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NAUGHTON, BARRY (8) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   001659


After the cold war: domestic factors and US and China relations / Ross, Roberts S. (ed.); Naughton, Barry (ed.); Sutter, Robert G. (ed.); Niland, Marcus (ed.) 1998  Book
Naughton, Barry Book
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication New York, M E Sharpe, 1998.
Description xiv, 194p.
Series Studies on contemporary China
Standard Number 0765602911
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
041280327.73051/ROS 041280MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   095537


China's distinctive system: can it be a model for others? / Naughton, Barry   Journal Article
Naughton, Barry Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The idea of the 'Beijing Consensus' does not accurately describe what has happened in China, nor does it represent a consensus among Chinese economists and policy-makers. This article presents six distinctive features of China's economic development, and argues that while each provides important lessons, none are easily copied by other developing countries. The intertwining of state and market in China is at the root of China's most distinctive developmental features. However, the specific character of the Chinese system and the way in which government and business relations have been structured cannot be readily replicated in other countries.
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3
ID:   130377


China's economy: complacency, crisis & the challenge of reform / Naughton, Barry   Journal Article
Naughton, Barry Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract China's economic success has bred a new complacency and resistance to change. This in turn has created a credibility crisis, as many Chinese citizens believe the opposition of vested interests makes reform impossible. However, proponents of economic reform argue that the current economic strategy is unsustainable. They point to reform backsliding, overinvestment, and financial fragility as problems that will collide with an inevitable economic slowdown caused by rapid demographic changes, and that will potentially cause economic and political crisis. Renewed economic reform is thus the only prudent and viable choice. The November 2013 Third Plenum shows that China's leaders have tentatively accepted the need for reform.
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4
ID:   075578


Chinese economy: transitions and growth / Naughton, Barry 2007  Book
Naughton, Barry Book
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Publication Cambridge, MIT Press, 2007.
Description xvi, 528p.
Standard Number 0262640640
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
052072338.951/NAU 052072MainOn ShelfGeneral 
5
ID:   151411


Dynamic China model: the co-evolution of economics and politics in China / Naughton, Barry; Chen, Ling   Journal Article
Naughton, Barry Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract China’s economic success derives from the co-evolution of the political and economic systems. There is no single ‘China model’. Rather, three successive generations of China model can be identified, corresponding to ‘growth equilibria’ that emerged when policy responded effectively to specific economic challenges. The structure of interaction between economic and political is determined by the basic governance strategy of the Chinese Communist Party.
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6
ID:   088598


Impact of the Tianamen crisis on China's economic transition / Naughton, Barry   Journal Article
Naughton, Barry Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
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7
ID:   090507


In China's economy, the state's hand grows heavier / Naughton, Barry   Journal Article
Naughton, Barry Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
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8
ID:   138151


Reform retreat and renewal: how economic policy fits into the political system / Naughton, Barry   Article
Naughton, Barry Article
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Summary/Abstract Xi Jinping’s economic reforms should be seen as a response to the situation bequeathed to him by the previous Hu-Wen administration. On balance, Hu-Wen achieved little with respect to economic reforms and in some ways went backwards. This reform retreat was accompanied by a substantial increase in the power of bureaucratic agencies such as the National Development and Reform Commission and the State Assets Supervisions and Administration Commission. Xi Jinping’s reforms can be seen both as an effort to overcome the crisis of confidence about economic reform that became pervasive in China over the past decade, and an effort to shake up entrenched bureaucracies that may have begun to block reforms. Xi’s initiatives are thus more radical when viewed from the standpoint of politics and economics together, than when just seen as economic policies. However, the overall logic of Xi’s policies has still not emerged clearly.
Key Words Economic Reform  Wen Jiabao  Xi Jinping  State Enterprises 
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