Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T20:59:10.754Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Shifting Fiscal Control to Limit Cadre Power in China's Townships and Villages*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 October 2012

Jean C. Oi*
Affiliation:
Stanford University.
Kim Singer Babiarz
Affiliation:
University of California, Davis.
Linxiu Zhang
Affiliation:
Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Renfu Luo
Affiliation:
Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Scott Rozelle
Affiliation:
Stanford University.
*
Email: joi@stanford.edu (Corresponding author).

Abstract

In contrast to its decentralized political economy model of the 1980s, China took a surprising turn towards recentralization in the mid-1990s. Its fiscal centralization, starting with the 1994 tax reforms, is well known, but political recentralization also has been under way to control cadres directly at township and village levels. Little-noticed measures designed to tighten administrative and fiscal regulation began to be implemented during approximately the same period in the mid-1990s. Over time these measures have succeeded in hollowing out the power of village and township cadres. The increasing reach of the central state is the direct result of explicit state policies that have taken power over economic resources that were once under the control of village and township cadres. This article examines the broad shift towards recentralization by examining the fiscal and political consequences of these policies at the village and township levels. Evidence for this shift comes from new survey data on village-level investments, administrative regulation and fiscal oversight, as well as township-level fiscal revenues, expenditures, transfers (between counties and townships) and public-goods investments.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2012 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

The authors acknowledge the National Natural Science Foundation of China (71033003), the Chinese Academy of Sciences (KZZD-EW-06) and the Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences (2011RC102) for financial support for data collection.

References

Barnett, Steven, and Brooks, Ray. 2010. “China: does government health and education spending boost consumption?” Tokyo: International Monetary Fund working paper WP/10/16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, Thomas P., and , Xiaobo. 2000. “Taxation without representation: peasants, the central and the local states in reform China.” The China Quarterly 163, 742–63.Google Scholar
Cai, Yongshun. 2008. “Local governments and the suppression of popular resistance in China.” The China Quarterly 193, 2442.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, Hongxiao. 2004. “Can a new education law save China's compulsory education system?Caijing 118, 2123.Google Scholar
Chen, An. 2007. “The failure of organizational control: changing Party power in the Chinese countryside.” Politics & Society 35 (1), 145–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chung, Jae Ho. 1995. “Beijing confronting the provinces: the 1994 tax-sharing reform and its implications for central–provincial relations in China.” China Information 9, (2-3), 123.Google Scholar
Chyi, Hau, and Zhou, Bo. 2010. “The effect of tuition reforms on school enrollment in rural China.” Xiamen: Wang Yanan Institute for Studies in Economics, Xiamen University.Google Scholar
Duckett, Jane. 2007. “Local governance, health financing, and changing patterns of inequality in access to health care.” In Shue, Vivienne and Wong, Christine (eds.), Paying for Progress in China: Public Finance, Human Welfare and Changing Patterns of Inequality. London: Routledge, 4668.Google Scholar
Edin, Maria. 2003. “State capacity and local agent control in China: CCP cadre management from a township perspective.” The China Quarterly 173, 3552.Google Scholar
Han, Linghui, Liu, Chengfang, Luo, Renfu, Rozelle, Scott, Wong, Christine and Zhang, Linxiu. 2009. “Fiscal reform, incentives and fiscal health in China's rural towns.” Beijing: Institute for Geographical Sciences and Natural Resource Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences.Google Scholar
Hu, Shanlian, Shenglan Tang, Liu, Yuanli, Zhao, Yuxin, Escobar, Maria–Luisa and de Ferranti, David. 2008. “Reform of how health care is paid for in China: challenges and opportunities.” The Lancet 372 (9652), 1846–53.Google Scholar
Huang, Jikun, Wang, Xiaobing, Zhi, Huayong and Rozelle, Scott. 2011. “Subsidies and distortions in China's agriculture: evidence from producer-level data.” Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics 55 (1), 5371.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jing, Fang. 2004. “Health sector reform and reproductive health services in poor rural China.” Health Policy and Planning 19 (supplement), 140–49.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kennedy, John J. 2007. “From the tax-for-fee reform to the abolition of agricultural taxes: the impact on township governments in north-west China.” The China Quarterly 189, 4359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Lianjiang, and O'Brien, Kevin J.. 1996. “Villagers and popular resistance in contemporary China.” Modern China 22 (1), 2861.Google Scholar
Li, Lianjiang, and O'Brien, Kevin J.. 2008. “Protest leadership in rural China.” The China Quarterly 193, 123.Google Scholar
Li, Linda Chelan. 2007. “Working for the peasants? Strategic interactions and unintended consequences in the Chinese rural tax reform.” China Journal 57, 89106.Google Scholar
Liu, Mingxing, Murphy, Rachel, Tao, Ran and An, Xuehui. 2009. “Education management and performance after rural education finance reform: evidence from western China.” International Journal of Educational Development 29 (5), 463–73.Google Scholar
Liu, Mingxing, and Tao, Ran. 2007. “Local governance, policy mandates and fiscal reform in China.” In Shue, Vivienne and Wong, Christine (eds.), Paying for Progress in China: Public Finance, Human Welfare and Changing Patterns of Inequality. London: Routledge, 166–89.Google Scholar
Liu, Mingxing, Wang, Juan, Tao, Ran and Murphy, Rachel. 2009. “The political economy of earmarked transfers in a state-designated poor county in western China: central policies and local responses.” The China Quarterly 200, 973–94.Google Scholar
Luo, Renfu, Zhang, Linxiu, Huang, Jikun and Rozelle, Scott. 2007. “Elections, fiscal reform and public goods provision in rural China.” Journal of Comparative Economics 35 (3), 583611.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montinola, Gabriella, Qian, Yingyi and Weingast, Barry R.. 1995. “Federalism, Chinese style: the political basis for economic success in China.” World Politics 48 (1), 5081.Google Scholar
O'Brien, Kevin J. 1994. “Implementing political reform in China villages.” Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 32, 3359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Brien, Kevin J. 1996. “Rightful resistance.” World Politics 49 (1), 3155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Brien, Kevin J., and Li, Lianjiang. 2004. “Suing the local state: administrative litigation in rural China.” China Journal 51, 7596.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Brien, Kevin J., and Li, Lianjiang. 2006. Rightful Resistance in Rural China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Oi, Jean Chun. 1989. State and Peasant in Contemporary China: The Political Economy of Village Government. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Oi, Jean C. 1992. “Fiscal reform and the economic foundations of local state corporatism in China.” World Politics 45 (1), 99126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oi, Jean C. 1996. “Economic development, stability, and democratic village self-governance.” In Brosseau, Maurice, Pepper, Suzanne and Tsang, Shu-ki (eds.), China Review. Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 125–44.Google Scholar
Oi, Jean C. 1999. Rural China Takes Off: Institutional Foundations of Economic Reform. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Oi, Jean C. 2004. “Old problems for new leaders: institutional disjunctions in rural China.” In Chu, Yun-han, Luo, Chih-cheng and Myers, Ramon H. (eds.), The New Chinese Leadership: Challenges and Opportunities after the 16th Party Congress. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 141–55.Google Scholar
Oi, Jean C., and Rozelle, Scott. 2000. “Elections and power: the locus of decision-making in Chinese villages.” The China Quarterly 162, 513–39.Google Scholar
Oi, Jean C., and Shimizu, Kay. 2010. “The uncertain outcomes of rural industrialization: a reassessment.” In Leng, Tse-Kang and Zhu, Yunhan (eds.), Dynamics of Local Governance in China During the Reform Era: Challenges Facing Chinese Political Development. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 1131.Google Scholar
Oi, Jean C., and Shukai, Zhao. 2007. “Fiscal crisis in China's townships: causes and consequences.” In Perry, Elizabeth J. and Goldman, Merle (eds.), Grassroots Political Reform in Contemporary China. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 7596.Google Scholar
Park, Albert, Rozelle, Scott, Wong, Christine and Ren, Changqing. 1996. “Distributional consequences of reforming local public finance in China.” The China Quarterly 147, 751–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Qian, Yingyi. 2007. “Fiscal and governance challenges for government and corporations: China in 2007.” Paper presented at the Stanford Center for International Development Workshop, Stanford University, February 2007.Google Scholar
Remick, Elizabeth J. 2004. Building Local States: China During the Republican and Post-Mao Eras. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center.Google Scholar
Ren, Xiemei. 2006. “A study of the impacts of rural reforms on rural education management in X county China.” Central Michigan University.Google Scholar
Rozelle, Scott. 1991. “The economic behavior of village leaders in China's reform economy.” PhD diss., Cornell University.Google Scholar
Rozelle, Scott. 1996. “Stagnation without equity: patterns of growth and inequality in China's rural economy.” The China Journal 35, 6392.Google Scholar
Shue, Vivienne. 1988. The Reach of the State: Sketches of the Chinese Body Politic. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Shue, Vivienne, and Wong, Christine (eds.). 2007. Paying for Progress in China: Public Finance, Human Welfare and Changing Patterns of Inequality. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sicular, Terry. 1995. “Redefining state, plan and market: China's reforms in agricultural commerce.” The China Quarterly 144, 1020–46.Google Scholar
Strauss, Julia C. 1998. Strong Institutions in Weak Polities: State Building in Republican China, 1927–1940. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Tang, Shenglan, Meng, Qingyue, Chen, Lincoln, Bekedam, Henk, Evans, Tim and Whitehead, Margaret. 2008. “Tackling the challenges to health equity in China.” The Lancet 372 (9648), 1493–501.Google Scholar
Tsai, Lily L. 2010. “Governing one million rural communities after two decades: are China's village elections improving?” In Oi, Jean C., Rozelle, Scott and Zhou, Xueguang (eds.), Growing Pains: Tensions and Opportunity in China's Transformation. Stanford, CA: Asia-Pacific Research Center, 143–66.Google Scholar
Wang, Hufeng. 2009. “A dilemma of Chinese healthcare reform: how to re-define government roles?China Economic Review 20 (4), 598604.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Shaoguang. 1995. “The rise of the regions: fiscal reform and the decline of central state capacity in China.” In Walder, Andrew G. (ed.), The Waning of the Communist State: Economic Origins of Political Decline in China and Hungary. Berkeley: University of California Press, 87113.Google Scholar
Wang, Shaoguang. 1997. “China's 1994 fiscal reform: an initial assessment.” Asian Survey 37, 801–17.Google Scholar
Wang, Shaoguang, and Hu, Angang. 1999. The Political Economy of Uneven Development: The Case of China, Asia and the Pacific. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Whiting, Susan. 2004. “The cadre evaluation system at the grass roots: the paradox of party rule.” In Naughton, Barry J. and Yang, Dali L. (eds.), Holding China Together: Diversity and National Integration in the Post-Deng Era. New York: Cambridge University Press, 101–19.Google Scholar
Wong, Christine. 1997. Financing Local Government in the People's Republic of China. Hong Kong: Oxford University Press for the Asian Development Bank.Google Scholar
Wong, Christine P. W., Heady, Christopher and Woo, Wing Thye. 1995. Fiscal Management and Economic Reform in the People's Republic of China. Hong Kong: Oxford University Press for the Asian Development Bank.Google Scholar
Yep, Ray. 2004. “Can ‘tax-for-fee’ reform reduce rural tension in China? The process, progress and limitations.” The China Quarterly 177, 4270.Google Scholar
Yip, Winnie, and Hsiao, William C.. 2008. “The Chinese health system at a crossroads.” Health Affairs 27 (2), 460–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, Linxiu, Luo, Renfu, Liu, Chengfang and Rozelle, Scott. 2006. “Investing in rural China: tracking China's commitment to modernization.” The Chinese Economy 39(4), 5784.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhao, Litao. 2009. “Between local community and central state: financing basic education in China.” International Journal of Educational Development 29 (4), 366–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhao, Litao. 2010. “Reforming China's funding of compulsory education: changes and their outcomes.” Social Science in China 31 (1), 5573.Google Scholar