ABSTRACT

This book is about mutual influences of thinking about economic development in China and in the West, from the 18th century until the present. Its chapters are contributed by development economists and historians of thought from China and other parts of the world.

The book describes important stages in the evolution, cross-fertilization and contextual modification of ideas about economic order, development and institutional change. It illustrates how Western concepts and theories have been adopted and adapted to Chinese conditions in different waves of modernization from the late 19th century until the present and that this was and is no one-way traffic. The book examines to what extent pre-classical thinking in the West, in particular French Physiocracy in mid-18th century, was influenced by China as an ideal and a source of ideas, at a time when China was the largest and most advanced economy in the world. It discusses to what extent different approaches of modern Western-style economics, in particular in the fields of development economics and institutional economics, can be used to understand the rapid transitions and developments of the Chinese economy in recent decades, and to what extent they need to be modified in the light of new experiences and insights. Against this background, several contributions to the volume provide assessments of the current state of economic science and teaching in China, in particular with regard to Chinese views on Western economics.

The book should be of interest to those who are interested in the economic history of China.

chapter |23 pages

Physiocracy and the Chinese model

Enlightened lessons from China's political economy? 1

chapter |21 pages

The reception of Adam Smith in East Asia

A comparative perspective

chapter |32 pages

Commodities, natural resources, and growth

A study through the history of economics

chapter |13 pages

Yan Fu, individualism, and social order

Translating Western ideas at the dawn of the twentieth century

chapter |22 pages

Chinese tradition meets Western economics

Tang Qingzeng and his legacy

chapter |17 pages

He Lian, a founder and practitioner of Chinization of Western economics

A study with a focus on his activities at the Nankai Institute of Economics

chapter |19 pages

Chinese reform and schools of thought in Western economics

Chicago school versus principal–agent theory

chapter |21 pages

The East Asian Development Model reconsidered

Which lessons for China?