Economic growth and human development in China

Type Working Paper - Occasional Paper
Title Economic growth and human development in China
Author(s)
Volume 28
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 1996
URL http://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/6248875.pdf
Abstract
The Chinese economic takeoff has captured the attention of the whole world with its
15-year sustained growth. It started with the implementation of Deng Xiaoping's
economic reform policy in 1979. Since then, China has been the world's fastest-growing
economy. For a country comprising one fifth of the world's population, with an
exceedingly diverse economy, such rapid growth would have been thought impossible.
What makes this possible? Has the fast economic growth been translated into human
development? What accounts for the successful or failing translation? To answer these
questions, this country report traces for more than four decades the performance of China
with respect to economic growth and human development, and offers explanations with
emphasis on interactions between economic growth and human development. The
structure of this report is as follows: the first section examines the trends of economic
growth and human development, discusses the growth pattern and nature, and provides
the findings of mixed performance in terms of the country's translation of economic
growth into human development. The second section develops an analytical framework to
explain this mixed performance from the aspects of institutional change, reform policy
and the quality of governance that concern the exact process through which growth
translates, or fails to translate, into human development. The third section, by utilizing
the analytical framework, discusses such empirical issues as income distribution,
reduction of poverty, education and health, economic security and environmental issues.
The last one contains a conclusion.

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