Professor Yingyi Qian, the Fourth Dean of the Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management, recently published a book entitledHow Reform Worked in China: The Transition from Plan to Market. The book, which is published by MIT Press, draws on Professor Qian’s unique combination of up-close experience and theoretical perspective regarding the events in question. The book’s homepage summarizes the work as follows:
“As China has transformed itself from a centrally planned economy to a market economy, economists have tried to understand and interpret the success of Chinese reform. As the Chinese economist Yingyi Qian explains, there are two schools of thought on Chinese reform: the “School of Universal Principles,” which ascribes China's successful reform to the workings of the free market, and the “School of Chinese Characteristics,” which holds that China's reform is successful precisely because it did not follow the economics of the market but instead relied on the government. In this book, Qian offers a third perspective, taking certain elements from each school of thought but emphasizing not why reform worked but how it did. Economics is a science, but economic reform is applied science and engineering. To a practitioner, it is more useful to find a feasible reform path than the theoretically best way.
The key to understanding how reform has worked in China, Qian argues, is to consider the way reform designs respond to initial historical conditions and contemporary constraints. Qian examines the role of “transitional institutions”—not “best practice institutions” but “incentive-compatible institutions”—in Chinese reform; the dual-track approach to market liberalization; the ownership of firms, viewed both theoretically and empirically; government decentralization, offering and testing hypotheses about its link to local economic development; and the specific historical conditions of China's regional-based central planning.”
Having served as the Dean of Tsinghua SEM between 2006 and 2018, Yingi Qian is currently a Professor in the School’s Department of Economics, and a Distinguished Professor of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences at the University level. His profile is available here:http:/en/qianyy