Publication | Closed Access
Central–Local Relations in an Era of Fiscal Decline: The Paradox of Fiscal Decentralization in Post-Mao China
298
Citations
11
References
1991
Year
Fiscal IssueEast Asian StudiesEconomic DevelopmentLocal Economic DevelopmentChinese Fiscal SystemEconomic InstitutionsSocial SciencesFiscal Decentralization (Corporate Finance)Central–local RelationsPolitical EconomyChinese PoliticsFiscal PolicyPublic PolicyEconomicsPost-mao ChinaEconomic ReformEconomic LiberalizationFiscal DeclinePublic FinanceEconomic PolicyBusinessCentral ControlFiscal Decentralization (Public Finance)Proper BalancePolitical Science
Finding the proper balance between central control and local autonomy is a perennial problem in the Chinese economy, and the Chinese fiscal system has undergone numerous changes in central-provincial revenue-sharing arrangements since the 1950s. In the post-Mao period, fiscal decentralization began in 1980 under the slogan of “cooking in separate kitchens” ( fenzao chifan ), and a series of reforms was implemented to put local governments increasingly on a self-financing basis. However, this attempt to revamp the financial interaction between the central and provincial governments has been made immensely more complicated by rapid changes in the fiscal system and the shifting composition of revenues and expenditures brought by economic reform.
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