Qin Xiaoying, Research Scholar, China Foundation For Int'l and Strategic Studies
Jan 23, 2017
The new system evolving in the anti-corruption campaign will not only integrate the existing supervisory bodies and their functions, but extend the scope of the oversight of the CPC’s discipline watchdog from Party members to all public officials. Pilot programs in three very different regions will provide examples for future reforms.
Qin Xiaoying, Research Scholar, China Foundation For Int'l and Strategic Studies
Nov 24, 2016
Massive corruption involving officials from the nation’s top level to the lowest local governments has not only damaged the image of Chinese officials but also seriously eroded the administrative ability of governments at all levels. The elevation of the president is not a personality cult but a move to preserve China’s ability to govern effectively.
Doug Bandow, Senior Fellow, Cato Institute
Sep 14, 2016
The People’s growing financial and political impact around the globe means that what happens in China matters everywhere. Thus, stability and predictability are important virtues. Yes, as Doug Bandow argues, political opacity is necessary as the interests of the Chinese coincide with those of outsiders.
Paolo Mauro, Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics
Sep 30, 2015
High-profile arrests like those carried out in China in recent years are insufficient to curb corruption in a lasting manner. Reducing pervasive government intervention in the economy and encouraging greater competition would reduce the near-monopolistic rents that create the incentives for corruption in the first place.
Meicen Sun, Ph.D. candidate, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Vasilis Trigkas, Visiting Assistant Professor, Schwarzman College, Tsinghua University
Sep 08, 2015
One of the major challenges for China’s leadership lies in enacting the rule of law by borrowing from Western principles while preserving China’s self-identity embodied in part in the Confucian ideology of the rule of virtue.
Fred Hu, Chairman, Beijing-based Primavera Capital Group
Aug 28, 2015
Moderating growth rates in the range of 5-7% per annum reflect the higher per capita income level and the changing growth paradigm in China. A modest slowdown is a necessary and healthy adjustment for China to transition to a new trajectory of more efficient and sustainable growth. But instead of greeting such a positive "new normal" with enthusiasm, the naysayers have reacted with dismay as though they would rather prefer the old growth model.
Yu Keping, Deputy Director, CPCCC Compilation and Translation Bureau
May 12, 2015
Modernizing state governance in China depends on the successful promotion of rule of law, to stimulate orderly participation of the public and to maximize the public interest.
Nathan Gardels, Editor-in-chief, THEWORLDPOST
Mar 31, 2015
In this premiere episode of a new Chinese Youku series produced by Guancha.cn, Shanghai scholar/entrepreneur Eric X. Li talks with political scientist Francis Fukuyama about his latest book: “Political Order and Political Decay.”