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    BUREAUCRATIC RESTRUCTURE IN REFORMING CHINA
    A Redistribution of Political Power

    by Li Jinshan (East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore)

    Since the introduction of the Dengist reform in the late 1970s, the state bureaucracy in China has experienced four major restructurings, each of which entailed the redistribution of political power. According to the purpose and scale of reorganization, the restructuring of the State Council can be divided into two stages. At the first stage, covering the period 1982 to 1997, Deng Xiaoping and his Executives, Zhao Ziyang and Li Peng, restructured part of the government administration in order to integrate market forces into the central-planning system. The integration was not smooth because of the struggles between reformers and conservatives, so the restructuring met with a backlash. After the Ninth National People's Congress in March 1998, the restructuring has entered its second stage, characterized by a radical retrenchment of government organizations and employees both at the central and local levels. In carrying this out, Zhu Rongji intends to relinquish government links with enterprises, thus pushing the “socialist market economy” further ahead.

     
    Contents:
    • Introduction — Reforming a Socialist Planning-Style Bureaucracy
    • Approaches to the Chinese Administration
    • Reorganisation for Socialist Market Economy
    • Reorganisation for a Market Economy
     
    Readership: General.
     


     
    44pp    Pub. date: Dec 1998  
    ISBN:   978-981-02-3706-6(pbk)
    981-02-3706-5(pbk)
       US$8 / £6

     


     

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    Updated on 20 November 2009