Publication | Closed Access
Selling China: Foreign Direct Investment during the Reform Era
704
Citations
112
References
2004
Year
Chinese Foreign PolicyInternational EconomicsChinese LawEast Asian StudiesEconomic DevelopmentTradeInternational InvestmentEconomic GrowthInternational FinanceYasheng HuangInternational BusinessReform EraChinese PoliticsForeign Direct InvestmentInternational ManagementEconomicsInternational Capital MarketLarge AbsorptionFinanceEconomic PolicyBusiness
In this book, Yasheng Huang makes a provocative claim: the large absorption of foreign direct investment (FDI) by China is a sign of some substantial weaknesses in the Chinese economy. The primary benefits associated with China's FDI inflows are concerned with the privatization functions supplied by foreign firms, venture capital provisions to credit-constrained private entrepreneurs, and promotion of interregional capital mobility. Huang argues that one should ask why domestic firms cannot supply the same functions. China's partial reforms, while successful in increasing the scope of the market, have so far failed to address many allocative inefficiencies in the Chinese economy.
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