This
paper seeks to construct an explanation
of China's sustained rapid economic growth
over the era of its systemic reform, which
centers around the notion of an evolving
''regime of accumulation'', or development
path, that embodies an uneasy mix of the
attributes of allocative and productive
efficiency. The paper provides two main
propositions. First, in contrast to the
general direction of market reform in
the institutional dimension, and in contradiction
to the principle of comparative advantage,
China's actual path of industrialization
and economic growth has been in the direction
of capital deepening. Second, China's
reformed economic institutions have encompassed
both market-conforming and market-supplanting
elements, represented by non-state-owned
enterprises and state-owned enterprises,
respectively, with the former accounting
for the improvement in allocative efficiency
while the latter accounting for the improvement
in productive efficiency. The paper concludes
with a discussion on the social implications
of the findings and propositions.
November 30, 2006.
|