Syllabus China Lecture0LGWHUP ([DP 3DUW 7ZR &RQWHPSRUDU\ ,VVXHV 1R &ODVV +XPDQ &DSLWDO 7KH...
Transcript of Syllabus China Lecture0LGWHUP ([DP 3DUW 7ZR &RQWHPSRUDU\ ,VVXHV 1R &ODVV +XPDQ &DSLWDO 7KH...
Clair Yang
The Jackson School of International Studies
University of Washington
Email: [email protected]
Office: Thomson Hall 218
Class Time: Tuesday and Thursday, 9:30 – 11:00 am, THO 134
Final Exam: Wednesday, Mar 20, 10:30 – 12:20 pm, THO 134
Office Hour: Monday, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Course Syllabus JSIS 484 Wi 2019
Political Economy of China
Course Description and Objectives: The past few decades have seen China increasingly rising as a political as well as
economic superpower. Some economists have predicted China to surpass the United
States as the world’s largest economy sometime over the next 50 years. Given its unique
scale, China’s global footprint is already considerable. To become an active participant in
today’s world requires a basic understanding of the county and the broader Asia-Pacific
region.
The course is organized into two broad segments: 1) The history of China and the Chinese
Economic Miracle since 1978; 2) contemporary issues. This first part will only capture the
key periods and turning points in historical China, which is necessary for understanding
how historical institutions continue to shape the economy today. The course’s primary
focus will be on the Chinese economic takeoff since 1978 and contemporary issues, with
an emphasis on political economy and cross-country comparisons.
The evaluation of the course will depend on class participation, an in-class presentation of
a starred paper, a midterm exam, and a final exam or a final project.
Assessment and Logistics
Grading:
30% Midterm exam
40% Final exam or final project
15% In-class presentation of a starred paper (20-min)
15% Homework and class participation
Homework assignments:
Each week I will post homework assignments on Canvas related to the reading assignments.
Students should bring their typewritten answers to class and hand them in at the end of the class.
The assignments will not be graded, but will be part of the participation grades. We will also
discuss the questions in class and similar questions will appear on the exams.
Exams:
There will be two exams, each covering approximately one-half of the course materials. The
exams will be in class, closed-book, and take approximately one hour and a half. Exam one will
be held in session 10, covering material from sessions 1 to 9. The final exam will be held
during the final exam week, covering material from sessions 11 to 19. The dates of the exams
are listed below in the Course Outline Table. Please make sure you can attend the exams as
they cannot be re-scheduled and no alternative test could be offered.
The midterm exam is required for everyone, while the final exam is optional. Students could
choose between taking the final exam or writing a final paper. The paper must be on a
contemporary economic issue of China. Students who want to write the final paper must decide
about their topic and obtain the instructor’s consent no later than week 3. Those who fail to do
so will be taking the final exam by default. The final paper could either take the form of a
literature review or a research proposal. There is no page limits. Students that choose to write
the final paper should also prepare for a 10 to 15-minute in class presentation on the last day of
the class. The final essay should be emailed to the instructor electronically no later than the last
day of class. Hard copies are appreciated.
Honor Code:
Any cases of cheating on tests (which includes allowing others to copy your work) or
plagiarism will be referred to the University Disciplinary Committee. All of your homework
answers must be in your own words, with citations from the reading materials highlighted
appropriately. Here is a link to information about expected student conduct and plagiarism:
https://depts.washington.edu/grading/pdf/AcademicResponsibility.pdf
All students taking this class automatically give the instructor consent to check their work for
plagiarism. This class does not tolerate plagiarism. You will fail the class if your work is not
your own.
Course Outline
The schedule is subject to change. Changes made after the school starts will be announced in class and on Canvas.
Lecture Topic Contents
Part One: Historical Background and the Chinese Economic Miracle
1 Introduction Course overview 2 The Origin of Institutions The origin of the Chinese civilization; geography
and economic endowments; the transition from feudal system to centralized bureaucracy;
3 The Great Divergence The Han dynasty and government interventions in private sectors; the great divergence; from divergence to convergence
4 The Chinese Economic Reforms (1) Early communist China; The Economic Reform of 1979; the three stages of reforms; household responsibility system; SOE restructuring; WTO and the rise of export;
5 The Chinese Economic Reforms (2)
Reform since 2000s; market approach vs. ownership approach; evaluating policies; student presentations
6 Growth Theory
The Solow Growth Model; The source of growth of Chinese economy; Overview of China’s economic growth; China compared to other East Asian countries; global regional comparisons
7 The Political Incentives of Growth (1): Federalism
Federalism vs. Centralization; policy experimentation;
8 The Political Incentives of Growth (2): The Bureaucracy
Motivating bureaucrats; promotional incentives and GDP growth;
9 Industrial Policies and the Role of Government
The East Asian developmental model; evolution of industrial policies in China; investment in infrastructure; the state sector and SOEs
10 Midterm Exam Part Two: Contemporary Issues 11 No Class 12 Human Capital The “demographic dividend”; health and
education; characteristics of the internal labor market; problem of an aging population
13 Social Welfare, Inequality, Corruption Social welfare in China; the urban-rural inequality; the issue of Corruption; urbanization; the Hukou system; the problem of an aging population; environmental issues; sustainable growth
14 International Trade I The benefits of trade; trends in international trade; trade integration of the East Asia region;
15 International Trade II China and world trade governance; WTO; US-China trade war
16 The Domestic Financial Market Composition of the financial market; the capital market; the banking system and private sector; financial repression; financial reforms; basics of financial crisis
17 International Finance Exchange rate and foreign reserve; China’s reform towards global financial integration; RMB as a global reserve currency
18 Innovation (Final paper due)
Innovation in developing countries; intellectual property right protection in China; Made in China 2025
19 Predicting China’s Growth The Chinese real estate; the fiscal expansion since 2008; the slow-down of the economy; the issue of government debt; the need for structure change;
20 Student presentation for final paper
Reading List: This is a tentative reading list. Final version of the reading list will be provided on Canvas
in the first week of class. Papers under “Required Reading” are to be discussed in class, and
students are expected to read them before each class. Papers under “Additional Reading” are
not required but are recommended for further research on the relevant topics. Papers marked
with a * are available for student presentation.
Journal articles are available online through the UW Library E-Journal collection or by clicking
the links provided in this syllabus. There are two required books for the class:
Kroeber, Arthur R. China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know®. Oxford University Press, 2016.
Prasad, Eswar S. Gaining Currency: the Rise of the Renminbi. Oxford University Press, 2016.
Both of the books are accessible electronically through the UW library using your UW NetID.
Physical copies of the books are also available for purchase online. Additional readings will be
available on Canvas.
Part I: Historical Backgrounds and The Chinese Economic Miracle
1. Introduction and Course Overview
2. The Origin of Institutions
Required Reading:
North, D. C., & Weingast, B. R. (1989). Constitutions and commitment: the evolution of institutions
governing public choice in seventeenth-century England. The journal of economic history, 49(04), 803-
832.
3. The Great Divergence
Required Reading:
Brandt, Loren, Debin Ma, and Thomas G. Rawski. "From divergence to convergence: reevaluating the
history behind China's economic boom." Journal of Economic Literature 52, no. 1 (2014): 45-123.
4. The Chinese Economic Reforms (1)
Required Reading:
Perkins, Dwight H. East Asian Development. Harvard University Press, 2013. Chapter 5: From
Command to Market Economy in China and Vietnam.
5. The Chinese Economic Reforms (2)
Required Reading:
*Huang, Yasheng. "How did China take off?" The Journal of Economic Perspectives 26, no. 4 (2012):
147-170.
*Lin, Justin Yifu. "Rural reforms and agricultural growth in China." The American economic review
(1992): 34-51.
Economist, “The Mixed Legacy of Zhu Rongji, China’s outgoing prime minister.” (2003)
6. Growth Theory
Additional Reading:
Commission on Growth and Development at the World Bank. "The growth report: Strategies for
sustained growth and inclusive development." Washington, DC (2008). (Overview, Page 1-12; Part 1,
Page 17-31)
7. Political Incentives of Growth (1): Federalism
Required Reading:
*Montinola, G., Qian, Y., & Weingast, B. R. (1995). Federalism, Chinese style: the political basis for
economic success in China. World politics, 48(01), 50-81.
*Lü, X., & Landry, P. F. (2014). Show me the money: Inter-jurisdiction political competition and fiscal
extraction in China. American Political Science Review, 108(3), 706-722.
8. Political Incentives of Growth (2): Bureaucratic Control
Required Reading:
Alesina, A., & Tabellini, G. (2007). Bureaucrats or politicians? Part I: a single policy task. The American
Economic Review, 97(1), 169-179. (skim the theory part)
*Li, Hongbin and Li-An Zhou, 2005. "Political Turnover and Economic Performance: The Incentive Role
of Personal Control in China." Journal of Public Economics, 89(9-10), pp. 1743-1762.
*Xu, Chenggang, “The Fundamental Institutions of China’s Reforms and Development,” The Journal of
Economic Literature, 2011, 49:4, 1076-1151.
*Blanchard, O., & Shleifer, A. (2001). Federalism with and without Political Centralization: China Versus
Russia. IMF Staff Papers, 171-179.
Kroeber, Arthur R. China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know®. Oxford University Press, 2016.
Chapter 6: The Fiscal System and Central-Local Government Relations.
9. Industrial Policies and the Role of Government
Required Reading:
Kroeber, Arthur R. China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know®. Oxford University Press, 2016.
Chapter 3: Industry and the Rise of the Export Economy.
Chapter 4: Urbanization and Infrastructure, part II, page 83-86.
Chapter 5: The Enterprise System.
Additional Reading:
Li-wen Lin and Curtis Milhaupt, “We Are the (National) Champions,” Stanford Law Review, Vol 67, April
2013, pp. 697-760. http://www.stanfordlawreview.org/wp-
content/uploads/sites/3/2013/05/Lin__Milhaupt_65_Stan._L._Rev._697.pdf
10. Midterm Exam
Part II: Contemporary Issues
11. Human Capital
Required Reading:
Kroeber, Arthur R. China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know®. Oxford University Press, 2016.
Chapter 9: Demographics and the Labor Market.
* Hannum, Emily, Jere Behrman, Meiyan Wang, and Jihong Liu. "Education in the reform era." China’s
great economic transformation (2008): 215-49.
12. Social Welfare and Inequality
Required Reading:
Kroeber, Arthur R. China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know®. Oxford University Press, 2016.
Chapter 11: the social compact – inequality and corruption.
Chapter 4: urbanization and infrastructure, part I, page 67-83.
*Chan, Kam Wing. "Children of migrants in China in the twenty-first century: trends, living
arrangements, age-gender structure, and geography".
Additional Reading:
Chan, Kam Wing. "Migration and development in China: Trends, geography and current
issues." Migration and Development 1.2 (2012): 187-205.
Huang, Xian. "Four worlds of welfare: Understanding subnational variation in Chinese social health
insurance." The China Quarterly. 222 (2015): 449-474.
Benjamin, Dwayne, Loren Brandt, John Giles, and Sangui Wang. "Income inequality during China’s
economic transition." China’s great economic transformation (2008): 729-75.
13. International Trade I
Required Reading:
* Athukorala, Prema-chandra (2013). “Global production sharing and trade patterns in East Asia,”
Chapter 13, Kaur and Singh, eds., Oxford Handbook of the Economics of the Pacific.
Additional Reading:
Athukorala, Prema-chandra (2013). “The political economy of Asia-pacific trade agreements,” Chapter
12, Kaur and Singh, eds., Oxford Handbook of the Economics of the Pacific.
W. Brian Arthur, “Increasing Returns and the New World of Business,” Harvard Business Review, July
1996, p.1-10
14. International Trade II
Required Reading:
*Mark Wu, “The ‘China, Inc.’ Challenge to Global Trade Governance,” Harvard Journal of International
Law, Vol. 57, No. 2, Spring 2016, pp. 261-324. Part II: page 284 – 324. Available at:
http://www.harvardilj.org/wp-content/uploads/HLI210_crop.pdf
* Branstetter, Lee, and Nicholas Lardy. China's embrace of globalization. No. w12373. National Bureau
of Economic Research, 2006. Part II, China’s WTO accession agreement and its implementation, page
649-677.
Additional Reading:
Athukorala, Prema-chandra (2013). “The political economy of Asia-pacific trade agreements,” Chapter
12, Kaur and Singh, eds., Oxford Handbook of the Economics of the Pacific.
Gregory Shaffer and Henry Gao, “China’s Rise: How It Took on the US at the WTO.” University of
Illinois Law Review, Spring 2018, pp. 116-184. Available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2937965
15. The Domestic Financial Market
Required Reading:
* Allen, Franklin, Jun Qian, and Meijun Qian. "Law, finance, and economic growth in China." Journal of
financial economics 77, no. 1 (2005): 57-116.
Kroeber, Arthur R. China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know®. Oxford University Press, 2016.
Chapter 7: The Financial System. Part I. Page 128-141.
Additional Reading:
Song, Z., Storesletten, K., & Zilibotti, F. (2011). Growing like china. The American Economic Review,
101(1), 196-233.
Bai, Chong-En, Chang-tai Hsieh and Yingyi Qian, "The Return to Capital in China", Brookings Papers on
Economic Activity, 2006, No.2, pp. 61-101.
16. International Finance
Required Reading:
Prasad, Eswar S. Gaining currency: the rise of the renminbi. Oxford University Press, 2016. Chapter 2:
Currency Concepts. Chapter 6: Reserve Currency.
Baniya, Suprabha; Rocha Gaffurri, Nadia Patrizia; Ruta, Michele. 2019. Trade Effects of the New Silk
Road: A Gravity Analysis. World Bank Policy Research working paper; no. WPS 8694.
Additional Reading:
Prasad, Eswar S. Gaining currency: the rise of the renminbi. Oxford University Press, 2016. Chapter 9:
Rising global influence.
[News] IMF Adds Chinese Renminbi to Special Drawing Rights Basket,
https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2016/09/29/AM16-NA093016IMF-Adds-Chinese-Renminbi-to-
Special-Drawing-Rights-Basket
John Hurley, Scott Morris, and Gailyn Portelance, Examining the Debt Implications of the Belt and Road
Initiative from a Policy Perspective. Center for Global Development Policy Paper 121. March
2018. https://www.cgdev.org/sites/default/files/examining-debt-implications-belt-and-road-initiative-
policy-perspective.pdf
17. Innovation
Required Reading:
* Chen, Y., & Puttitanun, T. (2005). Intellectual property rights and innovation in developing countries.
Journal of development economics, 78(2), 474-493. (Introduction only)
* Wei, S. J., Xie, Z., & Zhang, X. (2017). From “Made in China” to “Innovated in China”: Necessity,
Prospect, and Challenges. The Journal of Economic Perspectives.
Recommended Reading:
McKinsey report, the China effect on global innovation, 2015
Antràs, P., Garicano, L., & Rossi-Hansberg, E. (2006). Offshoring in a Knowledge Economy. The
Quarterly Journal of Economics, 31-77.
Hsieh, Chang-Tai, and Peter J. Klenow. "Misallocation and manufacturing TFP in China and India." The
Quarterly journal of economics 124.4 (2009): 1403-1448.
* Hu, Albert GZ, and Gary H. Jefferson. "FDI impact and spillover: evidence from China's electronic and
textile industries." The World Economy 25.8 (2002): 1063-1076.
Qian, Yi. "Impacts of entry by counterfeiters." The Quarterly Journal of Economics 123.4 (2008): 1577-
1609.
18. Predicting China’s Growth
Required Reading:
Kroeber, Arthur R. China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know®. Oxford University Press, 2016.
Chapter 12: changing the growth model.
*Li, Hongbin, et al. "Human Capital and China's Future Growth." The Journal of Economic
Perspectives 31.1 (2017): 25-47.
*Perkins, Dwight H., and Thomas G. Rawski. "Forecasting China’s economic growth to 2025." China’s
great economic transformation (2008): 829-86.
*Bai, C. E., Hsieh, C. T., & Song, Z. M. (2016). The Long Shadow of a Fiscal Expansion (No. w22801).
National Bureau of Economic Research.
Additional Reading
Glaeser, E., Huang, W., Ma, Y., & Shleifer, A. (2017). A real estate boom with Chinese Characteristics.
The Journal of Economic Perspectives, 31(1), 93-116.
Prasad, Eswar S. Gaining currency: the rise of the renminbi. Oxford University Press, 2016. Chapter 8:
the house of cards.
Bloomberg News, China's Next Debt Bomb Is an Aging Population,
[https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-02-05/china-s-next-debt-bomb-is-an-aging-
population]