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ID147620
Title ProperPolitical institutions, entrenchments, and the sustainability of economic development – a lesson from rural finance
LanguageENG
AuthorHuang, Yasheng ;  Qian, Meijun
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper provides insights on the sustainability of economic development from a historical and political economy perspective. We demonstrate that China's rural financial policy in the 1980s was quite liberal in employing market mechanisms, supporting entrepreneurship, and encouraging competition. These policies were abandoned in the early 1990s and replaced by ubiquitous government interferences that shifted resource and policy priorities to benefit political incumbents. A large panel of survey data confirms that rural household access to finance decreased dramatically in the 1990s and that the statistical significance of economic entrepreneurial factors in determining credit allocation also fell. Further empirical analyses show that market economic conditions are not sufficient to explain these changes and the evidence is consistent with a political entrenchment motive during the political regime after the turmoil in the year 1989. Given the connection between entrenchment and underdevelopment, our findings raise the concern that China's political institutions' insufficient limits on the government could be a challenge for China to sustain its economic success.
`In' analytical NoteChina Economic Review Vol. 40; Sep 2016: p.152–178
Journal SourceChina Economic Review 2016-09
Key WordsLiberalization ;  Private Sector ;  Financing ;  Political Events ;  Entrenchment