附註:Papers presented at a symposium held on Oct. 22-23, 1998 at the Center for Studies and Research on International Development in France.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
On the measurement of the openness of the Chinese economy / Jean-Louis Combes, Patrick Guillaumont and Sandra Poncet -- Social Consequences of economic reform in China: an analysis of regional disparity in the transition period / Justin Yifu Lin, Fang Cai and Zhou Li -- Provincial economic growth in China: causes and consequences of regional differentiation / Barry Naughton -- International trade and regional specialization in China / Jean-Francois Brun and Mary-Francoise Renard -- Productivity growth, catch-up and convergence in China's reforming economy / Yanrui Wu -- The impact of WTO accession on income disparity in China / Fan Zhai and Shantong Li -- Changes in income inequality in China's transition / Shi Li -- Infant mortality and external openness in Chinese provinces / Martine Audibert, Jacky Mathonnat and Ningshan Chen -- The regional distribution of foreign direct investment in China: the impact of human capital / Qiumei Yang -- Foreign direct investment, human capital and catching up: the Chinese case / Olivier Jammes -- Some observations on the ownership and regional aspects in financing the growth of China's rural enterprises / Wing Thye Woo -- Exports and economic performance: evidence from a panel of Chinese enterprises / Aart Kraay -- Real exchange rate and income disparity between urban and rural areas in China: a theoretical and econometric analysis / Sylvianne Guillaumont Jeanneney and Ping Hua.
摘要:In 20 years of reform in China, the key development has been the opening-up of the market to foreign trade and international investment. This increased economic openness has been accompanied by profound changes in both economic organization and regional disparity. This comprehensive work focuses on the link between these economic reforms and the causes - and ultimately the implications - of regional inequalities in the most populous country in the world. The authors examine the effect of globalization on regional disparities in terms of income, regional growth, industrial location, urban-rural.