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Index
Title Page Copyright Page Dedication Abbreviations Introduction ONE - Why Transitions Get Trapped: A Theoretical Framework Economic Development and Political Change Theories of Economic Reform Gradualism, Chinese Style Why No Autocracy Has Opted for the Big Bang A Question of the State: Developmental or Predatory The Theory of the Predatory State Why Decentralized Predation May Emerge during Transition TWO - Democratizing China? Political Reform: The Ruling Elites’ Views Political Reform According to Deng Xiaoping Political Reform: A Liberal Alternative Political Reform: Content, Goals, and Dilemmas Political Reform: A Stillborn Plan Institutional Reforms: Promise and Disappointment Legislative Output Constitutional Oversight Power Power of Appointment and Removal Organizational Growth Legal Reform Politicization of the Courts and Lack of Judicial Independence Fragmentation of Judicial Authority Village Elections Illiberal Adaptation Selective Repression Containing Social Unrest Responding to the Information Revolution Co-optation The Co-optation of the Intelligentsia The Co-optation of Private Entrepreneurs THREE - Rent Protection and Dissipation: The Dark Side of Gradualism The Grain Procurement System The Evolution of the Grain Procurement System Analysis The Telecom Service Sector Monopoly and State Control Analysis The Banking Sector Banking Reform since 1979 SCBs’ Dominance and Performance Poor Governance and Corruption Analysis The Economic Costs of Gradualism How Marketized Is the Chinese Economy? SOEs’ Share of Economic Output and Employment The State’s Influence in Commodities and Factor Markets Fragmentation of Domestic Markets International Comparisons FOUR - Transforming the State: From Developmental to Predatory The Institutional Dynamics of Decentralized Predation Corruption and Decentralization of Predation The Growing Size of the Chinese State Decentralization of Property Rights Administrative Decentralization and Predation Declining Monitoring Capability Crime and Punishment New Exit Options Declining Ideological and Institutional Norms Collusion and the Emergence of Local Mafia States FIVE - China’s Mounting Governance Deficits Governance Deficits and State Incapacitation Public and Workplace Safety Education Public Health Environmental Degradation Crisis in Rural Public Finance Erosion of the CCP’s Mobilization Capacity Economic Reform and the CCP’s Organizational Decline Internal Corruption Mass Disenchantment with the CCP Rising Tensions Between the State and Society Rural Decay and Discontent The Unemployment Challenge The Institutional Breakdown Conclusion Appendix: - Reported Cases of Local Mafia States Notes Acknowledgements Index
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