
Contents
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Post-socialist transformation – the overview Post-socialist transformation – the overview
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Post-socialist transformation – the debate Post-socialist transformation – the debate
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Post-socialist transformation in China Post-socialist transformation in China
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China during the state-command period China during the state-command period
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China in the process of post-socialist transformation China in the process of post-socialist transformation
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Political reforms and the gradual path Political reforms and the gradual path
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Economic reforms Economic reforms
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The chronology The chronology
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The Chinese perspective The Chinese perspective
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Post-socialist transformation – the comparison Post-socialist transformation – the comparison
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The developmental exceptionality of China’s post-socialist transformation The developmental exceptionality of China’s post-socialist transformation
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Two Post-socialist transformation in China
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Published:November 2014
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Abstract
As it embraces around 25 percent of the human population, post-socialist transformation is by all means a process of historical significance. It is hardly possible to imagine complex and extensive systemic changes that equal those taking place in parts of Europe and Asia. The process is twofold in nature; from the political perspective, authoritarian regimes are being replaced by democracies and, from the socio-economic perspective, the systems are being transformed from centrally-planned economies to market economies. This chapter examines the process of post-socialist transformation. It begins with the analysis of the general theory and discusses the main threads of the debate on the modes of transformation in reference to the so-called Washington Consensus. This is followed by a detailed analysis of post-socialist transformation in China. It is argued that China is indeed a post-socialist state in the process of systemic reformulation. The examination concerns China's transformation's political and economic features, its chronology and various perspectives. It is compared with the processes in other post-socialist countries. Finally, the developmental exceptionality of China's transformation is illustrated using quantitative examination.
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