late 1970s, has shared some of these characteristics, but not all. In particular, it is still much more of a command economy than the other three countries have ever been, yet, at the same time, has embraced globalization with, arguably, much greater enthusiasm than was done, in earlier times, by Japan, Taiwan or Korea. If China's experience, however, is compared with that of other, more or less successful, developing countries, the similarities with the East Asia development model would seem to dwarf such differenceshttp://eaces.liuc.it/18242979200902/182429792009060206.pdfChinaGrowthEast AsiaEconomic Policy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Boltho, Andrea
Weber, Maria
spellingShingle Boltho, Andrea
Weber, Maria
Did China follow the East Asian development model?
The European Journal of Comparative Economics
China
Growth
East Asia
Economic Policy
author_facet Boltho, Andrea
Weber, Maria
author_sort Boltho, Andrea
title Did China follow the East Asian development model?
title_short Did China follow the East Asian development model?
title_full Did China follow the East Asian development model?
title_fullStr Did China follow the East Asian development model?
title_full_unstemmed Did China follow the East Asian development model?
title_sort did china follow the east asian development model?
publisher Università Carlo Cattaneo LIUC
series The European Journal of Comparative Economics
issn 1824-2979
publishDate 2009-12-01
description China is located in East Asia and, just as Japan, Taiwan or (South) Korea at earlier stages of their development, has now grown very rapidly for some three decades. That is not enough, however, for it to qualify for membership of the club. The East Asian development model has a number of additional and important characteristics. Four are selected for discussion: the almost constant encouragement given to investment, the manufacturing sector and external competitiveness, and pursued via a variety of fairly interventionist industrial, trade and financial policies; a concomitant belief in the virtues of intense domestic (Japan and Taiwan) and foreign (Korea) competition; a set of broadly sensible and appropriate macroeconomic policies; and a number of favourable (pre-)conditions, such as the presence of a homogeneous population, a relatively high stock of human capital, reasonable income equality and fairly authoritarian governments. China, since reforms began in the late 1970s, has shared some of these characteristics, but not all. In particular, it is still much more of a command economy than the other three countries have ever been, yet, at the same time, has embraced globalization with, arguably, much greater enthusiasm than was done, in earlier times, by Japan, Taiwan or Korea. If China's experience, however, is compared with that of other, more or less successful, developing countries, the similarities with the East Asia development model would seem to dwarf such differences
topic China
Growth
East Asia
Economic Policy
url http://eaces.liuc.it/18242979200902/182429792009060206.pdf
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