ABSTRACT

In China, social development has fallen far behind economic development. This book looks at why this is the case, and poses the question of whether the conditions, structures and institutions that have locked China into unbalanced development are changing to pave the way for the next stage of development. Based on an empirical examination of ideological, structural and institutional transformations that have shaped China’s development experiences, the book analyses China’s reform and development in the social domain, including pension, healthcare, public housing, ethnic policy, and public expenditure on social programs. The book moves beyond descriptive analyses to understand the role of broader changes in shaping and redefining the pattern of development in China.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part I|32 pages

China into the next stage of development

chapter 1|21 pages

Society must be defended

Reform, openness and social policy in China

chapter 2|9 pages

China's new stage of development

part II|155 pages

Social policy reform moving to the fore

chapter 5|16 pages

Healthcare reform

Where is China heading?

chapter 9|18 pages

Developmentalism, secularism, nationalism and essentialism

Current situation and challenges of the ethnic issue in China

part III|48 pages

China's social development in a comparative perspective

chapter 10|23 pages

The evolving East Asian welfare regimes

The case of China

chapter 11|23 pages

Singapore's social development experience

A relevant lesson for China?