China encountered problems preserving economic stability while pursuing reforms aimed at increasing its economic flexibility and efficiency. This paper examines China's experience with market-oriented reforms since 1978, offering lessons for other centrally planned economies in the midst of transition to free markets.
We argue that China's journey towards a market economy is far from being finished. Instead, in many ...
There is an influential, neo-liberal proposition in the scholarly literature on China’s economic tra...
This paper explains the differences in performance between the Central and Eastern European countrie...
The last decade of this century has witnessed the transition of the formerly centrally planned econo...
Between 1978 and 2006, GDP growth in China maintained an annual average rate of 9.7%, meaning the Ch...
Beginning in late 1978, by luck as much as design, China arrived at a strategy for market-oriented e...
Economists studying socialist transition have established a paradigmatic view that emphasizes flexib...
This paper deals with economic reforms which have been implemented in the People's Republic of China...
The transition of countries with centrally planned economies to a market orientation, which affects ...
This paper examines the major aspects of economic changes in China in relation to the government's l...
This article adopts the point of view that China’s development policies can only be appreciated if t...
The consensus among economists is that China’s post-1978 market reform policies have pro-duced one o...
Between 1979-1988, the People\u27s Republic of China has been enmeshed in an extraordinary program o...
Ever since 1978, China has been making more and more progress in her economic system reform and gain...
Chinese economic growth since the start of the reforms in 1978/9 has been very rapid, yet has encoun...
We argue that China's journey towards a market economy is far from being finished. Instead, in many ...
There is an influential, neo-liberal proposition in the scholarly literature on China’s economic tra...
This paper explains the differences in performance between the Central and Eastern European countrie...
The last decade of this century has witnessed the transition of the formerly centrally planned econo...
Between 1978 and 2006, GDP growth in China maintained an annual average rate of 9.7%, meaning the Ch...
Beginning in late 1978, by luck as much as design, China arrived at a strategy for market-oriented e...
Economists studying socialist transition have established a paradigmatic view that emphasizes flexib...
This paper deals with economic reforms which have been implemented in the People's Republic of China...
The transition of countries with centrally planned economies to a market orientation, which affects ...
This paper examines the major aspects of economic changes in China in relation to the government's l...
This article adopts the point of view that China’s development policies can only be appreciated if t...
The consensus among economists is that China’s post-1978 market reform policies have pro-duced one o...
Between 1979-1988, the People\u27s Republic of China has been enmeshed in an extraordinary program o...
Ever since 1978, China has been making more and more progress in her economic system reform and gain...
Chinese economic growth since the start of the reforms in 1978/9 has been very rapid, yet has encoun...
We argue that China's journey towards a market economy is far from being finished. Instead, in many ...
There is an influential, neo-liberal proposition in the scholarly literature on China’s economic tra...
This paper explains the differences in performance between the Central and Eastern European countrie...