Private Sector in Public Office

£31.00

Private Sector in Public Office

Selective Property Rights in China

Asian history Sociology Comparative politics International economics Political economy International business

Author: Yue Hou

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Collection: Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics

Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 5th September 2019

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 3 Mb

ISBN: 9781108758024


Overview

This book addresses the long-standing puzzle of how China’s private sector manages to grow without secure property rights, and proposes a new theory of selective property rights to explain this phenomenon. Drawing on rich empirical evidence including in-depth interviews, a unique national survey of private entrepreneurs, two original national audit experiments and secondary sources, Professor Yue Hou shows that private entrepreneurs in China actively seek opportunities within formal institutions to advance their business interests.

Key Strategies

By securing seats in the local legislatures, entrepreneurs use their political capital to deter local officials from demanding bribes, ad hoc taxes, and other types of informal payments. In doing so they create a system of selective, individualized, and predictable property rights.

Significance

This system of selective property rights is key to understanding the private sector growth in the absence of the rule of law.

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