1. Bureaucrats, Businesses, and Economic Policies in a Globalized
China
2. Chasing Foreign Capital
3. From FDI Attraction to Domestic Competitiveness
4. Local Policy Making, Globalized Coalitions, and Resource
Allocation
5. The Microfoundations of State Intervention and Policy
Effectiveness
6. Varieties of Local Capitalism in Historical Perspective
7. Making Economic Policies Work
Ling Chen is Assistant Professor in the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.
"There is an urgent need to understand the sources of China's
industrial prowess. Avoiding sweeping generalizations, Ling Chen
spotlights China's divergent development paths and convincingly
argues that each city's use of foreign capital in the heyday of FDI
attraction has shaped and altered its government-business
coalitions, with important consequences for industrial upgrading
and innovation. This is a must read for anyone interested in
China's political economy and its global implications."—Dali L.
Yang, The University of Chicago
"This book should be required reading for anyone hoping to
understand how China's relations to foreign capital work in
practice. It represents the next generation of research, showing
how the strategies of local governments vary fundamentally across
regions, how these variations are rooted in local political
history, and why some are significantly more effective than
others."—Peter Evans, University of California, Berkeley
"In this impressively researched and tantalizing book, Ling Chen
advances capitalism literature by bringing it to subnational
development in China. She offers this key development lesson:
choices made in the early stages of economic liberalization
profoundly shape the subnational political economy for years to
come."—Edmund Malesky, Duke University
"Contrary to the popular image, Chinese localities vary
tremendously in their interactions with the global economy. In the
past two decades, Beijing has moved from pressing Chinese cities to
attract FDI at all costs to upgrading capacity through "indigenous"
innovation. Ling Chen gives a masterful account of the interaction
of local governments, firms, and vested international coalitions,
and why Beijing's new direction could be welcomed in some areas,
but not others."—Margaret M. Pearson, University of Maryland
"One of China's key challenges is managing the shift away from
export-led manufacturing toward more profitable, innovation-rich
industrial policies. Despite intense leadership attention,
implementation remains puzzlingly mixed at best. In this wonderful
book, Ling Chen takes us to the very nexus of this shift, arguing
that the size of locally-investing foreign firms influences and
reinforces coalitions of local bureaucrats, leading some locales to
foster and others to stifle these national policy
priorities."—Andrew Mertha, Cornell University
"In this thoroughly researched book, Chen (Johns Hopkins) presents
a fascinating case in a "globalized" era comprising a new
generation of emerging economies. The volume provides a nuanced and
convincing analysis of the nature of China's capitalism. The book
is of interest to students and scholars of China's political
economy, central-local relations in China, East Asian political
economy, and China studies in general."—X. Li, CHOICE
"Manipulating Globalizationcontributes to the best of subnational
research in the study of both China's political economy in
particular and social science generally. [Chen's] approach
contributes to growing concerns that the strategies producing
political compliance and economic success in one period have
serious consequences for subsequent stages of development,
especially for countries developing in the age of globalization,
where managing domestic and international firms presents additional
challenges."—Michael Thompson-Brusstar, H-Diplo
"Ling Chen has produced a well-researched and highly detailed
account of the ways in which, among other things, China's local
bureaucrats have responded to the incentives placed before them by
central policy-makers...The book certainly sheds further light on
the nature of Chinese capitalism and, more generally, the nature of
the developmental state. This type of research can really help us
better appreciate Chinese development."––Dylan Sutherland, The
China Quarterly
"Manipulating Globalization advances our understanding of
business-state relations, interest-group politics and industrial
policies in contemporary China. It should be on the reading list of
any scholar interested in these topics."—Yue Hou, Perspectives on
Politics
"By opening the black box of state and exploring the interaction
between government and businesses, Manipulating Globalization
advances our understanding of internal driving factors of economic
development in an authoritarian regime, which also provides a vivid
explanation for the dynamic state–market relationship. How an
emerging economy such as China integrates itself into a new
globalized world, while still preserving autonomous policies,
remains an appealing puzzle. Chen's book provides one feasible and
interesting explanation."—Wei Li, China International Strategy
Review
"Rich in its data, authoritative in its argumentation, thorough in
its investigation, and important in its findings about
globalization and structural economic transformation of China,
Chen's work constitutes an essential reading on Chinese political
economy."—Vasilis Trigkas, Pacific Affairs
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