L. SHIRK
SUDAN
“Playing
to the Provinces:
”
Deng Xiaoping’s Political of Economic Reform
The
classical
political
problem
bureaucracy
mass unless
and political
no other
choice.
the main
order
to make past,
vested
such
restructuring
everything
must
competition.
and to prevent
society.“’
Although
Deng
calculation. weight
from
the
to stick China’s
frequent
in bureaucratic with
work
bureaucracy
his political
conferences
bureaucratic
was less strong
strategy
a very
of the game.
system?
minor
to enhance
An important than
counter-
He opted
to
modifications the voice
and his reformist
and less entrenched
of
strategic
political
only
in
people.
of economic
different
rules
designed
In
the
with
did Deng
its wheels
way
democratization
as an effective
polity,
Why
spin
again-of
he made
the old political
policy-making.
the old authoritarian
central
that
to
of what happened
the broad
articulated
bureaucratic
policy
a repetition
use local officials
changing
communist
will only
the control-once
he took
decided arena
but he believed
in it in a thoroughgoing
tasks-through
publicly
actions
that he could
without
traditional
as the more
provinces
never the
He believed
to the center
retain such
Xiaoping
it is clear
under these
gamble,
“Restructuring
irreversible
and that
Gorbachev
up the political
It was a high-risk
in 1987,
an effective
and gover’nment planning
Union,
was to open
included
is only one way to accomplish
central
In the Soviet
people-is
Soviet
Party
in perpetuating
states.
be placed
is how to create
Communist
a counterweight
There
reform,
interest
As he said
actor-the
economy
” the central
in communist
way to create
participation
he had
the
policy-making
the only
a communist
to the “center,
that has a strong
dominates that
in marketizing
counterweight
Strategy
allies
reason
of the decide
was that
that of the Soviet
Union.? The Soviet
Stalinist Union
of its origin: Chinese central
model
40 years
40 years
is a brief
history. control
of a centrally
less than
Moreover, over
economic
planned
economy
ago and was easier stretch
during
of time
the period
life was much
was transferred to uproot
in China
to China than
from the
in the land
from
the perspective
of 2500
years
when
the Soviet-style
system
reigned,
less extensive
and less effective
than
of
in the
1. ?‘he Currml D&t of&utel Press, Vol. XXXIX, No. 8 (1987), p. 8. 2. Deng Xiaoping’s choice was also constrained by his own conservatism and thr conservatism of the other members of his generation of communist party leaders. Deng’s cohort of leaders are first generation founders of the communist revolution in China, whereas Gorbachev belongs to the fourth generation of communist leaders in the Soviet Union Uerry F. Hough, Soviel Leadership in Tmnsition (Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution, 1980)]. Lee argues that the political nature of the People’s Republic of China was shaped by the particular nature of this founder generation that remained in power for over 40 years [Hong Yung Lee, From Revolutionary Cadres to Party Technocrats in Socdirt China (Berkeley: University of California Press, forthcoming)]. STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE
0039.3592/90/03/4
COMMUNISM,
VOL. XXIII,
0227-32 $03.00 @ 1990 University
NOS. 314, AUTUMN/WINTER 1990, 227-258
of California
228
STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE COMMUNISM
USSR
itself.
Cultural
Particularly
Revolution
economic
role
than
apparatus
was
also
inclusive of
than
their
over
Soviet
products.’
China
Under
had
unpredictable. public
fired
being
criticized so that
Asian
urban
Europe.
Having
extreme
form,
changing
that followed of central
planning
bureaucracy
national
had central
economy,
plan,
and
less
high degree
controlled
while the Soviets
the
their jobs,
by their
Cultural
and
the
control
a substantial much
Revolution by some
the
of it was
Chinese
leaders
and
to the social alike,
pilloried
campaigns
a genuinely
were
in
disrupted behind
its
effect
on
traumatic trauma
of fascism
in
in such
an
system
more
the and
had to worry
fell increasingly
of the communist
citizens
were
citizens
Political
had
During politicized
and officials
and China
irrationalities
highly
Ordinary
and neighbors.
Cultural
experience.
became
professionals,
co-workers
compared
life
and imprisoned. stagnated
The
Revolution
social
standards
the Chinese, to creating and
Party
and
countryside
for
daunting
believed
active
would
bureaucracy administrative government center.
Communist
As
to economic where
their
reign
China
strategy
ready
to consider
Revolution
weakened
politicians Although Party
could these
organization,
their
become
limited
they
the
were
were
during
or sent
to the
were
Union
less
and other
central
decentralization
bureau-
which
they
domain. illuminates the
reforms,
possibility
that
counterweight
expected
the Cultural
jobs
In fact,
drive
operations
bureaucracies
In China,
the
normal
in the Soviet
Union
the reformist
politicians
state
as fiscal
to market
created
disrupted
and
reform.
obstacle
The
uninterrupted.
such
to the reform
to lower-level
and the Soviet
had
otherwise.
they were
been
of economic
resistance
severely
than
had
was a less formidable decentralization
been
Party
of reforms
and preserve
between
were
their
transferred
a result, reform
proponents
political
have
bodies
of officials
the Cultural
so that
it would
government
rationalize
comparison
Xiaoping’s
than
re-education.
states
were
for reform,
institutions
thousands
opponents
communist
a constituency
government
was less strong with
tive
central
the
central primitive
with a relatively
of the command
of the
experienced
Revolution,
The
periods
since
a stronger
The more
more
played
the system. Party
cracies
was
outside
of intellectuals,
living
Union.
version
(196661976)
from
society,
In addition central
“benefit”
neighbors.
Chinese
on
have
level.
decade
the economy East
went
Thousands
meetings,
about
the
Revolution
Soviet planning
Chinese
and even
in China
even during
China’s
activity
Forward,
than 600 products,
at the provincial
also
Cultural
in the
the
ofless
Leap
governments central
planning:
centralization,
of economic
administered
local
Chinese
central
and allocation
5500
share
the 1957 Great
counterparts
weaker.
administrative
production
since
(1966-1969),
appointed to articulate
the logic central
of Deng
Party-state
and previous provincial to the more agents local
of
waves Party
of and
conservathe
interests.4
central With
3. The Chinese categories were coatxr so the numbers are not strictly comparable. Christine P. W. Wang, “Material Allocation and Decentralization: Impact of the Local Sector on Industrial Reform,” in Elizabeth J. Perry and Christine Wang, eds., The Poli/ical Economy of Reform tn Post-Mao China (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985), pp. 253-278. 4. My view of the Chinese system as a hierarchy contradicts Granick’s that local governments wet-e principals with their own property rights. [David Granick, Chinese State Enlerprises, A Rgzonal Properly Rights Analysis (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990)]. I n my view, central Party officials hold all formal authority and delegate sotoe of it to lower levels of government for three reasons: to improve incentive compatibility: to divest themselves ofsole responsibility; and to win the political support oflower level officials. Granick’s observation that legacies of past investments in enterprises give different levels of government a normative claim to a share of enterprise products and profits is correct and important. However, his evidence for continuity in the relationships of levels of government and enterprises to demonstrate the validity of the
Deng Xiuopiq’s the support of provincial
Political Strategy of Economic Reform
politicians,
229
Deng might be able to push his reform program
through the bureaucratic decision-making the politicat rules of the game.
process and thus avoid the risks of changing
The ramifications of Deng’s crucial strategic decision to process economic reforms through the traditional communist political system were momentous. Two features of communist political institutions (characteristic of the pre-reform USSR as well as of China) were particularly significant for shaping reform policy outcomes. (1) Consensus ~e~is~~n-rnak~n~. Economic policy-making was delegated by tthe Communist Party to the government bureaucracy. Within the bureaucracy, decisions were made by consensus,
not majority
rule. Economic
consensus hierarchy
through bureaucratic bargaining, for resolution, or were indefinitely
provinces
that had strong objections
to be modified.
Consensus
policies
to protect
tended
reform policies either achieved
were referred to higher postponed. Government
levels in the ministries or
to policy proposals could veto them or force them
decision-making the original
militated
positions
against
redistributive
of bureaucratic
interests
policies; and shift
resources only incrementally. (2) Reciprocal accountability within the Communist Party. Communist Party leaders were chosen by an elite “selectorate” composed of the Central Committee, the revolutionary elders, and top military leaders (less than ftve hundred “selectors” in alI). The largest blocs within the selectorate were local (provincial) Party and government officials, central Party and government officials, and the People’s Liberation Army. Officials in these categories were appointed to their posts by the top Party leaders through the Organization Department, but they also had the authority to choose the Party leaders. This pattern of reciprocal accountability between top Party leaders and Party, ment, and military officials was called by Robert Daniels the “circular power. “5 The aspirants to top Party leadership “campaigned” which would enable them to claim credit and win support
governflow of
by promoting policies from members of the
selectorate. In this institutional context, the political consequences of Deng Xiaoping’s strategic choice to “play to the provinces” were mixed. The strategy was very successful at enhancing the political clout of provincial officials and putting it behind the reform drive. A Communist Party Central Committee in which the largest bfoc was local officials strongly committed to dismantling the centralized command economy helped sustain the momentum of reforms. Rut at the same time, local officials who enjoyed the rewards of partial reform became obstacles to carrying reform through to complete marketization. As one Chinese account explained, because the financial system reform devolving funds and responsibilities to localities was one step ahead of other reforms, each new reform initiative threatened the financial interests of localities. 6 Local ofIicials blocked important
property rights hypothesis is not completely persuasive. Moreover, the strongest evidence for hierarchy is one he ignores, namely the power of the central Party authorities to appoint and dismiss regional officials. Bahry’s x-search on the Soviet Union shows that even in the more-highly centralized Soviet system, republican officials W,PW expected to assert local interests and were even promoted for doing so. [Donna Bahry, Or&i& Momm: Power, Politics and Budgetary Policy in the So&-t R+dGcs (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987)j. 5. Robert V. Da&is, “Soviet Politics Since Khrushchev, ” in John W. Strong, ed., The Soviet Union Under Rrezhnev and Kosygin (New York: Van Nostrand-Reinhold, 1971). 6. Tiang Yinong, Xiang Huaicheng, and Zhu Fulin, Lunrhonp-~uocaithe~~tizhlgaigeyu honguan liaokong(On China’s Financial System Reform and Macro Regulatory Control) (Beijing: China Finance and Economics Publishers. 1988).
STUI)IES IN COMPARAIWE
230 measures
like
expanded
the financial
local
the
replacement
governments
to build
over
political
them.
machines
or the enterprises
to central
control
incentives
new incentives
with
climate had
and women.
to foreign
not
bureaucrats, On prices
a group other
hand,
and
lack
of risk,
results,
profitable
and local
The
decision
reform
to protect diluted
crucial
regulation
ofthe
financial
would
have
Fiscal
system
whose
Decentralization
account
called
Experiments method
and most
fiscal with
called
reform
a policy
and
“the
inflation,
system
and
and promote
in the end.
Determined
officials
the
blocked
efficiency
continued
and
to subvert
the reform
it. Yet even when
they were unable
politicians
competition
was the central
the
to impose
of provincial
of succession
or self-
to stimulate
that discredited
the wishes
of Deng
produced
of it to build
shortages,
local
in 1988,
of support
by irrational
officials most
political
elders
flout
rule
communist
market.
improved
a period
even
for
bureaucracy.
Xiaoping’s
in China’s
breakthrough introduced
Political
strategy greater
a vested
kitchens” to build
financial
interest
Strategy
and achieve
market
reform
without
and
Sichuan The
of support
autonomy
drive
was the
A Chinese
economic
central
(#& zao chifan),
in promoting
was the best way to create
the
in 1980.
a coalition
reform
governments.
for the entire
between
in Jiangsu
beginning
economic
to provincial point
contracts
in separate
including
officials package
steps authority
to all provinces
political
package
gave provincial
important
were
“eating
Xiaoping’s
bureaucracy
To
base
revenue-sharing
was extended
A reform
supply
problems
the Party
during
of local
entrepreneurs
Party
investment
among
characterized
backfired
have
local
to the
and bred
of communist
even
interests,”
and other
within
revenue
governments
popularly
would
as the Cornerstone
of financial
provincial
“partial
their
40 years
the national
officials
financial
like born
construction,
created
the responded
conservative.
bureaucratic
local
Communist
primary
by back
Reform
of the earliest
devolution
that
inflation
suicide
touting
still
and
Balkanized
on the provinces.
political
leaders
of Economic
investment
their
dominance
(i.e.,
strengthened
behavior
And local bureaucratic
conservative
been
conservative
environment
that
causing
attained
a new
Such
economy.
and allowed
for
the traditional call
of
authority
off any attempt
industry
over
to be sluggishly
plants,
initiatives
overheating,
officials commerce,
that
Chinese
reform
conservatives
Deng
the
local
aptitude
a bloc of pro-reform
what
economic
processing
to maintain
by creating
provincial
revenue-maximizing
protectionism
have
control
direction
the officials
that
local
fought
that
was to realize
thought
excessive
but wasteful
deficits;
One
e.g.
would
new financial
in either
True,
promoting
in an economic the
mixed.
zeal,
Chinese
generally
the
perverse
drive
the
game
a system
also were
people
of their
politicians
ofthe
which
the financial
freedom).
To observe
business
eradicated
the local
of creating
entrepreneurial
(li gai shui) shrinking
advantage
the rules
to market
officials
taxes while
taken
to change
consequences
of provincial
businessmen
Having
or forward
economic
with
of factories
for themselves,
the center The
of profits
autonomy
COMMUNISM
reform.“7
government in
fiscal
1977,
and and
was the cornerstone for the reform
for provincial
and sustaining
a political
counterweight
changing
the political
the
decentralization, of
drive.
governments
the reform
drive.
to the central system.*
7. Caizheng bu caishui tizhi zhu. Caishui&ge shiman (A Decade of Financial and Tax Reform) (Beijing: China Finance and Economics Publishers, 1989). 8. The strategy of achieving market reform by devolving authority and resources to local officials (and
Deng Xiaoping’s Fiscal
decentralization
reform
in
financial and
China Mao
counterbalance provincial
diffusion
officials and
of funds
support
provinces
gap
making
some
loans
from
Chinese
of officials
diffused
costs.
While
positions
of the
the formula
This
paper
context reform
decade,
politicians.
showing
After
showing
that
centralizing
a brief
the
of funds.
The
more
the
of this fiscal and
fiscal
note on other
political
instincts
logic
reform
reform of fiscal
of fiscal
of Li Peng
and
tilted
spread
rewards
with
and
towards
was to close
the the
the central
the costs,
corporations,
formula
made
sense
of the fiscal
the political
the consequences
drive
of fiscal
namely
extracting
to all provinces. benefits
on the relative as a whole for central
and
financial
is still
being
politicians
and
camp.
the evolution
how it reflects
formulas
governments
political
form
gratitude
the
of concentrated
reform
local
The
responsibilities
formula
of provincial
for the reform by the center
state
the
to the local level.
negotiated
widely
under
made
to win solution
budgetary
winning
created
why
that
preserves
in the reformist
describe
I discuss
short
government
solidly
will
Sharing
undoubtedly
and goes on to describe
localities,
power
central
politicians
province.
of the
the further
clout
provinces.
each
and shifting followed
support
contracts
solutions
decade prevent
the political
the opportunity
fiscal
the net effect
debated,g put local
from
Moreover,
with resources
for the
particularistic
central
all provinces,
terms
would
to
up the power
Revolution
in winning
center
to the provinces
building
that
along
leaders
politicians
innocuous
industries reform
scheme
pre-reform
between
Committee.
1980 demonstrates good
treasury
by politically
fiscal
Central
ofeconomic
The
of playing
the Cultural
fiscal
Party
namely
central
left the central
revenue
after
by negotiating
gave
over
to any
challenge
of resources
bureaucracy,
Party
especially
of central
policies,
province,
strategy
and shift responsibility
and the interests
political
Communist
of fiscal reforms
decentralization
the
231
experience.
on a sharing
of the central
sympathetic
for themselves
each
the
Reform
to the political
post-1949
based
pioneered
weight
of its control
evolution
solution
country’s
had been
had
within
of Finance
deterioration
the
systems
Zedong
leaders
Ministry
of
the political
progressive
The
was an attractive
because
and planning
locality.
Political Strategy of Economic
value
policies
in the
system
of provincial
aimed
The
officials paper
to the provinces
his conservative
Party
allies
historical
the course
at enhancing
decentralization.
giveaways
Chinese
over
of the
to central
the power concludes
overpowered when
they
of by the
came
to
in 1988.
The Chinese
Pre-reform
In 195 1, a mere system essentially
was
Financial
two years
laid persists
down.
after
communist
Although
to the
Relationship
present
Between
takeover,
subsequently day. lo The
the basic
subjected center
Center shape
and Localities of the PRC
to frequent
monopolized
fiscal
tinkering,
formal
it
financial
thereby allowing them to build up local political machines) made the Chinese and Yugoslav reform drives surprisingly similar. Of course, the reform experiences in China and Yugoslavia were different in other respects. For example, in Yugoslavia the national legislature became the main policy-making arena, while in China, policy-making remained within the Party and government bureaucracy. 9. Christine Wong (personal communication) has suggested to me that because the central government shifted many of its spending responsibilities to local governments and collected substantial amounts of funds through state corporations and loans from local governments, the net effect of fiscal decentralization was less favorable to local governments than many Chinese and foreign experts believe. 10. Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu, op. cit., note 7; Katherine Huang H&o, The Gooernment Budset and Fz.ml Policy in Mainland Chzna (Taipei: Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research, 1987); Guojia caizheng gailun bianxie zu. Cuo~ia caizhen~pilun (Introduction to National Finance) (Bei,jing: Finance and Economics Publishers, 1984).
SYUI)IES
232
IN
COMPARATIVE COMMUNISM
authority, and shared resources with lower levels. The form of the system was decentralized revenue-sharing. The system was called “unified leadership, level-bylevel management” ~ton~i ~in~d~# &-n ji guanli). “Unified leadership” meant that the central government determined provincial expenditure budgets and that provincial governments had little freedom to make their own spending decisions.” Because there was no Chinese Internal Revenue Service bureaucracy, local officials collected profits
(IRS), no national revenue collection and taxes as the agents of the central
government. meant that the profits of enterprises run by central “Level-by-level management” ministries went to the central government, and the profits of locally-run enterprises went flows were established by the quasi-ownership to local governments. I2 Revenue relations
[what the Chinese
call “subordination
relations”
(Mu
guanxi)] between
different levels of government bureaucracy and the enterprises. If a locality’s revenues were insufficient to meet its expenditures as set by the center, then the locality was appropriated a share of the industrial-commerci~ tax and other taxes generated by local economic activity that were categorized local enterprises exceeded local expenditure
as “shared” revenues. Or if revenues from needs, then the locality remitted a surplus
to the center. The provinces usually gave the center more than they received from it. Light industry, on which profits are high, was controlled mainly by local authorities, while centrally controlled enterprises were concentrated in less profitable heavy industry. l3 The pre-reform authority (although
fiscal
system
reflected
China’s
tradition
of centralized
formal
with a significant degree of de facto decentralization to the provincial level specific arrangements were not identical to earlier ones). l4 Influenced by this
historical tradition, China’s communist leaders sought to strengthen central authority, but in the end, established an administrati~~e structure that was more decentralized than (called that of the Soviet Union. *j The horizontal authority of local governments “kuai” by the Chinese) was more on a par with the vertical authority of central ministries (called “t&o” by the Chinese) than was the case in the USSR. The bureaucratic rank of provincial governments was equal to the bureaucratic rank of ministries in the People’s
Republic of China, just as it had been in the Kuomintang’s Republican go~,ernment. l6 The power of app ointment was also less highly centralized in China than in the Soviet Union, with the Party center responsible for filling only 13 000 posts on its nomsnkluturu
list,
as compared
with 51 000 in the Soviet Union.”
While the heads
1I. Granick, op. cit., note 4, ar~uusthat local govwnments had greater control over thr mat&al produrts of local factories than over financial profits. 12. When I talk about “local” or “locality”, I mean provinces, autonomous regions, and provincial-Ievel uties. 13. As Donnithornc points out, the Chinese national gcwernmcnt w’as able to draw on the caxablc capacity of light industry only by taxing local governments, which was politically much hardrr than taxing firms. [Audrry 11onnithorne, Cenlm-Prouinczal Econonuc Rrlatzom in China (Canberra: Australian National Uniwrsity, Contemporary China Papers, No. 16, 1981)]. 14 Ch’ien Tuan-shcng, The G’m~cmmmtandP&/k ojChzna (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1961); Arthur Waldron, “Warlordism Versus Federalism: The Revival of a Debate,” 7% China @ax&i&, No. 121, March 1990, pp. 1 I& 128; Madeieine Z&n, 7’he ~lagz~trat~‘s Taie. R~ti~n~~~~~n,~ Fiscaf R@m in ~~g~t~~~t/i Cmfury China (Rerkeley: University of California Press, 1984). 15. Rese&h by Rahry, op. cit., note4, shows that in the federal Soviet system, while the republics’ share of the budget increased after Sralin, central control over planning and budgeting remained tight. 16. Ch’icn Tuan-shcng (1961). op cit., note 14. 17. .Jnhn P. Burns, “China’s Nomenklatura System, ” Pwhlems ~fCommunism, Vol. XXXVI (SeptembcrOrtober, 1987), pp. 36-51.
Deng Xiaopins’s of provincial
finance
(the central all lower The
level
financial
industrial
Union.
than
The
greater
stemmed Soviet
of
from differences
Union, highly
less profitable industrial
and thereby
plants
generated
most
one. more
compulsory within Even were
did
governments substantial
of it.lg
compliance
one with
regions,
equalization
economic Allowing
sense
to retain
much
administra-
generated
was nearly Just
much by light
as centralized
because
collection a small
a province
handed
budgetary
oflocally-run
authorities.
share
down
control
targets
over
and spent
of above-budget
factories
and
made
investment;
deal
By
it
for
the
funds
to promote
retained
to claim
by forcing center
caused provincial
a province the terms
authority from
contracts
contracting
whenever
transferring
system
sharing
impossible
changed
central
a good
were earmarked
Revenue
Year-by-year
government
the
also In the
industry
Ministries
in command.
provinces
used
system system.
by the center.
the profits
instructions.
in
a
a larger
provinces
to
by demonstrating through
income
Beijing
redistribution
to and
services.20 the Chinese
There
were
two
on the light
for the center
provinces
its revenue
also enhanced
the center
however,
dependence
and
fulfilled
to obtain
central
of social
time,
decentralization. essential
contracts another
system
complete
for
heavy
on revenues
had
the central
stronger
centralized
made
them.
funds
surplus,
Annual
with
backward
and
was under hand,
spend
it was permitted
to accumulate revenue
compete
Over
center
price
fiscal
it could
by central
between
financial
mean
annually
for
by Stalin.18
the
revenues.
was very
renegotiated
in
were
government-set
from
although
did.
help
and locally-run.
still had to be approved side,
local
Party
were decoupled
the center
on
officials
decimated
which
PRC
to provinces
target,
relied
the entire
Moscow’s
organizations
to depend
small
that
they did in the Communist
officials
on the other
If a province
on the revenue revenues,
not
targets
but its uses
haggling
share
funds
the expenditure
as local
were
scope
a more
had been
the center
reflected
the technical
played
Party
industry,
the pre-reform
Expenditures
than
and Soviet
prices,
of which
expenditures.
revenue,
heavy
Because
Also provincial
provincial
forced
side,
financial
enterprise
made Chinese
On the expenditure as the Soviet
Chinese
they
the
beginning
Party
in the Chinese
the prices profitable.
where
authorities.
to the task of planning
the
Communist
in Beijing
in the hierarchy),
than in the USSR
factors.
had
and administration.
Union
weight
never
Communist
233
authorities
Party
in the PRC
contemporary
from
Provincial-level
in the Soviet
by provincial
was inadequate
authorities
finance,
by the Party
officials
commands
role in the Chinese
of the Soviet China
economic
Reform
one and two steps down
chosen
planners
economic
planning,
prominent
were
but also several
central
Beijing’s central
appointed
role of provincial
tradition,
of Chinese
economy, Chinese
were
all positions
officials
prominent
not only Chinese
tion,
departments
nomenklatura included
more
capacity
Political Strategy of Economic
to retain
fiscal reasons
industrial
to create a larger
system for profits
a system share
evolved
this
trend.
produced
that was more
of revenues,
in the direction First,
given
by local
factories,
“incentive
especially
of greater the
center’s it made
compatible.”
over-target
revenues,
18. Franz Schurmann, “Politics and Economics in Russia and China,” in Donald W. Treadgold, ed., .Sooze~andChineseCommunism(Seattle: UniversityofWashingtonPress, 1967). Chineseprovincialauthoritywas also closely tied to the military especially during the 1970s after the Cultural Revolution. Many provincial CCP secretaries served simultaneously as People’s Liberation Army political commissars. 19. Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu, op. cil., note 7. 20. Nicholas R. Lardy, Economzc Growth andDisMution in China (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979); Michel Oksenberg and James Tong, “The Fiscal Reform in China and its Effects on Interprovincial Variations in Social Services, 1979- 1983” (unpublished paper, 1984).
S.NJIIIFS IN COMP,~RA-~IVE COMMUNKM
234 and
granting
provincial
them
revenues
from
the early
1950s
incentive
to
them.
Deng
Party, officials.
political
strengthen and
serving
principles
provincial
the motivation
conscientiously
as Minister
for the financial
governments
and
ministry
Mao
his policy
officials
to retain
rhetoric
of “playing leadership
and
partial
the 1950s
of central growth
planners
and social
Mao
sped
Forward
his rivals,
to the provinces and
politics
interests
and
provincial obstructed
who supported
to Party
196Os, and
ministry
officials
transformation
surplus
of
collect
of Finance system,
during
stressed
the
revenues
the support
delegating granted
expenditures,
of the
Great
the countryside, greater
a larger
share
authority,
as a
government
he turned ” linked
to provincial the assertion
(f&zo). 2:! In
program
Forward
campaign
economic
revenues,
and “ownership”
and
authority
dramatic
to overcome
narrowlyinstances
the resistance
accelerating
economic
rivals.‘” at meetings
the Great
power
agriculture,
was a package
to the provinces.
discretion
of almost
Leap
in 1955%1957.‘*
to collectivize
modernization
greater
Party
for support. the
and launched
leaders
to central planners
against two
way PRC
by rival
of provincial
for
his Party
The
leaders
as pitted
used this strategy to his
the Communist
counterweight
by the central
and administrative
of their
within
threatened
cooperativization
Leap
planning
a natural
of provincial
and speed-up fiscal
officials
to the provinces.”
dominance
and to defeat
of agricultural
part
officials
ministries
Zedong
the pace
integral
to “play
in command,
of the
Mao
by mobilizing
industrialize
of provincial
leaders
felt his political
initiatives
Mao’s
economic
made Zedong
(kuai) during
influence
sense for Party
were structured Whenever
leaders
were
would
enterprises
who when
the basic
in view of the political
it made
institutions
policies
Xiaoping,
of allowing
them,
profitable
fund.2’
Second,
An
to spend
promote
had laid down
effect
reserve
the discretion
officials
over
all central
tax
of
Provinces rates
and
enterprises.‘”
2 1. Guanpming r&m, August 23, 1982,JE’RS. 81938, Economics 271, October 8, 1981: Michel Oksenberg and James Tong, “The Evolution of Central-Provincial Fiscal Relations in China, 195O- 1983: The Formal System” (unpublished paper. 1987). 22. Jonathan Unger, “The Struggle to Dictate China’s Administration: The Conflict ofBranches vs. Areas vs. Refbrm,” TheAustrakm journal qf Chinese A@rs, No. 18 (July, 1987), pp. 15-45. 23. Even in the Soviet Union, with a more centralized institutional set-up, leaders with ambitious reform agendas have sought to play provincial leaders against the conservative central bureaucracy Khrushchev tried 10 play to the provinces to weaken his rivals and disarm the powerful central ministries. The support of provincial allies in the Central Committee saved Khrushchev when the Presidium (Politburo) tried to get rid ofhim in 1957 [Bahry, op cit., note4, p. 271. Gorbachev also built a coalition ofsupport for reform by building a base among provincial Party officials [Timothy J. Coltan, TheDilemmn ojR&mn in thc&uiet Utkm (New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 19861. 24. Parris Chang, “Research Notes on the Changing Loci of Decision in the CCP,” ?‘he China Quarterly, No. 44(October-December, 1970), pp. 169- 194; RoderickMacFarquhar, 7%eOri~insojtheCufturnlReuoi~tion, Eiiiume I, C~~tradzct~aRs Army the People. 1!?5S-57(N ew York: Columbia University Press, 1974); Kenneth G. Licberthat and Bruce J. Dickson, A Research Guide to Cmiraf Party and C&wrme~~t Meetzq~ in China, 194% IYHY (Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 1989); David S. G. Goodman, “Provincial Party First Serrrtarirs in National Politics: A Categoric or a Political Group?, ” in David S. G. Goodman, ed., Groups and Poittia m the Peopie’~ Republic o/China (Cardiff: University College CardiffPress, 1984), pp. 68-82. Goodman challenges Chang’s assertion that the provincial leaders promised to support Mao’s policies in exchange for greater provincial autonomy by presenting evidence that the provincial leaders were not in complete agreement: While some of them advocated greater linancial autonomy, others demanded more central aid to provinces for projects like waterconservancy. To argue that provincial officials have political influence in the policy process and that Mao Zedong tried to win their support does not require that they always agree on policy; in fact, given the very different situations faced by their regions, it wouid be surprising if they had unanimrms policy prcfercnccs. Morrovcr, provincial leaders probably find no inconsistency in their calls for greater financial auronomy and more state aid for particular prqjects like water conservancy; they wish to have both. 25. For a detailed description of the Great Leap Forward fiscal system SCL’Okscnberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note21.
Deng Xiaoping’s Theoretically,
the new sharing
provinces
to make
national When
economic
organs
failure
the
caused
the fiscal
back
into
the hat,
however.
than
they
had been
before
A second
wave
power
the Cultural
portion
of their
but
Mao
system Funds
and
of provincial
subordinates to retain
projects.
projects own
The
fiscal
system
towards
the
threat
of war,
provincial provincial
funds,
economic
more
Zedong
were
creating
national
dispersed
granted
moderates cushion
initiatives.26
of their
authority
of their
by
to set aside
a financial policy
regained a share
in the mid-1960s Party
authorized
10 per cent
provinces
introduced,
level.2” and
to keep
Provincial
after
over
budget
a
to win In 1968,
profits
to use for
construction
surplus
provinces for even
dispersed,
for their
fiscal
history
said,
rational
a large
of the 1949decided
in separate
solution.“33
authority according
the radical in 1976,
financial
of their
Xiaoping
budgetary
Gang
authorities,
proportion
Deng
over
revenues
enterprises
to set
from
took
to to the
their
to contract, returned
authority
more by the
categories
authority
of Four
especially
even
own were
to power and
funds,
the side of the
and resources the
were
industrialized
to the center,
were pressing
decentralization.32
of Fiscal System
Ziyang
“eating
death
provincial
of central
granted
3o After
was
justified
and expenditure
to the center
control
in which
of Mao’s and
that remitted more
Initiation
and Zhao
struggle
31 At the time
highly
revenues. central
transfer
sources were
supporters
self-sufficiency,
a massive
revenue
a lump-sum
to restore
radical
of regional
governments
and use all remaining a political
by Mao’s
involving
transferring
provoking provinces.
in 1970 A program
and a shift of most
he attempted
The
on,
introduced
in 1975,
The
a
to put the cat
remained
by Mao
provinces
for Mao’s
and were
provinces.
was
control
budgets,
still
limit
into
in 1959.
and the central
and Communist
approximately
1965-1966
a certain
later
use.28
tilted
able
27 From
under
year
It was impossible
authority
bureaucrats
as extra-budgetary
were
to enable
turned
Leap.
In 1964,
the support
years
Forward one
to lose prestige
financial
235
for three
Leap
adjusted
was stirred-up
enterprises local
were
Zedong
the Great
Revolution.
allowed
to be fixed
the Great
was recentralized.
from central
revenues
were
when
arrangements
of decentralization
he reclaimed
launching
plans,
disaster,
to resurge,
when
arrangements
long-term
economic
Political Strategy of Economic Reform
The
Reforms
1976 fiscal
system
provides
to lead off the drive kitchens” legacy
was the “result
of the prior
the context
for fiscal system
in which
Deng
reform.
As one economic
of history
there
explains
the political
Xiaoping official
was no other logic
of fiscal
reform. 26. Cyert and March would call extra-budgetary funds a form of “organizational slack.” [Richard M. Cyert and James G. March, A Behavioral 7’heory ofthe Firm (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1963)]. 27. Sun Yun, “How to Improve Control of Extra-Budgetary Funds,” Caimaojin~i, No. 7, July 15, 1982. 28. Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cil., note 21. 29. Barry Naughton, “The Third Front: Defense Industrialization in the Chinese Interior,” The China Quuar/erly, No. 115 (September, 1988), pp. 351-386. 30. Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note21. 31. Unger, op. cit., note 22; James Tong, “Fiscal Reform, Elite Turnover, and Central-Provincial Relations in Post-Mao China,” Australian Journal of Chinese Aff airs, No. 22 (July, 1989), pp. 1-28. 32. Chinese planning was also much more decentralized than Soviet planning. The volume of interprovincial trade in China was depressed because provincial planners sought independent balances. This argument is presented in Thomas P. Lyons, Economic Zn~egration and Planning in Maoist China (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987). 33. Author’s interview.
(a) A tradition of revenues divided accordirg to the quasi-ownership (lishuguanxi) different levels of government, Centrally-run enterprises provided revenues and locally-run ment
assumed
enterprises
provided
revenues
proprietary
financial
rights
(b) A trend of dispersion offinancial Revolution. Provincial governments retained
a substantial
extra-budgetary officials
of central
locally-run
(mostly
government
ran
a large
The
central
was
was in the position
As
of a medieval
had to extract
to the provinces
during
turned
provincial
officials
all the
provincial
Party
Central
Committee,
members were
were
metaphor,
him down.
over provincial them
or former
The
the feudatories
central
governments,
good
against
relations
with
After
Party
incentives
of
leader.
decentralized,
“eating
from
but
the
guaranteeing
big
a given
changed.
40 Whenever
financial
straits,
same There
pot”
Party
exercise
responsibility
original
level
budget
was no institutionalized
not.
Th e center revenues
economic
of Finance
if the central
had
of local
unexpected
funds from the provinces
extend
and
could
authority leaders
led
self-restraint”“-
instead.
(da guo fan).
the Ministry
principle,
reclaim
fiscal
leaders To
had formal
(d) No division of authority and responsibility between central and localgovernments. been
of the
Politburo
the king
of individual
officials-to
almost
Provincial
the Party
and Communist
1958,
half)
to select
by had
members
secretaries.3s
chose
Zedong,
Revolution,
(approximately first
provincial
them
Mao
the Party.
the power
but the political
by
central
to live off his own
full or alternate
that had
government
to not use this authority
and to keep
number provincial
and
generated
Chinese
and Cultural
within either
of the “selectorate”
of
feudatories.37
Forward
were
a significant
members
Donnithorne’s bring
and
the
in elite political competition.
into a key constituency
concurrent
important
from
Leap
secretaries
taxes
king who was not able
funds
the Great
first
it,
amount
by provincial
by the taxes
and
put
enterprises,
viewed
not be supported on profits
Donnithorne
(c) A pattern of “‘playing to the provinces” playing
of govern-
a sizeable
had become
could
dependent
industry.36
and who therefore
levels
of industrial
and controlled
and powers
treasury
and
light)
Different
own enterprises.“4
proportion
revenue,
resources
enterprises
their
resources that had accelerated over the decade of the Cultural
of budgetary
funds. 35 These
as entitlements.
profits
funds
share
for provinces.
over
of enterprises by for the center
The was
even
when
revenue
responsible
landed
situation
of Finance
of annual
sharing
and expenditure,
of for
provinces
out. According
the Ministry
the terms
had
one
the economic
to bail them
was hard-pressed,
by renegotiating
Funds
remained
considered
developments
was expected
link between
system
in to the could
contracts.
between
power
and responsibility. The reform
initiative came
revenue
to expand
both
sharing
from
experiments
developed
coastal
planning,
material
arrangement, 34.
During
enterprises
has
mat
The
36.
Guojia
37.
Donnithorne,
38.
Goodman,
used
the
39
Granick,
40.
Guojia
gailun
up. cit., at.,
op cit., caizheng
same Sovict
funds
caizheng
note
were
bianxie note
note
gailun
with
1976
and
proposed and
The
a package
fiscal
method
1977.
system
(Rahry,
equal
to three
times
zu (1984),
op
CC,
zu (1984),
op. cit.,
the
proposed
was Jiangsu,
Jiangsu’s
revenues
op. cit.,
boldest
kitchens”
provinces
a highly reforms
proposed
in fiscal
(gudirq bili baogan) was a variant
of differentiating
Union.
in separate
Several
of decentralizing
management.
by
thr
subordination
rrlations
note4.) 1965
note 10.
13.
24. 4. hianxie
“eating
the
and the top-down.
rate responsibility”
in the
extra-budgetary
op
that
allocation,
periods
been
autonomy
during
province
the “fixed
35.
fiscal
the bottom-up
note 10.
amount.
[Sun
Yun,
up. ci/
, note271.
of of
Deng Xiaoping’s the “sharing
total
and
Total
in 1976.
(Jiangsu’s
share
four years.
revenue”
Political StrateQ of Economic
arrangement
provincial
The
was to decide
issuing
spending
targets
its own budget.
Jiangsu’s
a success
in
contribute 1977
that were tried
were
The
suggested
move
of Finance financial
and
to meet during
pursued
Finance,
1960s
their
own
had
often
a hard
among
situation, their
its revenue
interests.
time
the fiscal
When
managing
the
without
to divide
to
beginning
in
had become
to the center,
of the
Ministry
of
the Finance
(jiazhang),
enough
of the
so dispersed
to listen
head
money.
The
head mistreated
the family
for
was the inability
children
them.
In that
and put the children
off on
own.44
From
the viewpoint
kitchens
was that
government
system
The
central
Minister
system
central
income
at current
of central
revenues Zhang
People’s
of public
government
true “administration
the advantage
finance finance
by separate
of eating
as well as the resources
of Finance
at the National
current
between
of Finance,
the responsibilities
deterioration
risk with the center. previous
of the Ministry
it clarified
and guaranteed
the progressive
levels.
and force Jingfu
Congress
administration,
be concentrated Another
official
“Financial eating
power
in separate
(guding) its level Finance
scheme
to
advantages scheme
expressed had
kitchens of state
Ministry the
to share
system
revenue. could local
Ministry was
After
get
is still in a state in which the authority
economic
in the direction
on of
the
Finance
activism,
of tightening-up
in the
more
Finance
Revolution, money.“46 officials
but in their (shou),
and duties what should
is not dispersed.4”
the Cultural
way
the Cultural
its hands
Ministry
viewpoint
the only
with the
in terms of the relationship
finance,
during
of
stem
financial
the problems
and what should be dispersed
so dispersed
bureaucracy,
in arousing
as a move
the
become
tier
would
1979:
levels ” is unimplemented,
is not concentrated
in separate
of each
reform
localities
diagnosed
in June
and regional
The
of the various levels with regard to public finance are not clearly defined,
the
and
sharing
of sole responsibility
position
that the family
head
provinces
refused
as family
the family
and complained
for the family
system
describing
revenue
in 1979 by the Ministry
itself
officials
metaphor:
for balancing
Jingfu.42
of the decision
Provincial
used the family
themselves
it’s better
because
1970s.
and
in 16 other
to divest
context
were
of contractual
was proposed
by the desire
for
ministries
and by 1980 was judged
types
Zhang
decentralization
needs
and
basis
to 1970 province
unchanged
(central
production other
of Finance,
43The immediate
the
officials
Ministry argued
fiscal
and
remaining
in 1977,
expand
41 Two
out on an experimental
was motivated
management.
Ministry Q&an)
to
center.
by the Minister
to popularize which
the
1959
center
and was to be responsible
was introduced
province
to
from
between
with the percentages
to the province)
the
revenue
nationally
to be split
on its own expenditures
experiment
motivating
more
schemes
were
was set at 42 per cent), province
to cease
implemented
revenues
237
Reform
pointed
language:
Revolution,
that
the
Ministry
could
fix
this was the only way When stressed
own minds not letting-go
advocating its
the
incentive
they viewed
the
cfang).
41. Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note 2 1. 42. Ibtd. 43. Author’s interview. 44. According to interviews, the State Planning Commission proposed decentralizing capital construction at the same time (1979) and for the same reason, i.e. to divest itself of responsibility. 45. Renmin ribao, June 30, 1979, quoted in Akira Fujimoto, “The Reform ofchina’s Financial Administration System,” Japan External Trade Research Organization, China News/etter(March, 1980), pp. 2-9; p. 3. 46. Author’s interview.
238
Srunr~s IN COMPARATIVECOMMUNISM
The Communist Party had instructed the Ministry of Finance to draft the 1979 fiscal reform.+’ According to a Ministry of Finance official, the decision to carry out fiscal decentralization was made by a small group of top Party leaders including Zhao Ziyang who had just come from Sichuan. As the Ministry official put it, “They decided to give power and money to provincial leaders which made them happy and made them support reform. ’ ’ Others also attributed the initiative to Zhao, who, having just come from Sichuan, understood the perspective of provincial officials and convinced Deng Xiaoping to play to it. 48 The reformist leadership of the Party promoted fiscal reform as a way to win the support of the provincial leaders for the reform drive. The pressure from provincial officials for greater fiscal autonomy was palpable to central Party and government officials. Some officials I interviewed said that the provinces left the Ministry
of Finance
little choice but to pursue fiscal decentralization.
As one official said, “They couldn’t not do it at that time; the provinces wouldn’t have agreed.” The provincial leaders “forced a showdown” (tnn pai) with the center and insisted on a fiscal scheme that would be fixed for several years, that allowed them to decide
how to spend
their
revenues,
and that
gave them
a larger
share
of their
revenues.4Y In the context of succession politics-Deng Xiaoping was fighting to get rid of Mao’s chosen successor, Party Chairman Hua Guofeng, and place his reformist lieutenants Zhao Ziyang and Hu Yaobang in power-the provincial leaders could not be denied. The meetings discussing the fiscal system reforms gave provincial leaders ample opportunities to voice their demands. At a Central Work conference in April 1979 fiscal decentralization was discussed and one form of decentralization chosen. A Conference of Provincial Party Secretaries in October, 1979, decided to adopt a different form of decentralization.“(’
The final formula and the timetable
for implementation,
as well as
each province’s sharing contract (including base figure, percentages to be remitted and retained, or amount of subsidy), were determined at a National Planning Conference attended by representatives of provinces and ministries in December, 1979.“’ The
implementation
thousand condition
of the reform was supposed to await the return of several subordination, but this large enterprises5* to direct central government was never met. Both the managers of the enterprises and the provinces
objected.53 Instead at the December, 1979, National Planning Conference, a sense of urgency, particularly on the part of provincial participants, compelled a decision to rush ahead to implementation without recentralizing the enterprises.54 As Naughton 47. Author’s interview. 48. Zhao was not appointed as Premier until 1980, subsequent to the key 1979 meetings deliberating fiscal arrangements, but he may have played a leadership role at the meetings nonetheless. 49. Some provincial advocates pressed for an approach to reform called “local planned economy” that would shift ali economic authority from center to provinces. They held up American federalism as the model “Some Tentative Ideas on Carrying Out the Reform of the Economic to emulate. W&hong Fang, Management Structure,” Renmin ribao, September 21, 1979, p. 3. 50. Tian Yinong, et al., op. cit., note 6; Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note 21. 51. “State Council Notice on Carrying Out the Financial Management System of ‘Apportioning Revenues &hd ,+& vxnjian huibian and Expenditures While Contracting Responsibility According to Levels, ” Jir+ (Collections of Documents on the State Economic System Reform) (Beijing: Beijing Finance and Economic Publishers, 1984), p. 841. 52. One interviewee said the number was five hundred. 53. Author’s interview. 54. Tian Yinong, et al., op. cit., note 6, p. 76; Barry Naughton, “The Decline of Central Control over Investment in Post-MaoChina, ” in David M. Lampton, ed., Policy Implemenlalion in Pm-Mao China (Berkeley: University ofCalifornia Press, 1987).
Den8 Xiaoping’s observes,
“Local
sacrifice
At the time voices
were
at policy tion
governments
any of their
Reform
from
conferences
Commission.57
provincial
officials,
The
1980
Fiscal Reforms:
The
fiscal
reforms
provinces.
from
balancing They
could
authority The
Guangdong transfer.
plan
ahead.
by adjusting from
the central flexibly
the fiscal
decentraliza-
of the Economic
political
logic
from
of Finance,
were
authority
of the
new
swept
and
fiscal
were fundamentally Second,
so that
the and
aside.58
expenditures
the center.
different
were
in three
could
their
provinces
spending.
of
profit
responsible
to match
Third,
of local
resources
arrangements
provinces
provinces
for
revenues.
had budgetary
They
ceased
to receive
ministries.60
to the 30 provincial for
fiscal
of the policy
critical
Kitchens”
form
their
some
the Ministry
for five years
and amount
arrangements
and Fujian, were
different
”
to receive years.
The
Almost
all
provinces
revenues
were
revenue
level governments,
regions.
150 million could
of Beijing, were
placed
keep
The
were
per year.
everything
national
the most
to the center yuan
Tianjin,
where
granted
sources
to contribute
as subsidy
metropolises
central
the two provinces
concentrated,
Guangdongcommitted
The
and
was applied
to
reform
establishincluded
five
arrangements.61
investment
(2)
expanded sharing fixed
criticizing
a compelling
in Separate
rely on bail-outs
specific
having
with the method
the precursor
the wisdom
were
problems
leadership,
the new arrangements
from
without
was introduced,
Group,
such
shares
the structure
targets
new system
different
separate (1)
fiscal
about
in 1980
budgets
no longer
to arrange
mandatory ing
own
had
contractual
in revenue
their
reform
56 A paper
Party
“Eating
the
revenue
increases
the policy
any doubts
239
autonomy
the potential
Small
Communist
that of the past, 5g First,
Reform
introduced
Although
resembled respects..
that
kitchens
identified
in 1979-1980.
But
of the reformist
operational
Reform
“55
separate
out of the Economic
perspectives
greater
sources.
A few economists
research
came
got
revenue
the eating
heard.
Political Strategy of Economic
turned
above
and Shanghai
on the most
restrictive
to attract plan,
over
1 billion The
efforts
generous yuan
to
sum
provinces.
were
fixed
for five
amounts.
that provided plan
the
per year and Fujian
amounts
these
foreign
“lump
despite
the lion’s their
share
of
objections.
55. Naughton (1987), ibid. 56. Author’s interviews; Daimo Guo and Zhaoming Yang, “Different Viewpoints in a Discussion on the Reform of the Economic Management Structure,” Renmin ribao, September 21, 1979, p. 3; Fang, op. cit., note 49 57. Author’s interviews. 58. Tian Yinong, etal , [op cit., note 6, p. 751 says that despite the original intention in 1979 to reform other aspects of the economic structure before tackling financial reform, the clamor from all quarters for more financial power was so deafening that financial reform was undertaken first. 59. This summary description draws heavily on Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note21. 60. The ministries must have been reluctant to give up their control over local enterprise expenditures. In a 1979 document on fiscal decentralization, the State Council emphasized that while the central ministries would no longer have authority to hand down local expenditure targets, they still were to “guide the direction, approve the work program, carry out supervision and urging, sum up experiences, and help local enterprises in their sector” (State Council Notice on Carrying Out the Financial Management System of ‘Linking Revenues and Expenditures, Sharing Total Revenues, Contracting the Percentages, and Fixed for Three Years’,” (1979), Jiqji tizhigaige wen+m huibian 1977-83 (Collection of Documents on the State Economic System Reform) (Beijing: Finance and Economic Publishers, 1984), pp. 803-804. 61. The system was described in “State Council Notice on Carrying Out the Financial Management System of ‘Apportioning Revenues and Expenditures While Contracting Responsibility According to Levels” (1981) op. cit., note 60.
240
S-IUDIES IN COMPARATIVE Their
plan,
a version
percentage
of total
Because their
the funds
(3)
fixed
.Jiangsu fixed
them
four
for four
enterprises,
the central
treasury,63
the sharing
and
mainly was
from
and profits
center
and province.
in effect
income
mainly
came
during
included
in
commercial
the
fixed
income,
the Cultural of their
income,
fixed
Central
that
that the center
shared income,
income share to local
to reclaim
The was
contract
fixed
devolved
wanted
adjustment” The
shared obtained
Fixed-rate
20 per cent).
by
tax revenue.
resembled
was
Local
had been
to
divided
were divided
fixed-rate
income
enterprises.
the province
shared
income,
fixed
directly
which
sources
enterprises.
enterprises
Revolution
“income
adjustment
local
of centrally
and then
system
Revenue
of locally-run
profits,
tax, the most important
for shared
scheme
the percentages
taxes
together
revenue”
of centrally-run large
and
to be channeled
lumped
195 1 to 1958.
profits
those
category
were
by adjustment.
the
from
got 80 per cent
a
year.“2
government,
the Jiangsu with
profits
continued
specific
from
and taxes
from
mainly
management center
central shared
the profits
derived
with
fixed
each
to the central
revenue”
of the
in all schemes
were put on a “sharing
income
necessary
total
exception
all taxes
arrangement
arrangement,
to the center
in contrast
in “sharing
the
which
up into four categories: income,
were vitally year,
revenue”
to remit
years.
With
between
provinces
total
required
every
its experiment
controlled
Sixteen
“sharing were
revised
years.
by percentage
(4)
were
continued for
they
they generated
percentages
which
of the Jiangsu revenue
COMMUNISM
only the
industrial
fixed the sharing
and the local remittance
(the
revenue rate
to the center
for five years. “sharing
The total
at their
1979,
the
profits
strengthened
(5)
Eight
the local
a period
this form
national
meeting. of
subsidies
“sharing
specific
“sharing
enterprises sense
expansion
over
the Jiangsu
by provincial
“sharing
Party
secretaries
specific
revenue”
arrangement
local
revenues
and
for
of proprietorship
and optimism,
over these
thereby
enterprises.
most local officials
preferred
sharing.
minority
received
was chosen
of provinces
64 The
local
government’s
of economic
of revenue
system
revenue”
for the majority
October,
earmarked During
specific system
revenue”
from
provinces
and
the center
to cover
revenue”
system
increasing
annually
by 10 per cent.
of revenue
collected
above
autonomous
with These
their their
regions chronic
subsidy
provinces
could
which deficits
fixed retain
for
had previously were five
put on the years
the total
and
amount
the budget.
62. In 1980, Shanghai 88.8 per cent, Beijing63.5 per cent, and Tianjin 68.8 per cent. Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note ‘21. 63. Liaoningjngi loqji nianjian, 1987 (Beijing: Zhongguo tongji chubanshe, 1987). 64. In July, 1979, the State Council had made a preliminary decision to implement a version of fiscal decentralization called “linking revenues and expenditures, sharing total revenues, contracting for percentages, fixed for three years” (shourhiguagou, chuanefenchen~, bili baogan, sannian bubwz) which was essentially the Jiangsu “sharing total revenues” system; the “apportioning revenues and expenditures while contracting responsibility according to levels” (huafm shouahi, fen+ baogan) or “sharing fixed revenues” system was introduced on an experimental basis only in Sichuan because it was said to require reforms in other aspects of the economy [“State Council Notice on Carrying Out the Financial Management System of ‘Linking Revenues and Expenditures, Sharing Total Revenues, Contracting the Percentages, and Fixed for Three Years’,” (1979), op. cd., note601. After the October meeting of provincial Party secretaries and the December National Planning Conference, the State Council announced a change to the “sharing fixed revenues” system.
Deng Xiaoping’s
Political Strategy of Economic
The Evolution of Fiscal Sharing Systems, 1980-1987:
241
Reform
Bending Toward
the Provinces The
evolution
of fiscal
sharing
schemes
advantageous
terms
from
for the reform
drive
and for their
a strong
to keep
case
responsibilities
and
the center
more the
reveals
because
own political
revenues
reform
the ability
central
careers.
because
they
environment
of provincial
Party
leaders
Provincial were
new
to win
their
officials
taking
created
officials
needed
support
could
on more
make
budgetary
uncertainties
for
their
enterprises. The
terms
provincial
of each
officials
revenue-sharing
and
the
agreement
had to be approved
Council.65
And
sibility
of Finance
for each
sensitive
contract
to political
sharing
contract
was
to claim
credit
When
the
negotiated of the
center.67 central
burden
a political
sharing
bargaining overly
The
between
observed experiment
in 1977;
of Finance by 3 billion
deficit
center officials after
squeezing
local
reform
the original
in their producing
whose fiscal
aspects
localities
members
were
Party.
The
revenue-
in the
State
Council
that
various
to lower reducing
setting
initial with
targets
sharing
rates
insufficient
center
its reform
always policies
it
of fiscal that
were
funds,
was
of the Jiangsu
up from gave
and
as subsidies;
pattern
the center
The
because
yuan
in the case
were
out ahead
expenditure
This
was adjusted
as a rule,
came
revenue
billion
It had occurred share
its
yuan.6s
left the center
that
provinces
the provinces’
several
and percentages. especially
intention
was for fiscal
wanted
system
controlled,
were affected
contract.
contracts
environment
of the economic
revenues
sharing
whose
the provinces
13 billion
the center’s
explained
and political
were still administratively
provinces
it appealed the respon-
57 per cent
in to provinces
felt it had to “take were responsible
for
enterprises.
the economic
of other
and
I interviewed.
numbers
base
agreed yuan,
i.e.
province,
one year,
the localities,
Prices
and
an additional
of almost
and
when
Although
center
the
Conference,
and providing
care of’ ’ (thaogu)
five years,
politicians
between
official
many
the
Planning
to 61 per cent. 6g One negotiating
and
The
and by the State
In effect,
Council
the
Finance.
of its contract,
of the Communist
1979,
to the provinces
by several
by the State
the top levels
between
of
of Finance
Council.6ti
rates
Ministry
a budget
generous
to the State
document,
appropriations
by 10 per cent
to absorb
Ministry
for it.
at the December,
increase had
new
from
in bargaining
the
with the terms
was appropriated
direction
wanted
higher
set
of
of the Minister
was dissatisfied or even
were
department
by the office
if a province
to the Minister
contract
budget
the center
failed
when
pace
with
a product’s
and usually textile
to compensate
fixed
for a period
On the economic
to keep
so whenever
demanded,
For example,
to remain
interfered.
prices
them.
received, were And
fiscal
price
of
side, the reform.
7o
was revised,
an adjustment changed,
whenever
textilethe
sub-
65. “State Council Notice on Carrying Out the Financial Management System of ‘Linking Revenues and Expenditures, Sharing Total Revenues, Contracting the Percentages, and Fixed for Three Years’,” (1979), ofi. cit., note 60. 66. Author’s interviews. 67. In an earlier document the State Council had stressed that in the fiscal contract negotiations, stability of central revenues and national financial balance had to take priority. Ibid. 68. Tian Yinong et al., op. cit., note 6; Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op.cit., note21. 69. Only in part because of a change excluding enterprise depreciation funds from the local revenue base. Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note21. 70. “The failure to achieve a complete set of reforms has affected the implementation of fiscal reforms.” Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (1989), op.cit., note 7, p. 232.
ordinate local
relations
the revenue The
to central
coincided
Liaoning
brunt
with the 1981that
received rate,
for maintaining
Finance
praised
fiscal
was
1980-1982
financial
position
compensating central
of ‘eating
from
financial doing”
(baogan,
not doing” The
context. have been from
the
in economic
pounding
for agricultural
to shift
fiscal
the
In
1983
for
in interest
treated to
the
rates,
use,
their
center
the
on the
provinces
and petroleum expected
structural
factors.“7’i
provinces
a of
between
changes
they
became
the economic relationship
to compensate
74 The
deficits.”
the Ministry
of enterprises,
after
loosely
reform.
levels,
and
original
preserve
by
“While
in name The
A Ministry that
was
to feed there
is
and the problem
resolved.“7”
cured.
as “contract”)
translated
the center
implemented
fundamentally system
was introduced,
still expected
this is not really
reform
to the provinces
the reform
concluded,
had not been the
responsibility
After
all. Everyone
assessment
that
reform
solicitousness
Policy-making
toward
provinces’
of Finance
called
was in reality
in the
the provinces
bureaucratic
arena
impossible
to obtain
if provincial
the center.
Keeping
the provinces
political
support
provinces
able
has not been
interview
was an important
Another their
of Finance
continuous
tional
kitchens
central
from
reducing
the
official
“guarantee
for
a “guarantee
for
(bao bu San) system.”
would drive
that
on the center
usually
center’s
treatment
soldiers.
separate
the big pot’
in an
as soybeans
the aim of the 1980
at different
dependence
complained
relations
bore
perturbations.
were not entirely
responsibility
during
and terms
was never
Ministry
of change
which
contracting
article
reform
provinces
to help by raising
of heavy
One
of fiscal
industry
in the distribution changes
items
from
to redraw
hit were
agreed
of fiscal
balance.
from
entitlement
government
As one
separate
an
that had been
the kitchens them.
as
because
of contract
to demobilize
for economic
even though
resulting
of such
expenses
a factory
period hard
heavy
the system
a period
in the subordinate
in the prices
unexpected
from
administrations
readjustment
changes
changes
The
system
a major
the initial
case the center a year
stability
local
shifting
to get the center
Especially
income
it wait
for “in
relative and
management
there
of their
In Liaoning’s
environment,
reform
administration
budget
during
retrenchment.
the center-provincial
maintaining
was a battle
line.7’
but made
economic
method
central
most
by, for example,
there
perilous
1982
policies.
retention
In an uncertain
reforms
sharing
was particularly
of contractionary
its revenue
were altered,
management,
and expenditure
environment
which like
of an enterprise
management
consideration consideration
for reformist was
was a set of particularistic for
individual
who were clearly
Party dissatisfied
officials
succession deals
leaders
reflected required and
were the three
which
by tough
on board
fiscal
the reform
leaders.
politics.
The
for provincial
as well
institu-
consensus,
were alienated
satisfied Party
China’s
as for the metropolises
eating
officials reform
in
separate
designed drive.
whose
The
revenues
to win only were
71. Author’s interviews. 72. The center extended a loan to Liaoning in the meantime. Author’s interviews. 73. Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (Deepen the reform of the Budget Management Sys~ern to Promotr Economic Development),Jin~.~Quanli, No. 10, 1988, pp. 35-37, 39 74. Tian Yinong et al., op. cit., note 6, p. 84 75. Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (1988), op. cd., note 73. 76. The continued existence of the big pot is illustrated by the widespread “chicken game” between local and central governments over grain procurement funds during 1989- 1990. Local governments spent their grain procurement funds for other purposes and then asked the center to bail them out to prevent peasant
Deny Xiaopinc’s too crucial tried
to the center
to appease
Political Strategy of Economic Reform
to allow
officials
from
political
the
considerations
metropolises
243
to dominate.77
by periodically
Zhao
raising
Ziyang
their
revenue
share.78 The
fiscal
support
giveaways
for reform
left the central
treasury
infrastructure innocuous
served
and their
too poor
construction approaches
First,
they
organizing
into
tobacco
products,
during
1982-1983
etc.
to
help
which
unanimously
by the Party
necessity
monopolies
State
leadership.
was little
autonomy
to the sectors
the revenues
the ministries
could
meetings
do. Beginning
to discuss
controlled
generated
of petroleum,
how
coal,
in 1984,
electric
considered
these
a matter
principles.
corporations Economic
chafed
and
and
enterprise
was made.*’
As of
as well as by all enterprises had
become
at
Commission,
Commission
competition
but no progress
power
As
they constrained
the Reform
to restore
corporations,
and
these
of
was supported
reform entities
to the State
by corporations,
by these
were
by
estabLished
creation
Ma Hong,
of market
under
them
industries
were
The
corporations
Enterprises about
politically
for automobiles,
shipping
and as bureaucratic
enterprises. complained
and
by his advisor
in the face
competition,
the SEC
held
flew
but
subsidies,
several
profitable
difIiculties.7g
8o Central
they
price
corporations
metals,
Ziyang
devised
of the most State
budget
on Zhao
though
and often
Council
1985,
even
of subordinate
the restrictions but there
was urged
the
in building
for themselves,
for providing
officials
of several
non-ferrous
leaders
support
needs.
corporations.
solve
they discouraged
the freedom
Beijing revenue
the earnings
petrochemicals,
of Party
in building
its obligations
central
state
interests
interests
Therefore
national
corporations, of fiscal
collective
to meet
to meeting
appropriated
them
the
individual
under
the preserve
of the
center.82 Most
of the industries
dispersed.
To
corporations, taxes
appease Beijing
and profits
to increase central tion,
them
of the enterprises
central
for example, them
by the creation
provinces
offered
revenues
implementation
forced
affected the
of these
many
to do
than
so.
of central
ministries
side-payments
who
corporations lost
were
revenues
widely
to the
including
a 20 per cent
share
they gave up. Corporations
were a more
feasible
seeking
revenue
corporations
localities The
and
refused
automobile
from
was lax.
particular cigarette
also
had
factories less
way
Even
In the case of the tobacco
to give up their corporation
provinces.
new of the so,
corporaand no one
than
a complete
monopoly.83 Second, applied
and another per
cent
provinces
short-falls
“temporary”
universally.
Provincial
four billion
tax
(later
to generate
in 1981;
raised central
to
in central
governments the center
15 per funds
cent)
revenue
loaned wrote on
were
the center off the loans
extra-budgetary
for infrastructure
projects,
met
by ad hoc extractions
eight
billion
in 1982.84 funds
yuan
in 1980
In 1983, was
put
a 10 on
all
and a 10 per cent tax on
77. That is not to say that fiscal reform did not aggravate regional tensions. For one thing, many provinces were jealous of Guangdong’s special financial privileges (author’s interviews). 78. Author’s interviews; Shanghai’s share was increased from 12.1 per cent in 1984 to 24 per cent in 1985. Tianjin’s share was raised from 46 per cent in 1984 to 58 per cent in 1985 [Tong, 00. ctl., note311. 79. Oneofthem, theChinese National Petrochemical Corporation, was granted the bureaucratic status of a ministry; all the others were made subordinate to ministries. 80. Author’s interviews. 81. Author’s interviews. 82. Christine P. W. Wong, “Tax Reform and Central-Local Fiscal Interaction in China” (unpublished paper, 1990). 83. Author’s interviews. 84. Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note ‘21; Hsiao, op. ci/., note 10.
Srur~~:s
244 construction 1983.85 were
projects
In 1987, required
treasury
both
was expected Finally,
Of
ways:
subsidies,
housing
budget
pinch
too
items
policy
more
that
end
“eating
of
officials
decade,
local
purchase
from
the
just
big
pot”
as the center
central
responsibilities
virtually
all responsibility
few
education,
to uniform revenues
provinces.
the combination a
budgetary
according
on particular
Everyone
formula-based
preserves,
safer for Party
paid a little.
No one felt the
sharing
contracts
formula
tilted
universally-applied
obligations
winning
for price and many
formulas
uniform
expenditure
a politically
to all the
health,
was politically
of particularistic
sectoral
of revenue-sharing toward did
the
in the needs
to
pay
back
of concentrated
the
benefits
Guangdong
and Fujian
run enterprises
whose
of all enterprises reason
profit
retention
ments
were
for the
by
1983,
were were
suffering.
more
pooled,
change go Under
how
budget
reflected
Council
financial
to
protect
deficits
by changes
central
officials
sometimes control.@
central
in fact,
and and
conservative
shifts
in the situation
justified Party
revenues
preoccupied
But
were introduced, system all
and taxes
had reduced
central
bureaucracies.
was
in revenue-
at the lower
10 of the 16 provinces over
the “sharing
total
three
levels
revenue”
total
metropolises
and
to the center,
wage
of local
system,
of centrallythe profits
dividing
increases,
enterprises,
originally
“sharing
the exception
and province
readjustment, profits
the
8g With
directly
the center
the remitted
to the Jiangsu
except
system.
still went
with that
shifted
provinces
on the Jiangsu
profits
1980
State
treasury
revenues”
and
about
central
after the reforms
specific
system,
worries
were impelled
two years
The
to strengthen
economic
of the central
after
interests.
And
central
arrangements
revenues”
have
construction.
and
“sharing
arrangements
provincial
as measures
capital
In 1982,
The
the
to “voluntarily”
construction,
calculated
had found
leaders
elders
on the
the
costs.
government
sharing
at
and local
to bail out the center
to provinces
for generating
and
modifications
Party
proved
infrastructure
uniform,
deference
keypoint
added
Throughout
pressured
expected
shifted
over
were
hard
leaders
evolution
continued
taxes
that
87 With
and
Party
The
handed
provinces
extractions, and diffuse
was
cut by 10 per cent,
center.86 were
extractions
government
approach
severely.
the
center,
to the
were
funds
were
individuals
these
and urban
than leaning
toward
than
course
center
universal
leaders
extra-budgetary
amount and
the provinces
central
The
The
by
COMMUNISM
to bail out the provinces. the
provinces. other
COMPARATIVE
expenditures
this
enterprises,
bonds.
worked
financed
all budgetary to lend
governments,
IN
and
enterprise
and local local
and
the total. govern-
governments
85. Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cif., note 21. of the State Budget for 1986 and on the Draft State 86. Wang Bingqian, “Report on the Implementation Budget for 1987,” Xinhua, April 13, 1987, IBIS, April 15, 1987, pp. Kll-21. 87. In one exception to the universal application of these extractions, the center hit up Guangdong and Fujian for loans in 1981 (1.6 billion yuan from Guangdong, 154 million yuan from Fujian) and again in 1982 (the loans were written off in 1983 and nwer repaid) [Tong, op. cif., note 311. Officials in Guangdong and Fujian probably calculated that it was worth their while to pay off the center to keep their special privileges (which included capital construction and foreign investment approval authority, planning authority, a separate labor market, and foreign exchange retention as well as fiscal autonomy). From their point of view, the loans were protection money to the organization boss to preserve their profitable franchise. 88. “State Council Notice on Improving the Financial Management System of ‘Apportioning Revenues and Expenditures While Contracting Responsibility According to Levels’,” (1982), Jingji lizhi pi@ wenjian huibim 1977-83 (Collection of Documents on the State Economic System Reform) (Beijing: Beijing Finance and Economics Publishers, 1984), p. 841. 89. Ibid.; Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (1989), op. czl., note 7; Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op cit., note21; Wang (1990), op. ci!., note 82. 90. Tian Yinong et al., op. cit., note 6, p. 83.
Denx Xiaoping ‘s Political Strategy of Economic Reform got a larger giving
share
of more
up a share
governments
preferred
profits
growing
were
specific But
in a time
when
local
factories,
they
method
base.
seems
increases income
from
In other their
a beneficial The
words,
primacy
formation
financial
Instead
of the objectives
of the LGS
to weaken
the
subordinate
relations,
would
officials
resisted
Provincial system
wasted
time and energy
above were
of financial
bargaining
over
competed
most important local enterprises rents
Provincial taxes because
fiscal
and
and build
they wanted
once
not only
rates
again
proposed
when
with
in
1982 (ligai
of taxes.
the negotiability
were
trans-
taxes”
pay a variety
them
that
a radical
of profits
would
total
scheme
obtained
to the center.“’
Two
of enterprise
in the form of taxes;
“ownership”
local
and
and
budgetary
regardless
toward
to maintain
fiscal
relations
of the
oftheir
provinces
contracts gave
both
rarely
to bargain
profit
local officials
True,
they
with the center in the short
it the
so that
for the reasons
It offered
and politically
tax system.
with
center
Yet the center them
the power
valuable.
manipulable
legalized
of the financial
with
the center.
upper
provincial
in
officials
used its leverage discussed
above.
retention
contacts
opportunities
term
hand
over And, with
to collect
machines.g5
also opposed government
their
authority
leaders,
the easily
a uniform,
contracts
from
was politically
national
since
to bend
to provincial
officials
sharing
that all enterprises,
to replace with
formal
sharing
preferring
taxes
sharply
of sharing
had provided
enterprise
over the terms
below the
to win good terms
the provinces,
political
the effort
haggling
And
relatively
sharing
advisors
income
pay.q3
contracting
and the enterprises zero-sum.g4
and national
revenue”
the supplementary
the method
by formalizing
between
specific
of
finances
the local specific while
demonstrated
direct.
the profits
put their
the provinces
(1) to reduce
obligations linkage
by creating local taxes
revenues
useful
financial
that
tax increases
enterprises
were
threatening
when
the “replacement
profits,
proposal
financial
they
more
but also new
Ziyang’s
system,
“sharing
factories
will opt for whatever
method, was
enterprise
The
reasons,
In 1982-1983,
Zhao
of remitting
and local government (2)
and
local
the “sharing
to accept
officials
interests
officials
of China’s
shui, or LGS).
of various
for the loans
of provincial
of Finance
while of fact,
for local
because
a system
and commercial
sharing
them
risk with
will be willing
return.
in the fiscal
to compensate
Ministry
because
provincial
short-term
change
computed
their
were
in exchange
of expansion,
complete.
of local
reform
explained,
of industrial
was
proprietorship
“as a matter
the localities
a period
system
profits
structural
to spread
or even decreases
these
their
to localities,
During
revenue”
on
As one 1982 account
the revenue
will maximize
specific
and
tax revenues
enterprises.
claim
also made
preferred
or does not decrease, revenues.“g’
their
contraction
attractive
slowly
industrial-commercial
of local
the “sharing and
system
revenue”
on a broader
stable
of the profits
245
a tax from
their
system
national proprietary
to fund taxes,
local to be
financial
governments paid
rights
from
local
by all enterprises,
over local enterprises.
91. Guangming nboo, August 23, 1982, JPRS81938, Econ 271, October 8, 1982. 92. “State Council Notice on Improving the Financial Management System of ‘Apportioning Revenues and Expenditures While Contracting Responsibility According to Levels’,” (1982), u,& cit., note 88; Oksenberg and Tong (1987), op. cit., note 21. 93. Wong (1990), op. cit., note 82. 94. Guojia caizheng gailun bianxie zu (1984), op. cif., note 40; Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (1989), op. cit., note 7. 95. The theory of political rent-seeking, i.e., politicians who intervene in markets to generate political IXSO~KXS for themselves, has bee” most elegantly developed by Robert H. Bates in Essays on the PoliticalEconomy ofRural A&a (Berkeley: University ofcalifornia Press, 1983) and Markets andStatex in TropicalAfrica (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981).
246
STUDIES
IN
COMPARATIVE
COMMUNISM
The shift to the “sharing total revenue” Jiangsu system from the “sharing revenues” system in 198‘2-1983 had diffused but not broken the financial
specific linkage
between provincial governments and provincial enterprises. Provincial officials enjoyed the political and economic benefits of their role as corporate heads of the local economy and were loathe to give them up. 96 One Ministry of Finance official said, “An objective of the li%fugai shui reform was to break the administrative
relationship
of enterprises
with
localities, but it was not possible to do it. Some people’s thought on this issue had not changed yet, and it was also a question of power. “g7 In a series of meetings to discuss reptacing profits with taxes, provincial officials expressed their doubts and succeeded in modifying or delaying elements of the plan that shui reform was introduced in two stages. The first, begun in they opposed. ‘a The ligui 1983, required enterprises to pay only an income tax, and allowed them to continue to retain and remit to local governments after-tax profits at the same level as 1982. The second
stage,
begun
in 1984,
converted
all profits
to taxes,
but did not eliminate
negotiability or financial linkages based on the subordination relations of enterprises, although that had been theoriginal intention. An adjustment tax was bargained out with individual enterprises in seven year contracts granting one rate on current profit levels and another lower rate for incremental profits. yg Most important of all, due to the objections of provincial governments, the set of local taxes was never implemented and the revenue base of center and provinces was never put on a firm legal footing. Instead the State Council declared in 1985, that “temporarily” all provinces were to follow the system of “revenue sharing on the basis of dividing up tax revenues” which essentially replicated Thanks
the Jiangsu “sharing total revenues” system.‘“” to effective defense by provincial officials, provincial
financial interests were
left intact. Although all revenues from enterprises were called taxes instead of profits, little else had changed. As one official said, “It is the same regardless of whether we call it profits or tax; it’s all revenue anyway.“‘*’ Not surprisingly, Communist Party leaders did not intervene
in the bureaucratic
policy-making process to impose a thorough-going fiscal reform over the objections of provincial officials. The provincial officials were too important a bloc within the Party to push around. Moreover,
from the standpoint
of individual leaders at the top levels of
the Party, li g& &ui would have impeded their career-buiIding strategies. Party politicians took advantage of the particularism of liscal contracting to win political support for themselves and therefore were not enthusiastic about abandoning it. Even the Ministry of Finance, which was undoubtedly the agency most strongly committed to ligczishu, was basically satisfied with the current fiscal contracting system. 96. One groupofChinese reform economists argued that the cmrrqncc ofproblems like local ~~j~ninistr~itier inrwfcrence and market blockades could not br blarncd cntircly on the dccentralizrd fiscal system They WCK the result of introducing fiscal decentralization into a system characterized by “unifizd local Party and gwrmmrnt Icadership and the role played by local Party and government authorities in functioning as thr acting ~wnrrs of enterprise assets under the system of public ownership” [Hua Sheng, Zhang Xuejun, Luo Xiaoping, “Ten Years of Chinese Reform: Review, Reflection, and Prospects,” ,/q+ .ynnjzu, No. 9, September 20, 1988, pp. 13- 37. 97. Author’s interview. 98. See Susan L. Shirk, 7%ePofiticalFnilure~~f~onomacR~~form in Chino, Chapter Seven for a detailed analysis of the fifoi shuz case (forthcoming). 99. Wang (1990), op. cit., note 82. 100. Ibid.; Although formally all provinces were on a system of “sharing specific revenues,” “because conditions were not ripe” the “sharing total revenues” system was “temporarily implemented” [Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (1989), op. cit., note 71. 101. Author’s inter\,iew.
Denf Xiaoping’s Ministry
of Finance
eating
in separate
central
budget
pre-1980 third
They financial
the central
in 1979,
1988.1°4
The
officials,
was that
arousing
of their
“it
authorship
reform-minded Finance
of the
1980
fiscal
Ministry Some
center,
but
has to think
people
about
so.”
we do not
everyone
the interests
who are not familiar
it is not
What
than
with
Another
official
approve
of is using
and 35.3
income
officials that
of had
One
of the localities think
“The
Ministry to buy
at the same
they
official
proud
were
more
said,
“The
as well as about care
of Finance reform
in
of Finance
generally
we only
per
per cent
while
were
it proved
thought.
money
while
governments
to Ministry
our work
said,
of national
the combination
in 1985,
financial
claiming
the
per cent in 1972 and 14.3
Ministry
reform,
hand,
according
the center’s
over
was only one-
ran deficits
from local
13.8
contracting,
guarantee
always
of
was the
improvement
was two-thirds
30 per cent
of the localities.“105
and less conservative
center. reform.
could
the activism
fiscal
from
over
of which
authorities
the center
and loans
income
in 1982,
about
an
“I3 But on the other
of budgetary
thing
it as
consequences
serious
of central
that
247
unintended
expenditure
them
state corporations
20 per cent
good
defended
central
sat on surpluses. share
to over
while
Reform
of view the most
that the income
it galled
with national
the negative
point
always
income
lo2 And
governments
increased
time
they
complained
expenditures.
fiscal contracting cent
their
deficit-but
of national
provincial
acknowledged
kitchens-from
system.
financial
officials
Political Strategy of Economic
the
about
the
supports
from
the
lower
levels.“tofi Officials
at
eventually down
the
principle
in China
the
responsibility
“system
to either
revenues”
center
of central
another. stick
lo7 Yet
with
Other
because
individual system,
Administrative
eating
in separate of local
promulgated
of local
approving
capital
material
supply,
Central
Committee
local
localism,
kitchens
governments. of
governments construction retention declared
over
with
taxes
They
could
officials
of “sharing
wrangling
from having
the
different
the system
the constant
and localities
between
to bail out one
had a political
incentive
to
Policies was not the only policy
the course
different
measures
and shift more projects
of foreign
from
to
of setting
was done to change it.
fiscal reform Over
in accordance
administrations.”
taxes”
and local
commitment
the basis
the income
eliminating
central
public “on
and
power, or local
the center
nothing
whereby
authorities,
of divided
Decentralization
a number
incentives
down
in their
taxes”
administration
and preventing
the current
the power
and
of the “system
in breaking
unanimous
and financial
the central
and localities,
were
of divided
responsibility
on the advantages
total
The
levels
of unifying
is allocated agree
all
introduce
and
exchange
its intention
of the decade, intended
to
responsibility foreign
improve
to them
joint
earnings,
to eventually
designed
the central
ventures,
and many
send down
to enhance government
the
economic
in such matters planning others.
The
as and
CCP
(_Gafans) all industrial
102. Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (1988), op.ctl., note73. 103. During the period from 1979 to 1987, the center accumulated deficits totaling more than 64 blllion yuan, while local governments ran surpluses totaling more than 7 billion yuan [Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (1989), op. cil., note 7, p. 2321. 104. TianYinongelol., op. cit., note 6; “Minister of‘Finance Addresses Financial Meeting,” Xinhua, July 24, 1988. 105. Author’s interview. 106. Author’s interview. 107. Caizheng bu caishui tizhi gaige zhu (1988), op.cd., note 73
SIVIXES
248 enterprises
under
government had
ministry
never
capital assumed build
or material
Yet,
because
day-to-day
up local
One
control
industry
of the most
and
significant
ministries
in
Communist
1984.
The
personnel,
was cut back
to include
levels
The
down.
Central and
Committee
ministry reduce
the total
tunities
of local
Party
“central
power
proposed and
more
Their
who interfered enterprises
Ziyang
People’s military
Naturally cities
idea.
knew
city.
what
he was
Zhao’s
initiative
108. 109. 110. 3, 1983,
argue And
instead
of two
by the CCP
in turn
to province
decentralized
committees.‘08
The
reform
the patronage
was
1982.
first
oppor-
to put
regions
with
cities
doing The
making
publicly Zhao
hand, when
their
Ziyang
he made
were
recently
Chongqing
the vanguard patron. have
Burns, op. cit., note 17. Author’s interview. “China’s Current Economic Xue Muqiao, I;BIS, June 13, 1983, pp. K34-41.
by
Other lost
Chongqing,
Situation,
Session
of the Fifth coordination
except
those
National of the
important
to
lt” at restrictions
to give moved
up control
from
a major Sichuan,
point
for the
tremendously
of comprehensive had
the central
over
to Beijing
popularity
and extrac-
about
the demonstration
Analysis
a regional
government.“”
effective
enthusiastic
provinces some
and
in law (JO/IO)‘”
like a good way to free
who had benefited model
central powerful
of ministry
provincial
chafed
wildly
hated
authorities,
may
center.
had for years
had only
Sichuan
1979
Sichuan
as their
rule
more
mothers
seemed
originally
between
and provinces.
to restore
the provinces
who
dual
all enterprises
governments,
them
with
which
in
(itself
conflict
many
to cities
it at the Fifth
was
themselves,
the
ministries
measure economic
the coordination
had become
“too
by the
to Zhao,
to improve
decentralization
under
power
way
decentralizing provincial-level
had provoked
proposed
best
cities
fiscal
having
between
The
was another
labored
felt exploited
Ziyang,
reform.
while
all
authority
of the posts
expanded
the provinces
about
Shifting
strife
long
the other Zhao
cities
hardly
enterprises
by provincial
central
suit.
in under
On
Party
but
the and
appoint
managed
two-thirds
as a method
kitchens
complained
had
the cities
imposed
industrial
leaders
coordination)
operations.
according
tions
to
appointment
directly
idea of giving
took up the idea and promoted
security
to
was
in provinces
authority
committees
county
(kuai) because
notion
that
Congress
economy,
Party
the constant cities
city
its
of posts
reform
The
in separate
Many
in their
central
chen$zi)
to improve
managers
from
economic Zhao
eating
assertive.
province.
The
by reformist
and provinces
(ho)
decade
officials
committee’s
Party
city-, and
(thongxin
as a method
ministries
of
officials
of this control
of the reform
retained
and transfer
Provincial
consequences.
The
contraction
provincial
advantage
Party
Party
size of the nomenkluturu,
cities”
was favored
over
officials.
that had far-reaching of the economy.
still
control
at the same level and one level down
to prefectural,
did not The
Party
13 000 to 5000
committees.
nomenklaturu control
measures
was to cut the number
from
Party
reclaim
the economic
and took
central
machines.
of each
only positions
The
local budgets
policies,
to Communist
but the scope
effect
economy
decentralizing
authority
always
as it did during
political
of nomenkluturu
could
decentralization
of the local
and local
governments.
over the provinces;
the center
various
devolution government
authority
supply
of
COMMUNISM
to be run by local
its ultimate
by the center,
construction
198991990.
management
abrogated
to be approved
IN COMPARATIVE
no choice with
and Prospects,”
from
reform, but the
could
to follow
officials
in
Renmm Ribau, June
Denx Xiaoping’s provinces
forced
the cities
to give up power
From
1983
to
Dalian,
1987,
Guangzhou,
discussing
units pressure
central
and
provincial
powers
granted
credit.
resulted
budget.
officials
in fierce
originally
had been
of localism
ten more
cities
to cities
cities of local
sympathetic among
cities,
The
Reform
Bureau
of the State
disputes
that arose
and
Ministry
the
officials.
cities
forced
as extensive
as the
and more
enabling
who engaged
so-called
politicians
to
measure,
one another
and officials
and the
in Beijing
who
to view it as simply
a new
For example,
factory that
Bureau. that
had
by unified
raw
were
special The
Wuhan
fought coal
down
materials
which
and
wanted
administered the
State
to keep profitable
Economic
city,
to city jurisdiction because the to
their
Commission
over
the its
it lacked
ministry
take
directly
because
Material
a central
Pharmaceutical
in character
negotiations
mines.“”
became
to send
Wuhan
been
Province
like
the
between
as treaty
the city refused
dispute,
management.
management.
the
previously
Hubei
medicines
offered equipment;
with
cities
with
from provinces
and responsibilities
ones
than
multiplied
was swamped
acrimonious
when
reform
and powers
of revenues and central
bureaucratic
cities
Commission enterprises
of unprofitable
telephone
was more
the central
and
Provinces
jurisdictional
plants
arguing
be maintained
in war.
also relevant.
another
Pharmaceutical
Economic of shifting
and Telecommunications
provide
‘17 In
of ministry-level
and financial
basis,
and ministries
as protracted
themselves
producing
pharmaceutical objected,
were
proliferation
as a rationalizing
idea came
conflicts,
over the division were
engaged
were
factory
city
divest
of Post to
in the process
Negotiations central
countries issues
The
of central not
economists cities
provinces,
many
enterprises
the national
(kuai-kuaz].115
them.
between
were
documents
to more
sold
entities
to the central
jurisdictional
cities.
planning
cities
still managed
under
29.‘13
treatment,
originally
reformist
of ending
and
entities
nonetheless,
government Many
Instead
province
these
financial
on a particularistic
reform,
economic.
to central
While
of the privileges
special
extended Shenyang,
the provinces
the original
of national
jealous
Council Wuhan,
national
than
but valuable
competition.
competition
provide.
in
l4
in a proliferation
ability
with the officials
State
full-fledged
1988,
to extend
cities
central
ministries
were
the work
other
one thing,
11* By
units,
were granted
The
the
and Ningbo.“’
from
cities.’
powers
and
Qngdao,
of provinces-for
level
to central
“experimental”
Committee
Harbin,
complicated
Meanwhile,
Wuhan
249
points
cities-Chongqing,
the
39 provincial
Special
Central
in the cities-they
and
danlie)
of subordinate
supply
he gained
to nine
Xian,
appointments
(jihua
The
cities,
authority
the full authority
personnel
form
the
economic
not granted
claim
to central
Reform
themselves.
provincial-level
plan
Political Strategy of Economic
the
could several
by the national Bureau quality ruled
both had to in favor
1l8
111. Tian Jia, Zhu Limin and Cao Siyun, “ Further Perfect Reform of Separately Listing Cities in the State Plan,” shtjiejinpi; daobao, October 26, 1987, p. 10. I 12. For an argument on behalf of giving full provincial-level legal status to central cities see Tian Jia et al., Ibid. 113. “State Council Decision to Improve the Method of Local Financial Contracts,” C&hens, No. 10, 1988, p. 1. 114: By 1984, one account listed 52 experimental cities in China [Renmin ribao, October 20, 19841 115. Author’s interview. 116. Author’s interview. 117. Author’s interview. 118. Author’s interview.
SIWI~S
250 The Effects
of Fiscal Decentralization
The
in
eating
measures
gave
separate
kitchens
provincial
level
and the wherewithal constituted
of extra-budgetary
funds
new
industries,
and
by local
initiatives,
Yet
in the context
maximize
One
the reforms cannot
had
reformist are good
Local
Because
heads
new
built
invested
diverted
prqjects This
local
subordination
of local the
generated policies
by the the rapid
Ministry
expense
system
officials
liked central
in the environment
risk,
local
of existing
government plants.
central
They
construction.
the national capital
plan.
It The
construction
tributed
three-quarters
of provincial
over the decade
of reform.
up with
their
the
everyone
of provincial
was
policies,
shortages
collectively, officials
provincial
expenditures. and
there
by
a call
for
however,
and
inflation
under
current
the
as enriching revenues
Industrial efficiency
local
industrial
them-
under
revenues
growth.‘24
the con-
of factories
the only way for local authorities
was to accelerate
and
needs
officials.
provincial in fact
Beijing
deficits,
society’s
I** National
although
revenues,
Therefore,
from
interest.
but
shortages,
not to ignore
while
to portray essential
declined
and caused
harmed
state,
covered
obligations
signals
infrastructure from
officials
lz3 Thus,
was in the interest
barely
budget
local
to the national economy
of the
is not right”.‘“’
to enforce
away
overheating
products,i21
message.
overheated
of Finance
at the
post-1980
interests
growth
and funds
exhorted
profitable
opposite
Commission
we
context
efficiency
neglecting
“Often
are problems
activities. created
media
highly
actually
sent
drive
national
while
Planning
local
construction only
plants
to
over-
by saying,
If there
and lack of real financial the
efforts
economic
decentralization
the historical
of improving
manpower,
profitable
just
investors.
local
notably,
good.
founded
skyrocketed. economy,
most
leaders
They
to foreign
rates
but the economic
prices
processing
materials,
The
producing
instead
fiscal
Party
energy.
command
results,
are not necessarily
rationally,
for the State
to more
inflation.
selves
acted
budgets amounts
province
growth
economies
had significant
and Communist
of their
marketized
Maybe
of irrational
plants
impossible
merits
decentralizing local
government
of entrepreneurial
defended
is no good.
other their
local
governments
government
perverse
economist
in high-profit
became locals
numerous
decision-makers
were wrong.
under
and national
but the results
say the reform
the resources
a burst
the
local
with
to develop
llg Local with
pitched
combined
the incentive and local
of an only partially
revenues
heating.
1986,
besides.
to the new incentives
local
reform
state budget,
responded Stimulated
fiscal officials
to do it. By
half of the total
CO,MMUNISM
IN COMPARATIVE
had
to keep As one
119. Xinhua, June 2, 1987, FBZS, J une 5, 1987, p. K13; Most extra-budgetary funds wcrtl in the hands of rnterprisc managers, but a sizable share was controlled by local government officials. 120. Author’s interview. 121, “State Council National Forum on Industry and Communications Closed Scptcmber lst,” .Yznhua. September 3, 1981, FBZS, September 8, 1981, pp. 12- 13. Must Support Key Construction, ” Hongqi, No. 8, April 16, 1983, pp. 16- 18. 1’22. Jing Ping, “Evrryone “If we properly curtail the construction of ordinary processing industry 123 As one article acknowledged, projects in OUTlocality or department and concentrate OUTfinancial and material resources on supporting the state in the construction of key projects and the developmtmt of energy sources and transport in OUTcountry, we eventually will benefit, although OUTimmediate earnings will be smaller” [Hua Xing, “The Components Will Be Stimulated When the Whole is Handled Well,” Xinhua, April 17, 1983, FBZS, April 21, 1983, pp. KlO-111. to the System of ‘Apportioning 124. Wong (1990), op. cit., note 82; Han Gouchun, “A Brief Introduction Revenues and Expenses between the Central and Local Authorities, While Holding the Latter Responsible for thrir own Profit and Loss in Financial Management’,” Cazzhmg, No. 7, July 5, 1982,JPRS, No. 82018, October 19, 1982, pp. 16-19.
Deng Xiaoping’s economist
explained,
rate
Had
some
localities
impossible 1985
could
to pay workers
provinces
decentralization
means
officials To make
of their
usual
market, Local
to national investors as well
competition.
investor, from
1980
with
rate,
even
find it
would
high
growth
growth
growth
had entered
by 1987,
officials
two-thirds
interests. by offering
hard-currency In their
infant local
rates,
by
the ranks
of
of all counties
or promises however,
the competition
consumer
of access
their
Mao
local
goods
Economic
were
in
like Fiscal
for their less
own
developed
by excluding
Balkanization
policies
of regional
factories
more
to restrict
129 The
high-
manufacturing
the brandname focused
Commission)
Zedong’s
it up.
markets
traditional
robbed
energies
economy
dividing
industries
other
industries
Local
were
Especially
and
marketplace.
on fighting competition
of the Chinese self-reliance,
was
reforms. by new and
revenue
trade
Provinces export
and
which
to the domestic
governments
of the joint
cities
could
tripped
often
venture.)
give
local
by luring market.
to compete
authorities over
Foreign
in which
a deal,
interest
schemes
central
terms.
earnings,
to make
sharing
in ways
concessionary
the national
local
to protect
infant
the national
of profit
Shanghai
inputs.
technologies eagerness
coordinating
blockades.‘*’
from
under fiscal
spurred
as new
about
in pursuit
at the State
investment
not to undercut
tax rates
their
worse,
(often
were
mental
for their
local
had begun
officials
talking
of material
by the
foreign
center
“tz5 Even
and
industrial
localities
and Shaanxi)
subsidies,
in the national
in foreign
share,
by the economic
30 per cent
and many
Jiangxi,
administrative
matters
battles
which
another
wages.
merchandise
on competing
exacerbated
their
Jilin,
authorities
nurtured
sources
bureaucratic
after
of
brandname
centers.
than
staff
kept
127 local
encouraged
by
provinces,
meet,
on central
authorities
one big chessboard,
quality
ends
and
up simply
or even
251
in the red.lz6
central
factories
were propped
made
(Gansu,
relying
operating
While
finances
for a 20 per cent
not have
four new provinces
deficit were
“Local
it not been
Political Strategy of Economic Reform
one
joint local
officials joint
the
ignored
ventures
130 (Once
imposed
restrictions
Central
trade
to entice
were
governments edge
sought-
could
the urgings
they locked-in to protect were
now
in domestic
with excessively
authorities
one
as detri-
another
ventures
localities
with
viewed
of the low
a foreign local
firms
also
upset
12.5. Rui Jun, “Economists on How to Deal with Inflation in China,” Liammy Overseas Ed&n, October 24, 1988, FBIS, Octobrr 31, 1988, pp. 44-45. 126. Wong (1990), op. cit., note 82. 127. Liu Lixin and Tian Chunsheng, “Conscientiously Control the Scale of Investments in Fixed Assets,” Kenmzn r&o, February 21, 1983, FBI& February 24, 1983, pp. K15-18. 128. In April 1982, the State Council issued a regulation prohibiting regional blockades in purchasing and marketing industrial products [Xinhua, April 20, 1982, FBZS, April 21, 1982, pp. KlO- 11; also Qi Xiangwu and Hou Yunchun, “Why is it Necssary to Oppose Regional Economic Blockades?,” Hongqi, No. 9, May 1, 19821. Continuing press complaints about protectionist practices indicate that the problem persisted after 1982 [Ying Guang, “On the Socialist Unified Market,” Renmin r&m, February 28, 1983; “Do Not Put Up New Blockades in the Cause of Reform,” Xznhua, July 18, 1984, FBI& July 23, 1984, pp. Kg-101. 129. The pervasiveness oflocal protectionism is indicated by the fact that when Beijing Mayor Chen Xitong declared that Beijing would stop practicing local protectionism, it was front page news. According to the press report, local governments’ strategies for protecting local products included stipulation that a portion of the earnings derived from the price disparity of colored televisions purchased from outside be turned over to local coffers; orders to commercial enterprises specifying the amount of local products that must be sold each month; rarmarking loans for the purchase of local goods; and lists of products forbidden to be “imported” from other regions. [Chen Yun and Zhang Guimin, “Minister Calls for an End to Local Protectionism,” Xinhua, April 10, 1990, FBZS, April 20, 1990, p. 431. 130. Susan L. Shirk, “The Acquisition of Foreign Technology in China: The Bargaining Game,” (Presented to the 17th Pacific Trade and Development Conference, Bali, Indonesia, July 1988).
252 about
Srunr~s IN CUMPARATIVE COMMUNISM price gouging
in Chinese
exports
as local firms,
engaged in cut-throat international competition. Another negative effect of fiscal decentralization
hungry
for hard-currency,
was administrative
interference
in
enterprise management. The eating in separate kitchens’ financial system intensified local officials’ sense of proprietorship over local enterprises, creating what the Chinese call “the local ownership system” (d$ng soy~zhi).‘~~ (The imperatives of building bureaucratic consensus forced authorities at all levels to promise special revenuesharing arrangements to various departments as well, encouraging the “departmental ownership system” (Ruben ~o~~~~~~.)The trend of strengthening the financial stake of bureaucratic entities in their subordinate enterprises, while motivating oflicials to support their enterprises, also encouraged them to inferfere in enterprise operations. When a firm’s bureaucratic masters were off in Beijing, the manager could easily ignore them; when they were close-by, the manager was forced to listen to them. One reformist economist complained, “The central leaders, especially Zhao Ziyang, took too strong a line on fiscal decentralization and fundamentally confused the difference between economic and administrative reform. There is a contradiction between the two. Provincial officials meddle in local enterprises and stifle their economic autonomy.““’ Local officials’ interference in enterprise management might have played a positive role if the officials had promoted efficiency. But when local government officials stepped into factory decision-making it was rarely to enhance pro~tability by cutting costs or improving quality. Revenue-maximization was not the sole objective of local officials. If revenue-maximization
had been the only or even the dominant
interest
of local
officials, then the officials would have been more diligent at reducing losses in local firms during periods of economic contraction. As it was, local officials tolerated the inefficiency and losses of local plants because they needed the materials these plants produced and the employment opportunities they provided (as well as the politicallyuseful gratitude of their managers). The managers of strong, profitable local firms frequently complained that local officials subverted them by appropriating their earnings to redistribute to weaker firms. As Christine Wong points out, the local government had become both a player and the referee in local economic competition. r3s Administrative interventions in economic activity by and large were not conducive to enterprise autonomy or efficiency.lX4 Local administrative interventions were designed to generate political resources for local officials instead. After all, provincial officials had political interests at stake. Decentralizing reforms had granted them the authority to regulate access to the market and to redistribute fiscal benefits
and burdens,
investment
funds, access to foreign investment
and trade,
etc.
These economic powers created new opportunities for local officials to collect rents from bureaucratic subordinates and enterprise managers. Naturally, like their counterparts
13I, The financial link between local governments and their subordinate enterprises was more direct under the “sharing specific revenues” version of the reform than it was under “sharing total revenues.” But cvcn under the latter scheme local revenues were tied to thr performance of local enterprises. 132. Author’s interview. 133. Wong (1990), op. cit., note 82. 134. An rxception was Jiangsu Province. According to their reputation, Jiangsu officials traditionally respected experts and left them alone to make economic decisions. And because its local market was so small, Jiangsu officials encouraged enterprises to go out and compete on the national market instead ofprotectingthe local market [Author’s interviewl.
Dcng Xiaoping’s in Beijing, imposing
Political Strategy of Economic Reform
local officials built up political capital by allocating
253
benefits
selectively
and
costs uniformly.135
Provincial Party and government authorities chose to collect rents in different forms and put them to different uses. One strategy was to build up an industrial empire by reinvesting funds into industrial expansion. A more populist strategy involved using the funds they collected to make dramatic improvements in roads, housing, and other public works projects. I36 The corruption strategy was to slip funds into their own pockets
and those of their relatives
and friends.
Province
and city heads also were
expected to return a share of the rents in the form of political loyalty to the central Party politicians who had been their benefactors in expanding their autonomy. And local Party secretaries
took at least some of the rents in the form of political loyalty from their
own bureaucratic subordinates. They established local political machines by exchanging economic favors for political loyalty. 137These machines, linking Party leaders with government bureaucrats, bankers, and managers, then became the engine of local economic development. Decentralizing reforms changed past, the focus of their ambitions
the career incentives of provincial had been the central Party-state
officials. In the bureaucracy in
Beijing. But after 1980, so much of the economic action occurred at the provincial level and provincial leaders exercised such national political infldence that some politicians from the most dynamic regions chose to remain in the provinces instead of climbing the ladder
to Beijing.
Guangdong
One
province,
well-known who turned
example
was Ye
Yuanping,
the Governor
down an offer to be a vice-premier
of
of the State
Council and decided to stay in Guangdong. (To the degree that the allure of national position faded, the center lost some leverage over the behavior of provincial officials.) Under the post-1980 incentive structure, the political ambitions of individual iocal officials became closely identified with the economic accomplishments of their domains. As one press commentary noted, “Leaders one-sidedly consider and stress the partial interests of their departments, localities, and units in total disregard of overall interests. To show off their personal achievements in their official careers, they do not hesitate to infringe upon the fundamental interests of the state and the people.“138 Whether leading
an official aimed to climb the ladder of success to Beijing or to become a his or her reputation was enhanced by industrial
figure on the local scene,
135. For example, the press criticized local officials for giving or reducing taxes for par(icular enterprises on the one hand, and for imposing extra taxes (such as the so-called local energy and transportation construction tax) on all enterprises on the other hand [“Immediately Stop Additional Levies of Local Energy and Transportation Constructional Funds,” Renmin ribao, November 24, 19841. 136. The best example of this kind of local populism was the record of Li Ruihuan as Party Secretary of Tianjin. Because the Chinese system lacks elections we would predict that more officials would use rents for industrial empire building, which translates into bureaucratic power and prestige, than for popular public works, which translates into votes. The fact that a few officials like Li Ruihuan have experimented with the populist strategy suggests that they are gambling on a change in the political system occurring in the future. 137. On local political machines in other communist countries see Jerry F. Hough, [The Soviet Prefects (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1969)] and Jean Woodal [TheSncialirf Corporation and Technocratic Power: The P&h United Workers’ Party, lndusfriat Or;panization and Workforce Control, 1958 -80 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982)]. W e as yet have little empirical information about how these local industry-based political machines work in China. For example, is the Party secretary the power broker in Chinese provinces and cities as he is in the Soviet Union or is the broker role played by government leaders instead? Did the shift in power over expenditures from ministries to localities create new conflicts of interest on the local level? 138. “Reducing the Scale of Capital Construction is an Important Supporting Measure for Reform,” Rewxin tibao, September 2, 1988, FEXS, September 9, 1988, pp. 64-65.
254
STUDIES
growth
and
local
building
drive
to the Chinese
build
several
appear
more
might officials than The
in sleepy
cumulative
effect
inflation,
meddling.
These
Communist
Party
central over
financial the
The
the reform
drive
its economic reformers
Deng
of
effects
Communist secretaries Committee
of provincial
sustaining
economic
Government
officials
policy
While really system
and
officials
not
the current
maintain
their rents
seats
Central
bodies and local
slogans financial
themselves
market with
of
arrangements
quasi-ownership
for themselves
and
to more rights
to playing
per
over only
The
Politburo
the
Zhao
and
Thirteenth
for
the
First Party
43 per cent of the full
cent
of the
12th
would
had intended
as
for it to.
to approve
As one Beijing such
The
support
be reluctant
authority.
Central
(1987).‘*O
high-level
Ziyang
reform
involved arenas
Provincial
Committee
official
‘enlivening
the
recentralization.“‘*’
in the mantle
economy.
taxes
arena.
provided
Committee
was in fact the perpetuation
profits
for yet
over
provinces local
Committee,
13th
Xiaoping
against
out
in their
and Tianjin.
34
Party
the
elites
support
Committee;
to win
to the
in the
(1977),
retracting
used
draped
a genuine
replacing
and
Party
power.
of action
Shanghai,
the Central
to fight
by reform
preferred collect
officials
(&zohuojin~‘i) local
that
restore
worsened
political
in the Central
role in the national
of the
as Deng
and
conservative
of playing
to reserve
in these
reforms
“Local
meant
reforms
knew
rolling-back
complained, economy’
advocates
of
by
conservative
in particular,
of reform
freedom
Beijing,
cent
distorted
to the Provinces”
Committee
per
reform,
up
by post-1980
for
generated
of Party
bloc in the Central
Central 38
reform
strategy
decided
inflation
opponents
leadership
the largest and
local
to move
of marketization
who serve
greater
metropolises,
11th
(1982),
presence
officials
Ziyang’s
Congress
constituted of the
center
and administrative
ammunition
strength
fiscal
at the top reaches
to play a greater
Party
likely
growth
protectionism
the tide
political
of “Playing
Zhao
and
in reality
structured
economic
problems,
conservative
politics
of the three
members
the
and city officials
them
to stem
kitchens
the provincial
and
incentives
provided
wanted
decade,
Ramifications
encouraging Secretaries
maladies
who
enabled
provincial
The
but
will
career,
positions.“‘“’ were more
was dynamic
as well as by local
in separate
among
and hotels
official
and construction,
and political
As the economic
the
eating
Xiaoping
granting
any
and deficits,
in succession
The Political
economic
economic
course
increased.
in their
and vie for leadership
decentralization
control.
investment
areas.
ofthe
leaders
auditoriums,
with a lot of construction
backwater
and administrative
buildings,
rates
the local
those who dare not boldly
achievements
in growth
areas
linked
historically,
office
average
as officials
growing
shortages,
only
self-restraint
in rapidly
those
fiscal
to serve
local
commentator
“Judging
enterprises,
will make
no capital
preach
A press
structure:
factories,
to be ‘right,’
will have
projects.
political
COMMUNISM
IN COMPARATIVE
The
objections
dividing
taxes
thorough local
of market
of the hybrid,
factories
the role of referee
reform. and
what
they
partially-reformed
of local
by levels
market
reform,
officials
showed They
exploit
in market
to the
that
they
preferred
these
rights
to to
competition.
139. “What is Unnecessary Should be Given Up So That What is Necessary Can be Achieved,” Renmin nbao, December 4, 1988, FBIS, December 15, 1988, pp. 34-37. 140. James C. F. Wang, Conkmporary Chinese Politzcs, An Inhxfuctzon (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1989). 141. Author’s interview.
Deng Xiaoping’s Political Strateo of Economic Reform The evolution
255
of fiscal system reforms after 1987, when the conservatives
staged a
comeback in elite politics, 142 demonstrated the influence of provincial officials within the Party. Even during a period of conservative resurgence at the top, fiscal policies were constrained by provincial preferences and the political incentives of succession contenders to play to the provinces. The conservative leaders who came to power in 1987 (most notably Premier Li Peng and SPC head and Politburo Standing Committee member Yao Y&n, both of whom were proteges of the eminent Party elder Chen Yun) wanted to change the fiscal ruies to weaken the incentives for local construction and put more funds in the central coffers. As Yao Yilin expressed
this view,
economy is now excessively decentralized and proper centralization is called for The central finance suffers huge deficits every year; efforts must be exerted to cut deficits back each year until they are basically effaced. Under such circumstances, localities should contribute more to the central coffers in addition to the central finance’s practice of economy.“” Our
Yet Li and Yao were unable to carry out fiscal recentralization. Instead, in 1988, they renegotiated individual sharing deals with the provinces that left the central government with even less revenue than before! What the conservative leadership came up with was a package of particularistic giveaways that enabled them to claim credit with provincial officials. First, they began to emphasize the contractual form of revenue-sharing (baogan) had acquired great reformist cachet arrangements. The term “contracting” since the introduction of the enterprise contract system in 1987. 144Then they asserted that according to these contracts, provinces would be fully responsible for their expenditures (except in the case of natural disasters).‘45 Then they diversified the revenue-sharing
system into at least six different arrangements,
of “progressive contracting” (dizeng baogan) that gave incentives to “have greater initiative to invigorate their economies. ” 146
two ofwhich were forms for local governments
Li and Yao made a point of sympathizing with the economically strongest regions who contributed a large share of their revenues to the center.147 They identified 13 “high revenue areas which have to deliver a larger percentage of revenues to the state [and] have little enthusiasm for increasing revenues,” a set of powerful provinces including Jiangsu,
Liaoning,
Beijing,
and Chongqing.
i4’ The leaders granted
these provinces
142. Hu Yaobang was purged, Zhao Ziyang replaced him as CCP secretary, and Li Peng became premier. 143. Chao Hao-sheng, “Yao Yilin on the Economic Situation in China,” Ta Kung Pm (Hong Kong), December 23. 1989, FBZS, December 26, 1989, pp. 24 -26. 144. The original financial agreements between center and provinces introduced in 1980 had been described as contracts sharing responsibility as well as ~=sources, but in 1988, the contract notion was reiterated. 145. The original 1980 system had intended to eliminate the “eating from the big pot” phenomenon, but in fact, center and provinces continued to eat off one another’s plates. 146. Li PensChairs State Council Executive Meeting,” Xinhua,July 12, 1988, FBZS, July 13, 1988, p. 19; The contracting methods were specified as revenue progressive increase contract (shouru dizeng baogan), dividing total revenues (z~ngefencheq), dividing the total plus dividing the increase (zo~~efencheny+z zengzhang fencheng), remittanceprogressive increase contract (&qj& e d&q baa ran). fixed amount remittance (diqe ~han_+e), and fixed amount subsidy (&age btiziru) [“State Council Decision to Improve the Method of Local Financial Contracts,” op. cit., note 1131. 147. Appealing to powerful political actors who felt they had been put at a competitive disadvantage by Zhao Ziyang’s version of economic reform was a consistent theme in Li Peng’s succession strategy. He took up the cause of large state factories as well as high-revenue provinces [see Susan L. Shirk (forthcoming), Chapter 8, op. cit., note 981. 148. “Li Peng Chairs State Council Executive Meeting,” op. cit., note 146.
STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE
256 three
year
their
enthusiasm
revenue
progressive
above
the base
level.14”
State
Council
responded
provinces years, year
by changing
Guangdong instead
Central central
What positions central Party
stressing
elders,
When
1989,
and
and
Party
contracting
Session would
within
between
contract
would
system
per
reduce In
as the best
is more
readily
feasible.
we would
expect
conservative
provinces.
Conservative
congenial Yilin
to provinces. had
levels
politically
by Yao
of winning
the Party
to members
and supported
Perhaps
grown
to
without
of
by the
the influence
the
point
the support
that
of no
of at least
rejected
kitchens The
and governors it. 153 The
was defeated Minister
of the Seventh continue,
with
argued
National
a few local
the work
vehemently
1989, conference
against
Li Peng’s to abandon
supporters
but to announce
Congress, experiments
that
Li
revenue
in November,
conservatives
provincial
had no choice People’s
in June provincial
Committee
of the
by the reform’s
of Finance only
During
Central
attempt
to the conservative
Ziyang
eliminating
authority.
Thirteenth
even more
of Zhao
to propose
financial
of the CCP
secretaries
elite shifted
and the purge enough
central
Plenum
in the end
Committee.
the Third
contracting
naturally
Party
a chance
for three
low base.150
of to the
are
giveaways
crackdown
strengthening
in separate
Central
taxes
is that
assisted
Communist
did feel confident
the Fifth
provincial
proposal eating
balance
and his allies
proceeding
of fiscal
more
instead
of planning
stood
a very
put it, “the
outcome
in 1988,
at a rate of 9 per cent
on the part of the provinces.‘51
words,
center
financial
the
the Tiananmen
contracts
policy
to the
and the
officials.
the political
side after Peng
more
within
above
dividing
as one article
primacy
to top leadership
provincial
a system
Li Peng
high-contribution
Beginning
to the center
version
Yet here was Li Peng,
promoting
easy deal.
rouse
they generated
time,
high-revenue,
profit-seeking
“15* in other this
to play the
officials
contender
hand,
about
Peng
bureaucracies.
provincial some
Li
that the 1988
of the revenues
at the same
the
of revenues
short-term
circles,
is surprising like
of
its remittance
to advocate
to different
taken
ofGuangdong’s
admitted
On the other
acceptable
decision
100 per cent
continue
(shouru dizeng baogan) that would
a big chunk
jealousy
increase
and cause
contracts
to retain
the
the terms
authorities
alternative.
leaders
to
of keeping
they
them
In another
would
revenues
theory,
increase
by allowing
COMMUNISM
the system
in divided
in the
in 1990
at
of fiscal
taxation.‘54
149. The State Council meeting announcing the contracts for these thirteen high-revenue areas also announced that from then on the terms of all provincial contracts would be made public [“State Council Decision to Improve the Method of Local Financial Contracts, ” op cil., note 1131. This measure probably was designed to satisfy the high-revenue provinces that still turned over to the center a high proportion of their revenues. These provinces wanted everyone to recognize their own contributions to the public good and wanted to show up the free ride of other provinces. 150. Lin Ruo, “A Successful Attempt to Reform the Financial System,” Renmtn ribao, March 21, 1988, FBIS, April 6, 1988, pp. 55-57. 15 1. “StateCouncil Decision to Improve the Method of Local Financial Contracts,” op. cil., note113.One financial specialist predicted optimistically that “if we fixed an appropriate base figure for the contracted budget and a contracted growth rate, at least the financial revenues on the part of the central financial authorities would not decrease, according to normal predictions. Even if the increase in the local financial revenues is higher than the increase in the financial revenues of the central financial authorities, there will not be a serious imbalance between the revenue and expenditure of the central authorities since both the revenue and expenditure budgets are contracted.” [Zhang Zhenbin, “My Opinion on Several Questions Regarding Financial Reform,” Renmin ribao, March 18, 1988, FBIS, April 5, 1988, pp. 25-26; p. 25.1 152. Ibid. 153. Willy Wo-lap Lam, “Further on CCP Central Work Conference,” South China Morning Post (Hong Kong), November 3, 1989, FBIS, November 3, 1989, p. 13; David L. Shambaugh, “The Fourth and Fifth Plenary Sessions of the 13th CCP Central Committee, ” The China Quuar@y, No. 120, December 1989, pp. 852-862. 154. Wang Bingqian, “Report on the Implementation ofthe State Budget for 1989 and on the Draft Budget
Deng Xiaoping’s The
head
of the State
intended revenues.
to provinces,
The
drive.
allowing
the
on a Central move
context,
the center
had to deliver
and reduce
in order
it is difficult
conservative
to increase
central
to imagine
that this threat
fiscal
administrative
neither
opponents
whose
within
forward
after
were
unable
provincial
dedicated
in the
reform
even
they
the Chinese
drive
of
and
Committee
reform
However,
Committee
with
Central
the
won at the top,
deadlock
provinces
a CCP
it subverted
leadership.
to have
was a political could
257
in this policy
the contracts
to the
in creating
But
for Party
appeared
reform
Reform
governments
politics,
of playing
succeeded
reform
contenders
local
breaking
of succession
strategy
decentralization politics,
said that
of revenues
in effect
of Economic
out.
political
ing the
Strateu
Commission
the quotas
155 In the context
will be carried
Peng
Planning
to increase
its subsidies
Pditical
context
to eliminate
the
the conservative to impose
members
Party,
reformist
elders
and
a rollback
had benefited
Communist
to sustainof succession Li
of fiscal
from
it. There
and economic
reforms
nor backward.
Conclusion The
moral
limit
the possibilities
of the story
bureaucracy
opened
“Playing
government
tive
decentralization
and
stimulated
sharing
funds
political
rents
efficiency.
economic between for
Given
politicians economic
giveaways
imposing and deficits Did
were
caused
provinces? reform,
I contend
Standing
within that
the reforms
conservatives
make
reform
were
prevailed nature
while
leadership
Party
a risky
Congress,
file Party
members
mistake
At the end
after
expansion when
given
the Tiananmen
within power,
dominated
within
points
particu-
supporters
the inflation, provided
blocked
or forward
from
provincial
he gambled
of the first
of Party
control
political their
economic
officials
by
shortages,
a climate
for the
politics.
by the stalemate
to constitute
won
for
generated
improve
to central
of the old political
the reformists
proposition
elite
to
level
bargains
enterprise
provincial
Meanwhile,
economic
a serious
of accountability
was for the Party
aiso
and
nothing
up or alienate
on them.
in the top reaches
Committee,
the reciprocal
who
in Party
he did.
did
back
the confines
halted
province
but
Administra-
to the enterprise
of parricularistic
by moving
of the game
a comeback
and
counter-
decentralization
of plan and market.
reform,
leaders
one and where
as a pro-reform
and administrative
in partial
to give them
the Soviet
systems
Party-state
did not succeed.
patchwork
levels,
by the locally-driven
to make
market
Party rules
13)eng Xiaoping
achieve
all
interests
political
the central
decentralization
province
outcomes
loathe
universalistic
conservatives
at
vested
The
and
than
mixture
economic
overheating.
full marketization.
laristic
financial
where
officials
drive
a hybrid
with
center
their
to improve
toward
by stressing
interfered
provincial
the reform
level created
is that communist
in China,
of reform
of using
center,
to the provinces”
to the local
reforms Even
opponent
the possibility
to the conservative
efforts
economic
innovation.
was a less formidable
past history weight
of Chinese
for policy
the Party,
a new Central the uncertainty
that
system
decade
China
by playing
of China’s
economic
the Communist in the Politburo
the Central
could to the
Party.
The
and Politburo
Committee.
Given
the only way out of the impasse Committee about
by calling the views
a national
of rank-and-
crackdown.
fbr 1990,”
Xinhua, April 7, 1990, FLUS, April 12, 1990, pp. 16-24. 155. Zou Jiahua, “Report on the Implementation of the 1989 Plan for National Economic and Development, and the Draft 1990 Plan,” Xinhua, April 7. 1990, FBIS, April 10, 1990, pp. 13-21.
Social
What
would
Gorbachev
have
reform?
Countries
political
institutions
reforms.
Once
competition constraints
power
one reduces of geographic
move
beyond
their
reforms
reform, reform
command
The
network
of voters.
approval
bankruptcy a sure
under
that
formula
to
for tough
populist
institutions
measures
an
the
arena
of politicians
and direct
under
and the
and enlarges
machines
moving
their
to market
bargaining
motivate appeals
does success
communist economic
to the
instead, not
like tax reform,
to the economic than
follow
electorate,
electoral
of democratic
for
mass
agencies
incentives
clients
rules
challenges
a bureaucratic
and build
to
time as economic
to the legislature
government
are crucial
democratic
political
the Party
new electoral
creation
instead
of democratizing
political
selectorate
shift from
of bureaucratic The
from elite
machines
Gaining
difficult
of central
15s The
entities.
may be even harder discovered
change.
decided
or at the same
are in the process
shifts
Party
the influence
any easier.
and enterprise
yet
equally
bureaucratic
a narrow
constituency
market
that
but
from
had
before
Union arena
shifts
Xiaoping
restructuring
different
on policy-making
to neglect
has
face
the policy-making
them broad
if Deng
political
like the Soviet
for
a legislative influence
happened
in undertaking
to to a
make price
of market
ones. system
No one from
to market.
156. The relative influence of regions depends on the formula of representation. Even with some gerrymandering, the shift from the bureaucratic arena to the legislative one in China would be likely to strengthen the clout of the most populous coastal provinces that have the most to gain from economic reform.