Sugar Coated Bullets: Corruption and the New Economic Order in China

The recent political debate concerning the influence of corruption on the “new economic order” in the People's Republic of China is unique not only for its detailed and public manifestations, but also because it works around the acceptance of some degree of corporate private ownership of the me...

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Main Authors: FINDLAY, Mark, CHIU, Thomas Chor-Wing
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 1989
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2052
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/4004/viewcontent/SugarCoatedBulletsChina_1989_CC.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sol_research-40042017-05-22T07:51:17Z Sugar Coated Bullets: Corruption and the New Economic Order in China FINDLAY, Mark CHIU, Thomas Chor-Wing The recent political debate concerning the influence of corruption on the “new economic order” in the People's Republic of China is unique not only for its detailed and public manifestations, but also because it works around the acceptance of some degree of corporate private ownership of the means of production within China. The concern for corruption in Chinese government and commerce is not, of itself, novel.We prefer in this paper briefly to focus on the economic and political environment from within which this concern has been generated, to comment on the significance for the Government of the PRC in associating the pall of corruption with the undermining of more capitalist economic reform, and then to examine how the legal definitions and controls on corruption have been transformed to complement a new political agenda. Associated with this, it has been necessary to advance some rather tentative predictions concerning the development of new anti-corruption initiatives in the PRC, their justifications, and pressures on the economic transition which is said to be corruption generative.Speculation about the future face of economic corruption in China is of limited value when one is interested in questions of regulation and control. As the definition, indication and interpretation of corruption is a political process which may pay little regard to realistic indicators, so too the creation of control initiatives may not be dependent on predictions of actual developments in graft. We have endeavoured to show that recent regulatory programmes in the PRC themselves indicate much about the commercial contradictions that underly the new economic order, as well as evidencing the socio-legal dilemmas inherent in anti-corruption official discourse. 1989-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2052 info:doi/10.1007/BF00729634 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/4004/viewcontent/SugarCoatedBulletsChina_1989_CC.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Corruption China government economic reform economic corruption Asian Studies Law and Economics Law and Society
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Corruption
China
government
economic reform
economic corruption
Asian Studies
Law and Economics
Law and Society
spellingShingle Corruption
China
government
economic reform
economic corruption
Asian Studies
Law and Economics
Law and Society
FINDLAY, Mark
CHIU, Thomas Chor-Wing
Sugar Coated Bullets: Corruption and the New Economic Order in China
description The recent political debate concerning the influence of corruption on the “new economic order” in the People's Republic of China is unique not only for its detailed and public manifestations, but also because it works around the acceptance of some degree of corporate private ownership of the means of production within China. The concern for corruption in Chinese government and commerce is not, of itself, novel.We prefer in this paper briefly to focus on the economic and political environment from within which this concern has been generated, to comment on the significance for the Government of the PRC in associating the pall of corruption with the undermining of more capitalist economic reform, and then to examine how the legal definitions and controls on corruption have been transformed to complement a new political agenda. Associated with this, it has been necessary to advance some rather tentative predictions concerning the development of new anti-corruption initiatives in the PRC, their justifications, and pressures on the economic transition which is said to be corruption generative.Speculation about the future face of economic corruption in China is of limited value when one is interested in questions of regulation and control. As the definition, indication and interpretation of corruption is a political process which may pay little regard to realistic indicators, so too the creation of control initiatives may not be dependent on predictions of actual developments in graft. We have endeavoured to show that recent regulatory programmes in the PRC themselves indicate much about the commercial contradictions that underly the new economic order, as well as evidencing the socio-legal dilemmas inherent in anti-corruption official discourse.
format text
author FINDLAY, Mark
CHIU, Thomas Chor-Wing
author_facet FINDLAY, Mark
CHIU, Thomas Chor-Wing
author_sort FINDLAY, Mark
title Sugar Coated Bullets: Corruption and the New Economic Order in China
title_short Sugar Coated Bullets: Corruption and the New Economic Order in China
title_full Sugar Coated Bullets: Corruption and the New Economic Order in China
title_fullStr Sugar Coated Bullets: Corruption and the New Economic Order in China
title_full_unstemmed Sugar Coated Bullets: Corruption and the New Economic Order in China
title_sort sugar coated bullets: corruption and the new economic order in china
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 1989
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2052
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/4004/viewcontent/SugarCoatedBulletsChina_1989_CC.pdf
_version_ 1772829624579915776