ABSTRACT

This book analyses the industrial reform measures taken by the Chinese government during the decade 1985-95 and identifies the economic and political tensions and contradictions that state enterprise reform has presented to a leadership intent on maintaining its authoritative political position.
Using government sources and interviews with economists and workers at one of China's largest state-owned enterprises (The Second Automobile/Dongfeng corporation ), Hannan concludes that the relationship between state policy and enterprise is a complex two-way process characterised by tensions resulting from conflicting priorities.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter |36 pages

The national Interest Versus Particular Interests

Decentralisation, Negotiation and Manipulation

chapter |31 pages

Managers' Interests Versus Workers' Interests

Labour, Housing and Welfare Reform

chapter |39 pages

Banking, Price and Taxation Reform

Accounting for Actually Existing Circumstances

chapter |33 pages

Ownership Reform

Establishing a Modern Enterprise System

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion