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China: Searching for a New Development Modal

In: Moving Toward A New Development Model For East Asia-The Role of Domestic Policy and Regional Cooperation

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  • Sun Xuegong

Abstract

The high growth in over the past three decades has lifted China into the ranks of the high middle income countries. However, China’s path to becoming high income country is still rife with many new challenges in economic, social and environment fronts. Many factors that supported past high growth, such as exports, and abundant labor and capital supply will begin to exert an opposite effect, slowing growth. And China’s growth is increasingly constrained by rising social and environmental tensions. Faced with new challenges, China needs to search for new approaches to development. The key components of the new approach may include: coordinated social and economic development strategies, an innovation-centered industrial restructuring strategy, a consumption-centered domestic demand-boosting strategy, a migrant worker-centered urbanization strategy, a resource-aware and environmentally sustainable strategy, and a balance- centered external economic strategy. To turn to begin this new approach to development, China needs to push further reform in key areas.

Suggested Citation

  • Sun Xuegong, . "China: Searching for a New Development Modal," Chapters, in: Zhang Yunling & Fukunari Kimura & Sothea Oum (ed.), Moving Toward A New Development Model For East Asia-The Role of Domestic Policy and Regional Cooperation, chapter 5, pages 159-190, Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia (ERIA).
  • Handle: RePEc:era:chaptr:2011-rpr-10-05
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    File URL: http://www.eria.org/RPR_FY2011_No.10_Chapter_5.pdf
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    3. Theodore H. Moran & Edward M. Graham & Magnus Blomstrom, 2005. "Does Foreign Direct Investment Promote Development?," Peterson Institute Press: All Books, Peterson Institute for International Economics, number 3810, January.
    4. Tomoyuki Fukumoto & Ichiro Muto, 2012. "Rebalancing China's Economic Growth: Some Insights from Japan's Experience," China & World Economy, Institute of World Economics and Politics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, vol. 20(1), pages 62-82, January.
    5. Dew, Ed & Martin, Jeremy & Giese, Julia & Zinna, Gabriele, 2011. "China's changing growth pattern," Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, Bank of England, vol. 51(1), pages 49-56.
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