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Opportunities and threats – will China manage its third transition?

Nachemson, Fanny LU (2014) NEKH01 20132
Department of Economics
Abstract (Swedish)
Last three decades, China has experienced a stunning economic development, which has transformed the whole county on various levels. Until now, China has followed investment and export led growth and has become the world’s largest manufacturer. However, under the veil of rapid growth, social and economic imbalances have emerged causing a number of serious challenges facing China. Moreover, the China’s export and investment boom is expected to fall due to declining marginal product of capital and less comparative advantages pointing at rising wages and increasing prices on land. The theory of the Solow model and other economists suggests increased innovation and consumption driven growth in order to rebalance the economy and move up in the... (More)
Last three decades, China has experienced a stunning economic development, which has transformed the whole county on various levels. Until now, China has followed investment and export led growth and has become the world’s largest manufacturer. However, under the veil of rapid growth, social and economic imbalances have emerged causing a number of serious challenges facing China. Moreover, the China’s export and investment boom is expected to fall due to declining marginal product of capital and less comparative advantages pointing at rising wages and increasing prices on land. The theory of the Solow model and other economists suggests increased innovation and consumption driven growth in order to rebalance the economy and move up in the value production chain. However, domestic and global challenges may cause a drag on economic growth and deter a modernization process of the Chinese society. Many eyes are watching and a demographical change with an ageing Chinese population imply a limited window of opportunity. Furthermore, Governance framed by ignorance, passiveness and instability will give rise to social and political unrest. China is a diverse, and separated country. There is no definite answer whether a modernization process will succeed. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Nachemson, Fanny LU
supervisor
organization
course
NEKH01 20132
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
China, Economic Development, Macroeconomics, Solow model
language
English
id
4300954
date added to LUP
2014-02-11 15:01:31
date last changed
2014-02-11 15:01:31
@misc{4300954,
  abstract     = {{Last three decades, China has experienced a stunning economic development, which has transformed the whole county on various levels. Until now, China has followed investment and export led growth and has become the world’s largest manufacturer. However, under the veil of rapid growth, social and economic imbalances have emerged causing a number of serious challenges facing China. Moreover, the China’s export and investment boom is expected to fall due to declining marginal product of capital and less comparative advantages pointing at rising wages and increasing prices on land. The theory of the Solow model and other economists suggests increased innovation and consumption driven growth in order to rebalance the economy and move up in the value production chain. However, domestic and global challenges may cause a drag on economic growth and deter a modernization process of the Chinese society. Many eyes are watching and a demographical change with an ageing Chinese population imply a limited window of opportunity. Furthermore, Governance framed by ignorance, passiveness and instability will give rise to social and political unrest. China is a diverse, and separated country. There is no definite answer whether a modernization process will succeed.}},
  author       = {{Nachemson, Fanny}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Opportunities and threats – will China manage its third transition?}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}