This article engages with critical IPE scholars who have examined the rise of China and its impact on the neoliberal world order by analysing whether China poses a challenge to the neoliberal norm of free movement of capital. We argue that China’s capital control regime is marked by a contradiction between its domestic social relations of production and its global geo-economic ambitions. On the one hand, the key raison d’être of China’s capital controls is to protect and consolidate an investment-led accumulation regime that redistributes income and wealth from Chinese workers to its state-owned enterprise sector. Dismantling these controls would result in changing social relations of production that would not necessarily benefit Chinese in...
This thesis explores the development of the Sino-American imbalance between the mid-1990s and 2007. ...
The political-economic evolution of post-Mao China has been portrayed as a historically inevitable e...
China has been growing at over ten per cent annually since 1978, but this has only come to very wide...
This article engages with critical IPE scholars who have examined the rise of China and its impact o...
While China’s rise has been much discussed, its meaning continues to be contested. This is true in r...
If the United States made global capitalism in the twentieth century, can China unmake this American...
This paper establishes a novel understanding of the nature and implications of China's rise. By borr...
The globalisation of Chinese capital will be one of the hallmarks of 21st-century economics, shaping...
This dissertation examines whether China, Brazil and India will form a challenge to the Western-made...
Analysts generally agree that, in the long term, the biggest challenge to American hegemony is not m...
The political-economic evolution of post-Mao China has been portrayed as a historically inevitable e...
This dissertation examines whether China, Brazil and India will form a challenge to the Western-made...
The political-economic evolution of post-Mao China has been portrayed as a historically inevitable e...
David Harvey (2005), in ‘A Brief History of Neoliberalism’, includes China as a country embarking on...
David Harvey (2005), in ‘A Brief History of Neoliberalism’, includes China as a country embarking on...
This thesis explores the development of the Sino-American imbalance between the mid-1990s and 2007. ...
The political-economic evolution of post-Mao China has been portrayed as a historically inevitable e...
China has been growing at over ten per cent annually since 1978, but this has only come to very wide...
This article engages with critical IPE scholars who have examined the rise of China and its impact o...
While China’s rise has been much discussed, its meaning continues to be contested. This is true in r...
If the United States made global capitalism in the twentieth century, can China unmake this American...
This paper establishes a novel understanding of the nature and implications of China's rise. By borr...
The globalisation of Chinese capital will be one of the hallmarks of 21st-century economics, shaping...
This dissertation examines whether China, Brazil and India will form a challenge to the Western-made...
Analysts generally agree that, in the long term, the biggest challenge to American hegemony is not m...
The political-economic evolution of post-Mao China has been portrayed as a historically inevitable e...
This dissertation examines whether China, Brazil and India will form a challenge to the Western-made...
The political-economic evolution of post-Mao China has been portrayed as a historically inevitable e...
David Harvey (2005), in ‘A Brief History of Neoliberalism’, includes China as a country embarking on...
David Harvey (2005), in ‘A Brief History of Neoliberalism’, includes China as a country embarking on...
This thesis explores the development of the Sino-American imbalance between the mid-1990s and 2007. ...
The political-economic evolution of post-Mao China has been portrayed as a historically inevitable e...
China has been growing at over ten per cent annually since 1978, but this has only come to very wide...