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LOCAL ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   072866


Evolution of the Pudong Government: Chinese local administrative reform in adapting to an expanding market economy / Chan, Che-Po; Poon, Wai-Kit   Journal Article
Chan, Che-po Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract While the Chinese local adminstrative reforms so far have aimed at adapting to a market economy, in Pudong administrative reform has focused on setting up a local government that conforms to WTO rules and managing a market economy that integrates domestic and foreign investments. This article evaluates the results of the Pudong administrative reform and argues that the reform was part of building up an infrastructure conducive to investments. The reform obviously achieved the objective of attracting large capital investments, but there is still much room for improvement in the setting up of a fair economic market for all competitors.
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2
ID:   143785


Political elite coalition and local administrative reform in China—a case study of shunde under wang yang / Zhang, Nandiyang   Article
Zhang, Nandiyang Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines the importance of political elite coalitions at local levels to create institutional reform in contemporary China. By exploring Shunde’s administrative reforms under Wang Yang, Guangdong’s provincial Party secretary from 2008 to 2012, this article identifies a provincial–grassroots coalition as the essential impetus to local reforms. It argues that formation of political elite coalitions, built upon mutual trust through reciprocal interactions, is crucial for the success of reform. Within the coalition, the strong reformist provincial leader provides his leadership by becoming intensively involved in the reform process, while active grassroots cadres serve as designers and executors of reform plans. By means of a comparison between the scenarios of active grassroots cadres without Wang and Wang with less enthusiastic grassroots cadres, the article concludes that this political elite coalition is by nature fragile; if either side is not present, the coalition will collapse, resulting in either the failure of reform or a deviation of existing reforms to a less fruitful pattern.
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