Economic liberalisation: How the early “democratisation” is prolonging the rule of the Communist Party
(2009) STVK01 20091Department of Political Science
- Abstract
- China is an extraordinary country; in the last 30 years the economic development has moved forward in an almost impossibly high and even speed. The GDP has grown with an annual average of ten percent and placed the Chinese economy among the top three largest economies in the world. But while the economic development keep racing ahead, the democratic development has slowed down and is now standing still. This is something that should be impossible according the belief of many of political scientists, as it, according to modernisation theory, is an inevitability that economic development leads to democracy. So why does this not happening in Mainland China?
In this paper the supposed correlation between these two variables is examined closer... (More) - China is an extraordinary country; in the last 30 years the economic development has moved forward in an almost impossibly high and even speed. The GDP has grown with an annual average of ten percent and placed the Chinese economy among the top three largest economies in the world. But while the economic development keep racing ahead, the democratic development has slowed down and is now standing still. This is something that should be impossible according the belief of many of political scientists, as it, according to modernisation theory, is an inevitability that economic development leads to democracy. So why does this not happening in Mainland China?
In this paper the supposed correlation between these two variables is examined closer by studying process between the cause and the supposed effect, or rather between economic development and democratisation. By looking at this it is revealed that it is not the economic development that that caused the previous liberalisation in China instead it is the previous liberalisation that is causing the economical growth and development. Hence making liberalisation, or the so-called democratisation, appear to be the independent variable and the economic development the dependent one in the correlation. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/1459273
- author
- Ahlner, Katarina LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- STVK01 20091
- year
- 2009
- type
- M2 - Bachelor Degree
- subject
- keywords
- Economic Development, Democratic Development, Liberalisation, Modernisation theory, China
- language
- English
- id
- 1459273
- date added to LUP
- 2009-09-21 08:23:13
- date last changed
- 2009-09-21 08:23:13
@misc{1459273, abstract = {{China is an extraordinary country; in the last 30 years the economic development has moved forward in an almost impossibly high and even speed. The GDP has grown with an annual average of ten percent and placed the Chinese economy among the top three largest economies in the world. But while the economic development keep racing ahead, the democratic development has slowed down and is now standing still. This is something that should be impossible according the belief of many of political scientists, as it, according to modernisation theory, is an inevitability that economic development leads to democracy. So why does this not happening in Mainland China? In this paper the supposed correlation between these two variables is examined closer by studying process between the cause and the supposed effect, or rather between economic development and democratisation. By looking at this it is revealed that it is not the economic development that that caused the previous liberalisation in China instead it is the previous liberalisation that is causing the economical growth and development. Hence making liberalisation, or the so-called democratisation, appear to be the independent variable and the economic development the dependent one in the correlation.}}, author = {{Ahlner, Katarina}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Economic liberalisation: How the early “democratisation” is prolonging the rule of the Communist Party}}, year = {{2009}}, }