The End of the Beijing Consensus

Can China’s Model of Authoritarian Growth Survive?
Author:Yang Yao via

Since China began undertaking economic reforms in 1978, its economy has grown at a rate of nearly ten percent a year, and its per-capita GDP is now twelve times greater than it was three decades ago. Many analysts attribute the country’s economic success to its unconventional approach to economic policy — a combination of mixed ownership, basic property rights, and heavy government intervention. Time magazine’s former foreign editor, Joshua Cooper Ramo, has even given it a name: the Beijing consensus.

But, in fact, over the last 30 years, the Chinese economy has moved unmistakably toward the market doctrines of neoclassical economics, with an emphasis on prudent fiscal policy, economic openness, privatization, market liberalization, and the protection of private property. Beijing has been extremely cautious in maintaining a balanced budget and keeping inflation down. Purely redistributive programs have been kept to a minimum, and central government transfers have been primarily limited to infrastructure spending. The overall tax burden (measured by the ratio of tax revenue to GDP) is in the range of 20 to 25 percent. The country is the world’s second-largest recipient of foreign direct investment, and domestically, more than 80 percent of its state-owned enterprises have been released to private hands or transformed into publicly listed companies. Since the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) lacks legitimacy in the classic democratic sense, it has been forced to seek performance-based legitimacy instead, by continuously improving the living standards of Chinese citizens. So far, this strategy has succeeded, but there are signs that it will not last because of the growing income inequality and the internal and external imbalances it has created.
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The fastest railway, 100 metres per second

High-speed railway from Zhengzhou to Xi’an got a successful trial run. “Harmony” high-speed train took 1 hour and 48 minutes on this trip, and fastest speed is 352km/h, which means the train runs almost 100 metres per second.

A Landscape of Zhangjiajie is renamed Hallelujah Mountain

Nantianyizhu in Zhangjiajie is renamed Hallelujah Mountain which is famous of 《Avatar》. The float mountain in “Pandora’s Planet” of 《Avatar》 is made from Nantianyizhu is Zhangjiajie mountains.


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A Shanghai-Chinese woman was stabbed to death in New York

January 26, Chinese communities in the United States Flushing, New York area, the police removed a Shanghai-Chinese woman who was stabbed to death from the crime scene.
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The biggest scandal of China history:Football corruption case

Chinese soccer storm sweeping anti-illegal gambling has pointed to the highest officials of China Football Association. Nan Yong who is Vice-Chairman of China Football Association has recently been detained criminally by the Liaoning-Shenyang 8.25 team which is responsible for Gambling, and he was detained along with another full-time Vice-Chairman Yang Yimin, as well as a soccer referee Zhang JianQiang who is in charge of refereeing.

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