OECD Reviews of Regulatory Reform - China: Defining the Boundary between the Market and the State

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Bookmark this page: www.oecd.org/gov/regref/china

 

     

ISBN Number:
978-92-64-05939-9

 

Publication Date: 7 May 2009

 

Pages: 270

Number of tables: 18

Number of graphs: 14

 

China’s advance to a market economy is among the greatest economic success stories of modern times. China has made enormous progress in developing the modern legal and regulatory foundation for the market economy. The private sector is now the main driver of growth, and new laws have gone a long way toward establishing private property rights, competition, and mechanisms for entry and exit comparable to those of many OECD countries. At the same time important challenges remain, including further clarification of the scope of state ownership, reform of relations among central and local governments, firmer establishment of the rule of law, and strengthening of regulatory institutions and processes.

China's transition has recently been reviewed under the OECD Regulatory Reform Programme. The review focuses on the overall economic context for regulatory reform, the government’s capacity to manage regulatory reform, competition policy and enforcement, and market openness. The review also examines the regulatory framework in the electricity and water sectors. As for OECD countries, the review follows a multidisciplinary and highly interactive approach. A number of OECD instruments and policies are used in this assessment, although the review also takes into account the specific challenges faced by the Chinese authorities.

The review contains a comprehensive set of policy recommendations, which should support China in its efforts to implement regulatory reforms in order to boost economic growth, job creation, innovation and investment.

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Table of Contents

 


Part 1.  The Macroeconomic Context


   Chapter 1. Economic Reforms

Part 2. Thematic Issues


   Chapter 2. Regulatory Governance
   Chapter 3. The Challenges of Transition for Competition Law and Policy
   Chapter 4. Enhancing Market Openness through Regulatory Reform


Part 3.  Regulatory Frameworks for Public Services

   Chapter 5. Infrastructure Services: Lessons from 30 Years Of Reform In OECD Countries
   Chapter 6. Power Sector Reform
   Chapter 7. Water


How to Obtain this Publication

 

The full report will be available as of 7 May 2009:

  • Subscribers and readers at subscribing institutions can access the online edition via SourceOECD, our online library.
  • Non-subscribers can purchase the PDF e-book and/or paper copy via our Online Bookshop.

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