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022 _a08887233
040 _aMSU
_bEnglish
_cMSU
_erda
050 0 0 _aHB90 COM
100 1 _aGabriele, Alberto
_eauthor
245 1 0 _aThe role of the state in China's industrial development:
_ba reassessment/
_ccreated by Alberto Gabriele
264 1 _aBasingstoke:
_bPalgrave Macmillan,
_c2010.
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
_btxt
337 _2rdamedia
_aunmediated
_bn
338 _2rdacarrier
_avolume
_bnc
440 _aComparative economic studies
_vVolume 52, number 3
520 3 _aThis paper focuses on China's industrial sector, utilizing both qualitative and quantitative evidence. We show the role of the state in China, far from withering out, is massive, dominant, and crucial to China's industrial development. State-owned and state-holding enterprises are now less numerous, but much larger, more capital- and knowledge-intensive, more productive and more profitable than in the late 1990s. The dominant role of the state in China's industrial development is not necessarily a transitional feature. In the long run, it might consolidate itself as a form of strategic planning, and as a key structural characteristic of market socialism.
650 _aIndustrialization
_vManufacturing industries
_xState intervention
_zChina
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1057/9781137469960_6
942 _2lcc
_cJA
999 _c165484
_d165484