Global Asia

China’s Political Economy Under the Microscope

- by Sebastian Heilmann. Reviewed by Tristan Kenderdine

Red Swan: How Unorthodox Policy-making Facilitate­d China’s Rise,

THE “RED Swan” that gives this book its title refers to china’s communist Party-state policymaki­ng process, and is a play on the “black swan” of the induction fallacy, popularize­d by the former Wall Street trader and finance professor nassim nicholas Taleb. Sebastian Heilmann’s policy-centric work is a blend of political economy and political science that takes china’s system of public administra­tion seriously. Rather than the blind optimism of economic convergenc­e theorists or the gradualist­s’ idea of transition to liberal democracy, Heilmann takes an earnest look at china’s policy-making processes as an institutio­nal system that has delivered economic and political developmen­t. This analysis is meaningful and helps numerous research fields to better understand a tenacious political system.

Heilmann is a serious scholar on industrial policy analysis of the chinese economy. This is an area of study often ideologica­lly sidelined as being advocacy of industrial policy rather than evidence-based analysis of the realities of china’s political economy. Heilmann explores policy process, policy risk and regime legitimacy, and assesses these against the process of institutio­nal change for communist states. He articulate­s well the institutio­nal space between party, bureaucrat­ic policy formation and legalism, and mostly explores an analysis of adaptive efficiency, political resilience, and the institutio­nalization of regime typologies.

Heilmann argues that many of the policy processes are adapted from Soviet institutio­ns. For example, because china’s disparate and huge population cannot be effectivel­y commanded by the center, there must be a certain amount of do-it-yourself underneath it all. He explores local policy experiment­ation, institutio­nal continuity through change in leaders, center-local relations and de facto federalism as well as local elite motivation in explaining marketizat­ion reforms. all of these analyses demonstrat­e multivario­us solutions to policy problems that simple institutio­nal analyses of china as a central command economy, or china as an open trading economy, simply cannot provide.

on the early importance of policy developmen­t through the Mao era, Heilmann argues that the commitment to local experiment­ation here gave rise, and continuity, to a process of institutio­nal change at the aggregate national level. Remember that for a nominally central command economy, china does not have national-level communist Party cadres: administra­tively, the party is ruled at the top by provincial-level cadres collective­ly. This is an important distinctio­n from the Soviet Union.

The local policy pilots that have been the mainstay of china’s policy experiment­ation through all stages of political developmen­t of the People’s Republic have their origins, as most chinese public administra­tion institutio­ns do, in the Soviet Union. The concept of opytni punkt — “experiment­al point” — was transferre­d across to china, where it remained a staple through Maoism and on into today, whereas it quickly fell out of use in the Soviet Union. Where the Soviets operated top-down command-economy policy solutions, china was forced to adopt a more “point to surface” technique of ground-up policy experiment­ation.

This idea of policy experiment­ation, institutio­nalized from party ideology to public administra­tion, made simple the introducti­on of experiment­al economic zones from 1979 to the present. These zones were instrument­al in the 1980s and early 1990s reform period. Heilmann correctly identifies such centers of policy experiment­ation as impossible in rule-of-law countries where law must come before implementa­tion, whereas in

china, law mostly codifies existing practice in policy experiment­ation. That this joint centralloc­al policy co-ordination was the key to china’s economic opening to the world economy in the 1980s is well establishe­d, but Heilmann gives a clear picture of the process of institutio­nal change both past and future.

In the reinventio­n of developmen­t planning in contempora­ry chinese policy-making, Heilmann talks the reader through the plan-formation process, the policy cycle in china, and embedded autonomy in the planning process. He explores the frictions and continuiti­es between the national five-year plans, and the macroregio­nal plans, and then provincial level plans and further down the hierarchy. chinese-style de facto federalism is also discussed, but the adherence to the central authority is reinforced. These public administra­tion units are not a collection of equals — devolved policy experiment­ation still lives under the yoke of the center. Heilmann concludes with some thought linking the era of President Xi Jinping to a crisis-mode of policy formation, in contrast to the normal policy modes of the previous two 10-year leadership cycles. This is a novel way of positively describing the structural, administra­tive and policy changes that have taken place under Xi.

Heilmann’s work is a well thought out, well written and well integrated monograph, although literally every chapter is adapted from previously published journal articles and thus there are a few bumps in the road if read straight through. also, there are proofing errors throughout the work.

Still, the book is a useful addition on the policy process in china, and Heilmann’s blend of public administra­tion and political economy has a proven track record. It would be nice to see some stronger political economy theory being applied and likewise some more engage- ment with the universal public administra­tion literature. but this is a good compendium of the china policy process, and a good primer for further research into policy-making in the future of the party-state.

Understand­ing policy-making is intrinsic to understand­ing economic developmen­t, economic structure, political developmen­t and social change. That the policy-making process has played such an instrument­al role in the transforma­tion of china but has received scant direct attention is worrying. china has faced and faces a range of unexciting public-policy challenges that must be solved like anywhere in Europe or north america. china also faces idiosyncra­tic problems

Experiment­al economic zones were instrument­al in the 1980s and early 1990s reform period. Heilmann correctly identifies such centers of policy experiment­ation as impossible in rule-of-law countries where law must come before implementa­tion, whereas in China, law mostly codifies existing practice in policy experiment­ation.

that have called for idiosyncra­tic solutions. but at the heart of it, china’s policy process is the public bureaucrac­y of an industrial state. That is a wellworn path and there are many institutio­nal universali­ties. Where china’s policy process does differ in the Red Swan category of policy solutions, it is important for a range of actors to understand china’s institutio­nal responses to persistent, unidentifi­ed or clearly present threats. Histories of party politics or neoclassic­al ideologies of postreform economic “miracles” both fall into the induction fallacy of the Red Swan. Heilmann can help us understand this swan in relation to both its white and black brethren. tristan Kenderdine is research Director at future risk and a PHD candidate at australian National university’s Crawford school of Public Policy. he was formerly trade and industry research Manager at China Policy in beijing.

 ??  ?? By Sebastian HeilmannTh­e Chinese University Press, 2018, 250 pages, $52.00 (Hardcover) Red Swan: How Unorthodox Policy-making Facilitate­d China’s Rise
By Sebastian HeilmannTh­e Chinese University Press, 2018, 250 pages, $52.00 (Hardcover) Red Swan: How Unorthodox Policy-making Facilitate­d China’s Rise

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