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Institutions and Investments: Foreign Direct Investment in China during an Era of Reforms
Jun Fu
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As China continues to be heralded as a rising economic power, the need for an understanding of its institutional effects--such as investment-related policies, regulations, and laws--on foreign direct investment increases as well. Institutions and Investments employs interdisciplinary perspectives from economics, business, law, and political science to shed light on the interaction between institutional changes and investment patterns and to form a clear picture of investment behavior as China's legal and regulatory infrastructure has developed over the reform years.
Organized into three main parts, the book first discusses the evolution and nature of China's FDI regulatory framework. Part 2 examines the various modes and variant patterns of FDI in China in the reform years. Part 3's central task is to demonstrate a systematic link between institutional changes in China's FDI regulatory framework and the changing patterns of FDI. In conclusion, Jun Fu finds that China has made substantial progress from a command economy to a market system, but that it still has a long way to go before it truly attains a transparent and rule-based system.
This book adds new dimensions to the scholarship on China as a growing economic power and will be of particular interest to international economists, political scientists, and business scholars studying China.
Jun Fu is Associate Professor in the School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University.
Organized into three main parts, the book first discusses the evolution and nature of China's FDI regulatory framework. Part 2 examines the various modes and variant patterns of FDI in China in the reform years. Part 3's central task is to demonstrate a systematic link between institutional changes in China's FDI regulatory framework and the changing patterns of FDI. In conclusion, Jun Fu finds that China has made substantial progress from a command economy to a market system, but that it still has a long way to go before it truly attains a transparent and rule-based system.
This book adds new dimensions to the scholarship on China as a growing economic power and will be of particular interest to international economists, political scientists, and business scholars studying China.
Jun Fu is Associate Professor in the School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University.
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Cover
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Title
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Copyright
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Contents
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List of Maps, Tables, and Figures
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Abbreviations
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction and Synopsis
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PART I: INSTITUTIONS
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1. Evolution of China’s FDI Regulatory Framework
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2. International Perspectives
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PART II: INVESTMENTS
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3. Principal Modes of FDI in China
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4. Trends and Patterns of FDI
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PART III: EVIDENCE
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5. Politics of Taxation and High Demand for FDI
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6. Institutions Matter
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Conclusions
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References
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Index
Citable Link
Published: 2000
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
- 978-0-472-02686-9 (ebook)
- 978-0-472-11178-7 (hardcover)