Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Bachelor of Arts with Departmental Honors in Economics |
Title | China’s Current Economic Transition: A Household Consumption Propensity Analysis |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2014 |
URL | http://wesscholar.wesleyan.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2266&context=etd_hon_theses |
Abstract | China's rapid emergence into a world economic superpower is well documented. No country in the history of mankind has witnessed both the speed and magnitude of growth (as measured in GDP) that China has experienced over the past three decades. As the second largest economy behind only the U.S., the root causes of its success are many. From its initial reform in 1978 through today, China’s economy was largely driven by investment growth. And more recently, over the last decade, exports became the primary growth driver. Yet the Global Financial Crisis (“GFC”) of 2008-2009 proved a formidable test of the sustainability of China’s recent economic model. The collapse in external demand weighed heavily on its export growth, forcing a massive government intervention to buoy its economy. China's leaders recognize the unsustainability of its growth model and in March 2011 published its Twelfth Five Year Plan (“Plan”), an ambitious agenda of initiatives and reforms set to tackle the many growing pains of their country. Central to this new Plan was the explicit recognition by its leaders that in order to maintain future and sustainable growth, China needed to pivot away from an economic structure so reliant on exports and investment to one more reliant on internal private consumption; namely, to be more of a consumer-led economy. |
» | China - Urban Household Survey 1990 |