ABSTRACT

With the expansion of globalization, international trade has played an increasingly significant role, especially for developing countries. As the largest developing country, China has made a lot of efforts to integrate to the global market since its Open and Reform Policy in 1978 and has become the second largest economy in world. So what is the effect of China’s trade-oriented strategy for the country and the world? How did it improve the country’s economic development? These are some critical questions this book discusses.

This book utilizes classic Western economic models to examine how China’s openness policies have affected the manufacturing upgrading and economic development of the country. A large amount of micro-level empirical evidence is added to support the conclusion.

Scholars and students in economics and business will benefit from this book.  Also, it will appeal to readers interested in policy making and Chinese studies.

part II|151 pages

Micro-evidence

chapter 4|50 pages

China’s processing trade

A firm-level analysis 1

chapter 5|31 pages

Unexceptional exporter performance in China?

The role of processing trade 1

chapter 6|25 pages

Processing trade, tariff reductions, and firm productivity

Evidence from Chinese firms

chapter 7|23 pages

Trade liberalization, product complexity, and productivity improvement

Evidence from Chinese firms 1

chapter 8|20 pages

Processing trade, export intensity, and input trade liberalization

Evidence from Chinese firms 1

part III|79 pages

Channels and mechanisms

chapter 9|29 pages

Exports and credit constraints under incomplete information

Theory and evidence from China 1

chapter 10|17 pages

Input trade liberalization, processing firms, and firm R&D

Empirical evidence from Chinese firms 1

chapter 12|17 pages

Firm R&D, absorptive capacity, and learning by exporting

Firm-level evidence from China 1

part IV|47 pages

International comparison

chapter 13|17 pages

China and India

Trends in trade over the last decade 1