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Institutions of the Party-State

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Institutions of the Party-State Major debate about the capacity of the Chinese state Where does Pei Minxin stand? Alternative argument: Yang Dali + – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Institutions of the Party-State


1
Institutions of the Party-State
  • Major debate about the capacity of the Chinese
    state
  • Where does Pei Minxin stand?
  • Alternative argument Yang Dali

2
Institutions of the Party-State
  • Major debate about the capacity of the Chinese
    state
  • Where does Pei Minxin stand?
  • Alternative argument Yang Dali
  • China has made significant institutional reforms
    to improve governance
  • Critique strong on policy weak on
    implementation
  • Remaking the Chinese Leviathan
  • Now lets look at some empirical evidence to
    assess the relative merits of each side in the
    debate.

3
Institutions of the party-state
  • Fiscal Policy Background1994 tax and fiscal
    reforms
  • Established National Tax Service (collects
    central and shared taxes under Tax Sharing
    System) historic!
  • Budgetary revenue as share of GDP
  • 1994 10.8 percent
  • 2005 17.3 percent
  • Centralized control over fiscal revenue
  • Centers share of budgetary revenue
  • 1993 22 percent
  • Since 1994 gt 50 percent
  • Continued decentralized expenditure
    responsibility
  • ? Revenue squeeze on local governments

4
Central provincial shares of total revenue and
expenditures ()
  • 1993 2003
  • Revenue 35 66 (31)
  • Expenditure 45 49 ( 4)
  • Source Wong 2006

5
Fiscal Policy Background
  • Further centralized control over fiscal revenue
  • 2002 reassigned corporate and individual income
    taxes from local to shared category with center
    taking 60 percent
  • Abolished agriculture taxes
  • ? burdensome on low-income farmers
  • After 2002
  • No Ag Special Products Tax
  • No Slaughter Tax
  • After 2004
  • No Agriculture Tax

6
Fiscal Policy Background
6
  • Why is central fiscal capacity important?
  • Is Dali Yangs optimism justified?
  • p.44

7
Institutions of the party-state
  • Implications of fiscal policy fiscal gap
  • 40-45 percent covered by local and shared taxes
  • 40-50 percent of fiscal needs covered by
    intergovernmental fiscal transfers
  • 5-10 percent of fiscal needs unmet (Wang Yongjun
    estimate 2006).
  • High degree of dependence on fiscal transfers
  • Central gov. sends resources to poorer areas
  • Reliance on off-budget funds and local gov. debt
  • Exacerbated by political pressures
  • Tenure, promotion criteria

8
Institutions of the party-state
  • Using law to govern (Dali Yangs argument)
  • Under Mao, used ideology more than law
  • During reform era, new role for law
  • Bring regularity to government operations
  • Indicate policy direction
  • Supervise/regulate functioning of state agencies
  • Key institutions for ruling by law
  • Peoples Congresses
  • Courts

9
Institutions of the party-state
  • Hierarchy of authoritative documents
  • Enactments with the formal status of law
  • in the sense of being enforceable by courts
  • Constitution xianfa ??
  • National Peoples Congress Standing Committee ?
    statutes/laws falü ??
  • State Council ?
  • administrative regulations xingzheng fagui
    ????
  • Provincial-level peoples congresses ?
  • local regulations difangxing fagui ?????

10
Institutions of the party-state
  • Problems with the hierarchy of authoritative
    docs
  • No good system for authoritatively resolving
    conflicts between different rules
  • Technically,
  • Constitution
  • Law on Legislation
  • National Peoples Congress Standing Committee
  • May review and invalidate legislation passed by
    lower-level bodies
  • NPC not known to have overturned a single
    administrative or local regulation (Chen 2004114)

11
Institutions of the party-state
  • Problems with the hierarchy of authoritative
    docs
  • Courts
  • Not allowed to play role of resolving conflicts
    of law/rules
  • Not allowed to invalidate legislation
  • Can only either appeal to higher legislative body
    or apply lower-level rule
  • Regulations passed by lower-level governments
    often trump superior regulations
  • In practice, local governments dominate
  • Administrative Litigation Law
  • In principle, citizens can sue in court to force
    governments to follow only laws already on the
    books ? land ex.

12
Institutions of the party-state
  • Courts beholden to local party-state
  • No tenure for judges
  • Local government controls funding
  • Local party committee and party political-legal
    committee (?????)
  • Have influence over
  • Court personnel
  • (technically Peoples Congress authority over
    personnel)
  • Acceptance of cases
  • Handling of cases

13
Chen Guangcheng, blind lawyer
  • Sought to enforce 2002 Population and Family
    Planning Law
  • Family planning shall be practiced chiefly by
    means of contraception Article 19
  • informed choice
  • Led lawsuit by rural residents of Linyi against
    local government practices
  • Sterilization
  • Forced abortion

14
Chen Guangcheng, blind lawyer
  • Beijing University Law Professor, Zhan Zhongle,
    who helped draft the 2002 Population and Family
    Planning Law re Chens challenge
  • By suing the government, Linyi peasants are
    merely asserting their legal rights. Whether the
    courts accept the case, and how they handle it,
    will be a test of Chinas Justice system and of
    whether China can govern according to law.
  • (Source Washington Post, 8/27/05)

15
Institutions of the party-state
  • Local Peoples Congresses
  • In principle, new supervisory role over local
    governments (Dali Yang, p. 49)
  • Must approve work report of government
  • Must appraise local officials performance
  • Must approve local government budget
  • In practice, very limited
  • Lack authority to actually punish local
    governments
  • Only party performance appraisal matters
  • Party group steers Peoples Congress Standing
    Committee
  • PC lacks adequate data or staff to meaningfully
    supervise budget

16
Institutions of the party-state
  • Local Peoples Congresses
  • Examples of real attempts at supervision
  • (reflects what PC deputies hear from local
    citizens)
  • Hubei, Shiyan PC vetoed work report of government
    to highlight misappropriation of poverty relief
    funds
  • Hubei, Wuhan PC vetoed work report of government
    to highlight poor implementation of employment
    re-training project for laid-off workers
  • What really happens
  • Governments ignore
  • PC signal sent to higher level party apparatusit
    then can choose whether to take action

17
Institutions of the party-state
  • Questions for discussion
  • To whom are local cadres accountable?
  • What aspects of the system promote effective
    policy implementation?
  • What are the structural obstacles to effective
    governance?

18
Questions for discussion
  • Why has the passage of significant environmental
    legislation and the building of an extensive
    environmental regulatory framework not led to
    improved policy implementation or reduced
    environmental degradation?
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