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    CHINA'S POLITICS AND ECONOMY IN 1999
    Coping with Crises

    by Zheng Yongnian (East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore) & John Wong (East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore)

    What the Jiang Zemin leadership faced in 1999 can be characterized by a century-old Chinese saying, neiyou waihuan (literally, “internal disturbance and external threat”). What with the worst growth record in a decade, the Falun Gong sect's siege of Zhongnanhai, Nato's bombing of the Chinese embassy in Yugoslavia, and Lee Teng-hui's new “two-state” theory, the Chinese leadership was under tremendous pressure throughout the year. Many have wondered if that leadership could still hold its own at the turn of the century.

    This volume provides the reader with an in-depth analysis of how the Chinese leadership coped with the crises during the year. Though there was fair success in managing those crises, serious crises lie ahead which could significantly impact the leadership. China's economic slowdown may be bottoming out, but increasing Party decay, a growing spiritual vacuum, and volatile cross-strait relations are likely to pose serious threats to the leadership.

     
    Contents:
    • China's Politics in 1999: Neiyou Waihuan (Zheng Yongnian)
    • China's Economy in 1999: Bottoming Out and Poised to Rebound (John Wong)
     
    Readership: General.
     


     
    56pp    Pub. date: Mar 2000  
    ISBN:   978-981-02-4302-9(pbk)
    981-02-4302-2(pbk)
       US$8 / £6

     


    56pp    Pub. date: Mar 2000  
    ISBN:   978-981-279-287-7(ebook)
    981-279-287-2(ebook)
       US$11 / £N/A

     


     

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    Updated on 20 November 2009