China's Economy
The Sustainability of China's Present Economy
The Sustainability of China's Present Economy
In the past thirty years the Chinese economy has exhibited phenomenal growth, especially when compared to what the country had seen for the century before that. China has become a model of economic efficiency and stability. They have used different models to attain this through a graduated system that has been marveled at by the rest of the world. With a mix of free markets and governmental control, China has been able to achieve something few thought possible.
However, quick rising bubbles often collapse. Just like a souffle, China's economy could be in for a fall with the slightest, unconscious bump.
People have been analyzing this growth for the past three decades, and there are many theories regarding the sustainability of the model with which China has, so far, been successful. This research paper is designed to examine where china has come from, how they produced the growth initially, how they have sustained that growth, and if what they have achieved is a continuing possibility.
China began the reform in 1978, and they have seen remarkable growth since then (Brammal, 2000,4). This was in great contrast to the economic forecast in 1949 when Chairman Mao "declared that the Chinese people had 'stood up'" (Zhang, 2004). At that time the GDP per capita in China was $18 as compared to the United States which was at $500 and Britain at $464 (Zhang, 2004). Due in large part to the leadership of Deng Zhaoping, the Chinese economy has grown from a weak GDP of $150 billion in 1978, to a GDP of $2.2 trillion in 2005 (Jefferson, Hu & Su, 2006). That made China, at the time, the fourth largest economy in the world behind the U.S., Japan and Germany (Jefferson, Hu, & Su, 2006).
There were many reasons for the growth of the Chinese economy, but the greatest of these was the "open door policy" implemented by Deng Xiaoping (Nolan & Furneg, 2003, 218). These researchers go on to say that "Before economic reforms, the apparent lack of modern capitalism under Mao's leadership, particularly during the Cultural Revolution, was a main constraint on economic performance" (218). Many thought the reforms of Xiaoping were slow and deliberate and that they would never work. The Chinese "sequenced reform by sectors -- agriculture, industry, international, labor, and capital" (Kohli, Moon & Sorensen, 2003, 160).
One of the main reasons that this worked is that China began opening markets slowly, and then the government worked with the private sector to realize growth (Ahrens & Mengerinhaus, 2006). The government had State Owned Enterprises (SOE's) that needed to be transformed. "The rapid development of private enterprise in China over the past two decades has resulted from a gradual and cumulative reform process featuring the spontaneous development of private enterprises and the top-down transformation of the SOEs" (Garnaut & Song, 2004, 45). After this transformation was begun, the cities In China started looking for cues among the international cities that had a successful growth pattern (Kong, 2009).
After the transformation of the SOE's and private industry within the cities, the government was ready to work with small businesses that were primarily in the country (Alon, 2003, 78). These business were mom and pop manufacturing shops that made everything from crafts to machined parts. The growth of the small industries has thrived and spread across the landscape of China from the coast into the inland cities.
Several significant changes have occurred in both the large cities and the outlying areas recently that have helped China to sustain the growth that they have built.
"Inland provinces and regions possess the advantages of inexpensive labor, low factor costs, and unrealized potential for market expansion. Fostering conditions and creating a climate more conducive for inducing foreign investments inland could stimulate another round of sustainable and sustained economic growth, actualizing extensive growth potential hitherto untapped. For augmenting the basis for sustainable growth, increased foreign capital injection into noncoastal regions is both expeditious and realizable (Shen, 2000, 215).
This research concludes that China has started to use the resources it has within its massive population. By utilizing all of the people that it has at its disposal, China does two things. First they are able to produce more than almost any country in the world cheaper. Second, by providing the jobs to their people, they increase their internal economic growth. This is wise when it comes to the countryside, but what has China been doing in the big cities?
Beijing is the capital of china and they have just been...
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