Law and Economics with Chinese Characteristics: Institutions for Promoting Development in the Twenty-First Century

Explores how the lessons of the Chinese market economy might help policymakers in other countries to achieve equitable and sustained development Provides a critique of the prevailing law and economics doctrines that have been influential in shaping legal doctrines and institutions around the world.
Author(s)

  • Explores how the lessons of the Chinese market economy might help policymakers in other countries to achieve equitable and sustained development
  • Provides a critique of the prevailing law and economics doctrines that have been influential in shaping legal doctrines and institutions around the world
  • Explains which institutional arrangements, including legal systems, are most likely to promote development

Policymakers and economists largely agree that ‘rule of law’ and property rights are essential for a sound economic policy, particularly for most developing countries. But it is becoming increasingly apparent that transplanting legal frameworks from one society to another doesn’t work – even though neoliberal orthodoxy has held that it should. China’s economic development offers a backdrop for developing alternative viewpoints on these issues. In this book, economists, academics, and policymakers wade straight into the discussion, using China as a concrete reference point. The volume is the result of a series of dialogues among academics and policymakers from China and around the world. While the authors are not at all of one mind on many things, they do share the conviction that China is now entering a critical phase in its economic development and in its transition to a distinctly Chinese market economy. The essays cover a broad range of subjects that have been particularly relevant in China’s growth, from property rights to social rights, corporate rights, institutions, intellectual property, and justice. Although the work thoroughly analyzes the best regulatory and institutional frameworks for China’s evolving economic and political strategy, its ultimate goal is bigger: it seeks to aid policymakers in both developing and developed countries to create – or in the latter case reform – institutional and regulatory frameworks to achieve equitable and sustained.

 

About the Editors

Joseph Stiglitz
President
Initiative for Policy Dialogue (IPD)

Joseph E. Stiglitz is President of the Initiative for Policy Dialogue, and Chairman of the Committee on Global Thought at Columbia University. He is University Professor at Columbia, teaching in its Economics Department, its Business School, and its School of International and Public Affairs. He chaired the UN Commission of Experts on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial System, created in the aftermath of the financial crisis by the President of the General Assembly. He is former Chief Economist and Senior Vice-President of the World Bank and Chairman of President Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisors. He was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2001.

David Kennedy
Professor
Harvard Law School

Recent Publications
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