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ID092262
Title ProperPolicy learning or diffusion
Other Title Informationhow China opened to foreign direct investment
LanguageENG
AuthorMin Ye
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)When China embarked on economic reform in the late 1970s, its leaders aspired to learn from Japan's developmental policies that were restrictive of foreign capital. In the 1990s, China strove again to emulate Japan and South Korea in restricting foreign direct investment and promoting indigenous corporations. Despite these efforts, China's industrial catch-up was in fact led by FDI, in sharp contrast to the classic Japanese/Korean paradigm where FDI was strictly circumvented. Why was China unsuccessful in learning restrictive FDI policies? How did a new developmental path emerge in China? The answer lies in China's strong networks with diaspora communities. Through a diffusion mechanism, ties between local governments and diaspora capital helped initiate and catalyze China's FDI liberalization, despite the central efforts to learn from Japan and South Korea. Two critical reform episodes are examined: (1) the establishment of special economic zones and (2) the reform of state-owned enterprises.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of East Asian Studies Vol. 9, No. 3; Sep-Dec 2009: p399-432
Journal SourceJournal of East Asian Studies Vol. 9, No. 3; Sep-Dec 2009: p399-432
Key WordsChina ;  Economic Reform ;  Foreign Direct Investment ;  Diaspora Networks ;  Policy Diffusion ;  Developmental State ;  Special Economic Zones ;  SOE Reform