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State Failure and Distorted Urbanisation in Post-Mao's China, 1993–2012

  • Book
  • © 2018

Overview

  • Investigates ghost cities in China
  • Measures contributions of manufacturing, farming, real estate and services to local GDP to assess the growth engine in Northwest China
  • Explores state failure in relation to industrial policy in Northwest China
  • Analyses growth, public welfare, environment and private capital as signs of state failure

Part of the book series: Palgrave Studies in Economic History (PEHS)

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Table of contents (8 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This book examines failure in the urbanisation of Northwest China as a result of government industrial policies that have impacted on the economic development of the region. By looking at the under-researched provinces of Gansu, Qinghai and Inner Mongolia, which make up a quarter of China's territory, Zheng and Deng challenge the common story of China's miracle growth and reveal the dark side of the country’s pursuit of modernity.

Severe weather conditions, chronic drought, permanent lack of oxygen and unforgiving terrain in the Northwest make farming, manufacture and services difficult simply because people tend not to stay. Yet, China’s current political system forces growth to take place even though basic conditions and prerequisites for market-based growth are missing. This volume analyses 'ghost cities' and social tension in the process of ‘forced urbanisation’ in which huge amount of resources are wasted, the local environment is systematically damaged and ordinary people’s basic rights are brutally violated in the name of higher GDP and greater government glory.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Beijing Enlightenment Institute for Economic and Social Research, Beijing, China

    Yazhuo Zheng

  • London School of Economics, London, United Kingdom

    Kent Deng

About the authors

Yazhuo Zheng is President of the Beijing Enlightenment Institute for Economic and Social Research, China. Zheng is a scholar-turned government official; her experience as a local bureaucrat in addition to being an academic researcher have allowed her a unique insight into China’s on-going problems with state incompetence.

Kent Deng is Professor of Economic History at the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. His research interests include Chinese and Maritime Economic History. He is Series Editor for Palgrave Studies in Economic History.

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