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ECONOMIC COMPETITION (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   127778


Ascendency of state-owned enterprises in China: development, controversy and problems / Yu, Hong   Journal Article
Yu, Hong Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The state sector still plays an important role in China's economy. One of the key development phenomena characterizing the Chinese economy is the rapid ascendency of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and the resurgence of the state. The strength of China's SOEs is projected in the centrally administrated state-owned enterprises (CSOEs). They are the backbone of the national economy, spearheading national economic development and Beijing's 'going-out' strategy. The CSOEs have expanded their reach and increased their power, domestically and globally. In seeking to boost local GDP growth, the eastern provinces in China have joined the western provinces in a fierce contest to attract investment from SOEs. Nevertheless, the rapid ascendency of the SOEs has brought many negative consequences for China's economic, social and political development by causing conflict with the market-oriented development direction of Chinese economic reform and hindering fair competition between state-owned and non-state-owned enterprises.
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2
ID:   126403


China's neighboring strategy goals and challenges / Xiangyang, Li   Journal Article
Xiangyang, Li Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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3
ID:   127622


Economic competition and nuclear cooperation: the "nuclear renaissance" revisited / Lantis, Jeffrey S   Journal Article
Lantis, Jeffrey S Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The number of bilateral nuclear cooperation agreements surged during the "nuclear renaissance" of the past decade. This proliferation is only partially explained by the prevailing approaches that focus on strategic imperatives. To supplement these explanations, this study draws on neoliberal models of economic competition to posit that bilateral agreement negotiations also exhibit conditions of "uncoordinated interdependence" and maneuvering to gain market share. Case evidence suggests the contours of supplier state bids for civilian assistance are determined at least as much by considerations about economic competition as they are by positive strategic goals. In addition, this study identifies several cases of cooperation where there appears to be little or no strategic motive for export agreements. The study concludes that patterns of economic competition and the influence of peers in defined competitive spaces alter material payoffs and impact policies. It also identifies a surprising role for principled restraint in dampening strategic and economic competition in some dyads.
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4
ID:   098917


Strategic and economic competition between India and China in A / Ghoshal, Baladas   Journal Article
Ghoshal, Baladas Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Key Words China  India  Economic Competition  Aisa 
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5
ID:   179149


Towards bounded engagement / Gill, Bates   Journal Article
Gill, Bates Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Bates Gill discusses the new normal for US-China relations and what it means for the rest of the world.
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