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DE FACTO FEDERALISM IN CHINA
Reforms and Dynamics of Central-Local Relations

by Yongnian Zheng (East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore)

This book is the first attempt to conceptualize China's central-local relations from the behavioral perspective. Although China does not have a federalist system of government, the author believes that, with deepening reform and openness, China's central-local relations is increasingly functioning on federalist principles.

Federalism as a functioning system in China is under studied. The author defines the political system existing in China as “de facto federalism”, and provides a detailed analysis of its sources and dynamics in the book. The system is mainly driven by two related factors — inter-governmental decentralization and globalization. While economic decentralization since the 1980s has led to the formation of de facto federalism, globalization since the 1990s has accelerated this process and generated increasingly high pressure on the Chinese leadership to institutionalize de facto federalism by various measures of selective recentralization.

 
Table of Contents
 
Readership: The book is primarily for those who are interested in China's development since the reform and open door policy, including Chinese scholars, policy makers, business persons and students, particularly postgraduate students.
 
“It comes recommended to those who are interested in the various forms of economic governance in the provinces Zheng covers. For those studying central-local relations, it provides a basis from which to further probe the difficult issue of institutionalised reciprocity in China's fragmented polity.
China Perspectives

 
460pp
Pub. date: Jan 2007
eISBN: 9789812706805
 
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