Effective Reform in China: An Agenda
By (Author) Henry H. Woo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th March 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political economy
338.951
Hardback
272
A deepening economic crisis and a demoralized work force are the primary issues of concern in Henry K.H. Woo's examination of the overall direction of reform in China. Untenable reform initiatives during the 1980s which led to public disillusionment, financial chaos, and ultimately to the bloody collision between government and students in 1989 are closely scrutinized with a commitment to their remedy. Woo's recommendations for viable reform are grounded in his assertion that China's problems can be helped only by recognizing the essential nature of China as a socialist country whose economy is primarily agricultural and is still developing. The major portion of the text develops reform strategies that both acknowledge China's cultural and political framework and challenge existing conventional tenets of developing economies. China as a stable agriculture-first economy in which there will be eventual implementation of price decontrol is Woo's vision, a concept that will no doubt stimulate debate among economists, sinologists, scholars, and policymakers interested in or integral to China's future.
HENRY K.H. WOO is chairman of the China Foundation (Hong Kong) and is affiliated with the Hong Kong Institute of Economic Science. He is the author of A Reconstruction of Education, Uderstanding Economic Affairs of Hong Kong, THe Unseen Dimensions of Wealth--Towards a Generalized Economic Theory, What's Wrong with Formalization in Economics--An Epistemological Critique, and several articles in economic journals about China and other developing countries.