Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- Preface
- 1 China as a Latecomer in World Industrial Markets
- 2 The Outside World as an Impetus for Change in China
- 3 Tailor to the World: China's Emergence as a Global Power in Textiles
- 4 Beating the System with Industrial Restructuring: China's Response to the Multifiber Arrangement (MFA)
- 5 China Looms Large: Reform and Rationalization in the Textile Industry
- 6 Industrial Change in the Shadow of the MFA: The Role of Top-Level Strategy, Mid-Level Intervention, and Low-Level Demand in China's Textile Industry
- 7 Chinese Shipbuilding: The Modest Origins of an Emerging Industrial Giant
- 8 Dangerous Currents: Navigating Boom and Bust Cycles in International Shipbuilding
- 9 Chinese Shipbuilding and Global Surplus Capacity: Making a Virtue out of Necessity
- 10 Market-Oriented Solutions for Industrial Adjustment: The Changing Pattern of State Intervention in Chinese Shipbuilding
- 11 Who Did What to Whom?: Making Sense of the Reform Process in China's Shipbuilding Industry
- 12 External Shocks, State Capacity, and National Responses for Economic Adjustment: Explaining Industrial Change in China
- 13 China in the Contemporary International Political Economy
- Appendix Contours of the Research Effort
- Bibliography
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- Preface
- 1 China as a Latecomer in World Industrial Markets
- 2 The Outside World as an Impetus for Change in China
- 3 Tailor to the World: China's Emergence as a Global Power in Textiles
- 4 Beating the System with Industrial Restructuring: China's Response to the Multifiber Arrangement (MFA)
- 5 China Looms Large: Reform and Rationalization in the Textile Industry
- 6 Industrial Change in the Shadow of the MFA: The Role of Top-Level Strategy, Mid-Level Intervention, and Low-Level Demand in China's Textile Industry
- 7 Chinese Shipbuilding: The Modest Origins of an Emerging Industrial Giant
- 8 Dangerous Currents: Navigating Boom and Bust Cycles in International Shipbuilding
- 9 Chinese Shipbuilding and Global Surplus Capacity: Making a Virtue out of Necessity
- 10 Market-Oriented Solutions for Industrial Adjustment: The Changing Pattern of State Intervention in Chinese Shipbuilding
- 11 Who Did What to Whom?: Making Sense of the Reform Process in China's Shipbuilding Industry
- 12 External Shocks, State Capacity, and National Responses for Economic Adjustment: Explaining Industrial Change in China
- 13 China in the Contemporary International Political Economy
- Appendix Contours of the Research Effort
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In trying to interpret the momentous changes that have occurred in China since the death of Mao Zedong, one piece of the puzzle has been conspicuously missing – conceptually if not always empirically – from most scholarship on the so-called reform era: the impact of the outside world. Simply put, what influence have international forces had on the course of change in post-Mao China? Even in the literature on China's growing participation in the world economy, shifts in policy and behavior – both at home and abroad – have been attributed quite narrowly to domestic factors. While this tendency has begun to shift somewhat in recent years, the dominant approach remains Sinocentric in critical respects. Especially for the 1980s and early 1990s, the impact of the outside world continues to be seriously underestimated. Indeed, this book is intended less to highlight the contemporary pattern of external influence on China – one that is increasingly (if still sometimes inadequately) acknowledged in both the academic and popular literatures on China's political economy – than to document the significance of external influence during this earlier period.
More specifically, the overriding goal of this book is to begin work on a conceptual foundation for understanding how international forces have structured the choices China has faced as it has expanded its participation in the world economy while simultaneously undertaking reform of its state socialist economy.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- China in the World MarketChinese Industry and International Sources of Reform in the Post-Mao Era, pp. xv - xviiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002