Patron-client networks are widely found in governments of transitional societies and are often seen as an impediment to effective governance. This article advances an alternative view that emphasizes their enabling effects. I argue that patron-client relations can be used to improve government performance by resolving principal-agent problems within political hierarchies. I substantiate this claim by examining how patronage networks shape economic performance of local governments in China. Using an original city-level panel dataset between 2000 and 2011, and a new method that identifies patronage ties based on past promotions, I show that city leaders with informal ties to the incumbent provincial leaders deliver significantly faster econom...
This paper examines a distinctive mechanism of providing incentives to local governments – upgrading...
Autocrats may try to generate regime support in order to remain in power, but do they get the result...
This article investigates how China's economic cooperation affects authoritarian persistence elsewhe...
The remarkable political durability and economic accomplishments of China under the Chinese Communis...
Extant literature on authoritarian legislatures argues that dictators set up quasi-democratic instit...
Despite increasing attention to the role of social ties in emerging economies, few studies have expl...
This paper addresses the question of how bureaucratic incentives affect economic performance in Chin...
In this paper, we provide empirical evidence on the incentive role of personnel control in post-refo...
China has sustained incredible double-digit economic growth over three decades. In Chapter 2, I inve...
To explain China's dramatic economic growth, researchers have proposed a tournament thesis. Acc...
Government responsiveness is often viewed as a result of political pressure from the public, but why...
Modern autocrats depend on at least some support and cooperation from the business sector to sustain...
The low degree of institutionalization of Chinese administration means that citizens engaging with t...
We engage an enduring the long-time debate about on the effect of corruption on economic growth deve...
This article addresses whether the promotion of China’s provincial leadership can be explained thro...
This paper examines a distinctive mechanism of providing incentives to local governments – upgrading...
Autocrats may try to generate regime support in order to remain in power, but do they get the result...
This article investigates how China's economic cooperation affects authoritarian persistence elsewhe...
The remarkable political durability and economic accomplishments of China under the Chinese Communis...
Extant literature on authoritarian legislatures argues that dictators set up quasi-democratic instit...
Despite increasing attention to the role of social ties in emerging economies, few studies have expl...
This paper addresses the question of how bureaucratic incentives affect economic performance in Chin...
In this paper, we provide empirical evidence on the incentive role of personnel control in post-refo...
China has sustained incredible double-digit economic growth over three decades. In Chapter 2, I inve...
To explain China's dramatic economic growth, researchers have proposed a tournament thesis. Acc...
Government responsiveness is often viewed as a result of political pressure from the public, but why...
Modern autocrats depend on at least some support and cooperation from the business sector to sustain...
The low degree of institutionalization of Chinese administration means that citizens engaging with t...
We engage an enduring the long-time debate about on the effect of corruption on economic growth deve...
This article addresses whether the promotion of China’s provincial leadership can be explained thro...
This paper examines a distinctive mechanism of providing incentives to local governments – upgrading...
Autocrats may try to generate regime support in order to remain in power, but do they get the result...
This article investigates how China's economic cooperation affects authoritarian persistence elsewhe...