About CID
About CID
CID People
CID People
CID Events
CID Events
Research
Research
Student Programs
Student Programs
Publications
Publications
Research Datasets
Research Datasets
Resources
Resources
CID Home
CID Home
About CID
About CID
Contact Information
Contact Information
Supporting CID
Supporting CID
CID Flyers & Brochure
CID Flyers & Brochure
CID In the News
CID In the News
Stay Informed
Stay Informed
Visitor Information
Visitor Information
CID Site Map
CID Site Map
CID Director
CID Director
CID Executive Director
CID Executive Director
Steering Committee
Steering Committee
Executive Committee
Executive Committee
Faculty Associates
Faculty Associates
Research Fellows & Associates
Research Fellows & Associates
CID Staff
CID Staff
KSG Directory
KSG Directory
Event Calendar
Event Calendar
CID Seminar Series
CID Seminar Series
Past Events
Past Events
Stay Informed
Stay Informed
Explore CID Research
Explore CID Research
Growth Lab
Growth Lab
Mexico Program
Mexico Program
Micro-Development
Micro-Development
Political Economy of Religion
Political Economy of Religion
Remittances & Migration
Remittances & Migration
Sustainability Science
Sustainability Science
Student Research Projects
Student Research Projects
Research Archive
Research Archive
Student Programs
Student Programs
Graduate Students
Graduate Students
Undergraduate Students
Undergraduate Students
ID Study Guide
ID Study Guide
Funding Opportunities
Funding Opportunities
MPA/ID Program
MPA/ID Program
Working Papers Series
Working Papers Series
Annual Brochure & Flyers
Annual Brochure
Affiliated Publications
Affiliated Publications
Publication Archive
Publication Archive
CID Datasets
CID Datasets
Online Datasets
Online Datasets
Data Products
Data Products
International Statistical Sites
International Statistical Sites
National Statistical Offices
National Statistical Offices
Other Internet Data Resources
Other Internet Data Resources
Useful Resources
Useful Resources
Global Trade Negotiations
Global Trade Negotiations
Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD)
Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD)
Quadir Prize
Quadir Prize
RISE-Pakistan
RISE-Pakistan
Job Opportunities at CID
About CID
About CID
About CID
CID Site Map
CID Site Map
Return to CID Home
Return to CID Home

CID Working Paper No. 172, June 2008

Experimentation under Hierarchy: Policy Experiments in the Reorganization of China’s State Sector, 1978-2008

Sebastian Heilmann

Abstract 

The reorganization of China’s state-controlled enterprises after 1978 was subject to strong political inertia and opposition. Powerful vested interests and ideological concerns stood in the way of transformative change. Against this background, one central puzzle in China’s restructuring efforts lies in how policymakers managed to overcome these constraints and to promote new policies and institutions that changed the rules of the game.

The Chinese experience demonstrates how a succession of policy experiments can drive the generation of restructuring measures and transform basic policy parameters. From 1978 to the mid-1990s, recurrent rounds of experimentation under hierarchy (a process of policy generation that legitimizes local initiative while maintaining ultimate hierarchical control) resulted in protracted policy tinkering with bureaucratic and financial incentives or formal corporate reorganization, yet without touching the politically protected and financially privileged status of the state-owned enterprises in the economy. Incremental reforms minimized political conflict and social disruption but did not eliminate the misallocation of resources and therefore may be judged as wasteful in narrow economic efficiency terms.

Yet, seen from the perspective of policy learning, the contribution of experimental tinkering to transforming the policymaking context of local and central decision-makers was essential. It provided test-runs for novel administrative and business practices, initiated behavioral and attitudinal changes among state managers and bureaucrats, and thereby undermined entrenched ideologies and interests. Experimentation resulted in serial, and cumulatively radical, redefinitions of the policy parameters for economic activity and prepared the ground for broad reform departures that were finally triggered by transnational push factors such as the Asian Financial Crisis and the WTO accession negotiations.

Keywords: experimentation, China, state enterprises, restructuring, economic policy-making

JEL codes: D72, D73, N45, P31

Download the paper in PDF format

_______________________________________________________________

Back to CID Working Papers page


Direct site comments or questions to CID's Webmaster.
Copyright © 2008 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.