000 01775pab a2200205 454500
008 180718b2007 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aNgok, Kinglun
245 _aMarketization, globalization and administrative reform in China: a zigzag road to a promising future
260 _c2007
300 _ap.217-33.
362 _aJun
520 _aThe Chinese administrative system has been periodically reformed since the early 1980s. This article mainly focuses on the reforms of the State Council, the central government of China, and then deals with the five main rounds of reform. it gives a full picture of the story of reform with its context and contents, the measures taken, the difficulties encountered and the challenges ahead. It is argued that administrative reform in China has been used to reorient the Communist state to an emerging market-oriented economy and to enhance the capacity of the government to regulate market forces and to respond to the significant impacts made by economic globalization. Given the authoritarian nature of the party-state polity of China, the authors argue that administrative reform in China has also been used as an alternative route to alleviate the crisis of governance resulting from rapid social change; however, its effects are constrained by the implications of politico-administrative apparatus. To build up a modern governing system suitable for a market economy, a proactive approach, including political or constitutional reform, should be put on the agenda. - Reproduced.
650 _aglobalization - China
650 _aAdministrative reform - China
650 _aAdministrative reform
700 _aZhu, Guobin
773 _aInternational Review of Administrative Sciences
908 _aN
909 _a74663
999 _c74663
_d74663