Chapter 8 Dynamic dictators : Elite cohesion and authoritarian resilience in China

This chapter provides a framework for understanding changing levels of power concentration and how they might be linked with authoritarian resilience. It looks at elite level dynamics in China and discusses elements of power concentration including personalization, administrative centralization, and...

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Main Author: Sinkkonen, Elina (auth)
Format: eBook
Published: Taylor & Francis 2021
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Online Access:Get fulltext
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520 |a This chapter provides a framework for understanding changing levels of power concentration and how they might be linked with authoritarian resilience. It looks at elite level dynamics in China and discusses elements of power concentration including personalization, administrative centralization, and state control over economic assets. There is a general trend of deepening autocratization during Xi Jinping's regime. Institutional arrangements in existing institutions such as Party bodies and the People's Liberation Army, innovation of new institutions, and purges of opponents show a clear trend of power concentration. Before the Xi era, the central government shared power with regional administrations and China's level of fiscal decentralization was relatively high in international comparison. More recently, the tide has turned towards increasing centralization. In the economic realm, China's development model has many features ensuring Party control. New forms of control such as the social credit system have emerged along with traditional measures, such as state control of the financial sector and special arrangements guiding state-owned companies. 
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653 |a Chinese, language learning, foreign policy, Chinese political system, domestic governance, international relations, Chinese culture, Chinese literature, Chinese history, Chinese sociology, Chinese opposition, Chinese activism, Chinese people, Chinese society, Chinese studies 
773 1 0 |t The Routledge Handbook of Chinese Studies  |7 nnaa