The New Chinese Leadership
Challenges and Opportunities after the 16th Party Congress
Ramon H Myers editor Yun-han Chu editor Chih-cheng Lo editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:18th Mar '04
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Examines the selection of new Communist Party leaders in China.
China's Communist Party selected a new generation of leaders in late 2002. This volume explains how, in order to maintain its position as a regional and world power, China's leaders are reconfiguring its huge command economy, promoting a market economy, and undertaking gradual political reforms.This volume presents a concise history of how China's Communist Party (CCP) selected a new generation of leaders in late 2002 and why the individuals, in their late 40s and 50s, were so well qualified to govern China. These leaders are trying to lead China to become a regional and world power in which their people can enjoy a modest living standard and take pride in the nation's achievements. Addressed to the expert or ordinary reader, these essays see China's leaders as challenged by a new trend, visible only in the last decade, of a widening gap between the losers in society and the winners of the recent economic and political reforms. The leaders of the largest, single ruling party and state authority in the world must somehow reverse that trend if China is to survive as one nation. This volume explains they are doing that by reconfiguring their huge command economy, promoting a market economy, and undertaking gradual political reforms. It is unflinching in its discussion of how China's leaders face mounting political corruption, spreading unemployment, growing disparity of wealth and income, and a crisis of belief.
ISBN: 9780521600583
Dimensions: 240mm x 157mm x 18mm
Weight: 435g
264 pages