Book contents
- Micro-institutional Foundations of Capitalism
- Micro-institutional Foundations of Capitalism
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Part I Politics of Market Governance
- Part II Nations and Sectors: Patterns of Market Governance
- 3 China and Sectoral Variation
- 4 Security Imperatives, Infrastructural Development, and High-Tech Sectors
- 5 Political Stability, Local Goals, and Labor-Intensive Sectors
- 6 India and Sectoral Variation
- 7 Pro-Liberalization Transnational Business and High-Tech Services
- 8 Political Legitimacy, Economic Stability, and Labor-Intensive Small-Scale Sectors
- 9 Russia and Sectoral Variation
- 10 National Security and Infrastructure and Resource Sectors
- 11 Regional Development and Labor-Intensive Sectors
- Part III National Configurations of Sectoral Models
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Political Stability, Local Goals, and Labor-Intensive Sectors
Decentralized Governance in Chinese Textiles
from Part II - Nations and Sectors: Patterns of Market Governance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 June 2022
- Micro-institutional Foundations of Capitalism
- Micro-institutional Foundations of Capitalism
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Part I Politics of Market Governance
- Part II Nations and Sectors: Patterns of Market Governance
- 3 China and Sectoral Variation
- 4 Security Imperatives, Infrastructural Development, and High-Tech Sectors
- 5 Political Stability, Local Goals, and Labor-Intensive Sectors
- 6 India and Sectoral Variation
- 7 Pro-Liberalization Transnational Business and High-Tech Services
- 8 Political Legitimacy, Economic Stability, and Labor-Intensive Small-Scale Sectors
- 9 Russia and Sectoral Variation
- 10 National Security and Infrastructure and Resource Sectors
- 11 Regional Development and Labor-Intensive Sectors
- Part III National Configurations of Sectoral Models
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In parallel to the centralized governance of strategic industries in Chapter 4, the lower degree and narrower scope of the perceived strategic value of labor intensive and less value-added sectors, represented by textiles, for national security and the national technology base, has shaped decentralized governance and private governance in nonstrategic sectors. In the context of sectoral structural and organization of institutions, less concerned about controlling products or services that have few applications for national security and low contribution to the national technology base, the central state introduced competition in textiles in the 1980s and devolved market coordination of quasi-state and private ownership to local governments and commerce bureaus by the early 1990s before China’s World Trade Organization accession. The cross-time sector and company case studies reveal the interacting strategic value and sectoral logics apply at the subsector. Capital-intensive and more value-added technical textiles experience more deliberate market coordination by local governments and the central state and are characterized by mixed property rights sponsored by and connected with state-run research and development institutions. Taken together the textile industry today experiences periodic overexpansion, environmental degradation, and reactive local state interventions in response to economic reverberations and central-level environmental and developmental mandates.
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- Micro-institutional Foundations of Capitalism , pp. 127 - 156Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022