132 research outputs found

    sj-pdf-1-mcx-10.1177_00977004221074297 – Supplemental material for Performance-Based Authoritarianism Revisited: GDP Growth and the Political Fortunes of China’s Provincial Leaders

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-mcx-10.1177_00977004221074297 for Performance-Based Authoritarianism Revisited: GDP Growth and the Political Fortunes of China’s Provincial Leaders by Yumin Sheng in Modern China</p

    Replication Data for: The regional consequences of authoritarian power-sharing: Politburo representation and fiscal redistribution in China

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    Much political economy research examines how higher-level political representation of the constituent jurisdictions affects resource redistribution among the lower-level units in democracies, but little work has probed the redistributive consequences of regional political representation under dictatorship. This study investigates the effect of membership for provincial officials in the Politburo of the single-ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) on fiscal resource flows between the central government and provincial governments in reform-era China. I find robust evidence that the provinces overseen by CCP Politburo members tended to remit more budgetary revenues to the center but did not receive larger central budgetary subsidies. This is consistent with a territorial logic of authoritarian power-sharing in single-party states, which suggests that the regionally selective presence at a collective ruling-party decision-making forum for subnational officials aims at tighter political control to help induce greater policy compliance from below

    Replication Data for: The regional consequences of authoritarian power-sharing: Politburo representation and fiscal redistribution in China

    No full text
    Much political economy research examines how higher-level political representation of the constituent jurisdictions affects resource redistribution among the lower-level units in democracies, but little work has probed the redistributive consequences of regional political representation under dictatorship. This study investigates the effect of membership for provincial officials in the Politburo of the single-ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) on fiscal resource flows between the central government and provincial governments in reform-era China. I find robust evidence that the provinces overseen by CCP Politburo members tended to remit more budgetary revenues to the center but did not receive larger central budgetary subsidies. This is consistent with a territorial logic of authoritarian power-sharing in single-party states, which suggests that the regionally selective presence at a collective ruling-party decision-making forum for subnational officials aims at tighter political control to help induce greater policy compliance from below

    Economic Openness and Territorial Politics in China

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    Why and how has the Chinese central government so far managed to fend off the centrifugal forces under rising globalization that are predicted to undermine national-level political authority everywhere? When institutionally empowered by centralized governing political parties as in China, national politicians confronting the menace of economic openness will resort to exercising tighter political control over the subnational governments of the 'winner' regions in the global markets. Although its goal is to facilitate revenue extraction, redress domestic economic disparity, and prolong the rule of national leaders, regionally targeted central political control could engender mixed economic consequences. Sheng examines the political response of the Chinese central government, via the ruling Chinese Communist Party, to the territorial challenges of the country's embrace of the world markets, and the impact of the regionally selective exercise of political control on central fiscal extraction and provincial economic growth during the 1978–2005 period.</jats:p

    Modulation of molecular mobility in sucrose-based amorphous solids detected by phosphorescence of erythrosin B

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    This project studied the temperature and composition dependence of molecular mobility in amorphous sucrose. Phosphorescence of erythrosin B provided parameters sensitive to localized molecular mobility in the glass and to more global modes of mobility activated at the glass transition and provided evidence of dynamic site heterogeneity in amorphous sucrose solids. In sucrose-based binary matrices, plasticizer (glycerol), salts (NaCl, CaCl2, MgCl2, Na-citrate, Na-acetate, Na-phosphates), maltodextrins (DE 5 to 18), protein (gelatin), and polysaccharides (xanthan and high amylose starch) were selected to investigate how variations in nature and content of each additive influence the molecular mobility as well as dynamic site heterogeneity in amorphous sucrose matrix. Measurements of phosphorescence intensity, lifetime, and emission energy were made in amorphous sucrose-additive films containing the probe erythrosin B. Results showed the complex effects of additives on the mobility in a hydrogen-bonded sugar matrix. Glycerol exhibited an antiplasticization effect shown as decreased mobility at glycerol/sucrose mole ratio ≤ 0.27 and at temperature ≤ 45° C. On the contrary, all the polymers studied, including gelatin, xanthan and high amylose starch, displayed a ‘plasticization’ effect (increasing mobility) at very low while a rigidification effect (decreasing mobility) at higher concentration without significant change in Tg. Maltodextrins, mixtures of molecules with a variety of molecular weights, increase the mobility in spite of their high Tg. Sodium chloride showed a strong rigidification effect on the sucrose matrix; however, this effect was weakened at mole ratio NaCl/sucrose above 0.5. Other salts showed effects resulting from a compromise between two opposite actions (decreasing mobility due to salt itself and increasing mobility due to absorbed moisture). All above behaviors are difficult to interpret using Tg alone. Molecular mobility appears to be more accurate to evaluate the physical stability of the matrix. Phosphorescence of erythrosin B was also able to report dynamic site heterogeneity that is an intrinsic property of the amorphous solid state. The heterogeneity was be evaluated by the variation of lifetime and lifetime heterogeneity across the excitation and emission band and the temperature dependence of bandwidth and lifetime heterogeneity. The composition influence on the dynamic site heterogeneity was discussed as well.Ph.D.Includes bibliographical references

    RETHINKING INDUSTRIAL POLICY

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    Despite the hold of the neoliberal orthodoxy on policy making in developing countries, industrial policy remains important for the promotion of industrial development. However, the context for the design of industrial policy has profoundly changed as a result of new rules governing international trade, the rise of global value chains and marketing networks, and other aspects of globalization. Traditionally, the case for industrial policy has been framed in terms of “market failures” but the paper argues that that is not a sufficient basis. After addressing the traditional points of criticism, an attempt is made to outline the “domains” of industrial policy in the current circumstances, especially for industrially lagging countries. As country contexts differ widely there are no satisfactory blueprints for policy making that countries can readily adopt. As in production decisions, considerable ingenuity and innovation is needed in designing policies. This is all the more necessary as the WTO rules have become increasingly stringent and the rise of international trading networks has created new barriers for young firms to enter the world market. These developments have changed the context but not the importance of policy in industrial development. The paper identifies areas where government intervention is needed and can still make a positive difference.

    A RE-EXAMINATION OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC SYSTEM IN A GLOBAL SETTING: ISSUES AND PROPOSALS

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    The globalization of the world economy poses major challenges to the prevailing international economic system. The recent trade-investment system raises the issues of the marginalization of countries, firms, and agents if they are not capable to compete with large successful entities. The system engenders conflicts of interest in its interfacing with sovereign domains. In numerous cases such as employment and mutual trade benefits, it can produce zero sum outcomes. Consequently, significant segments of public opinion in many countries have mobilized against it. In the monetary and financial area, the system has from 1945 evolved on a piecemeal and ad hoc basis. In recent years, it has not been able to predict, prevent or effectively deal with financial crisis. It demonstrates a lacuna in global financial governance especially with respect to enforcing its rules on the major countries and bringing the private sector therein. The central institution, the IMF, is shown to be in need of basic reforms involving forging a global vision, reconsidering and updating conditionality, further democratization of political governance, and revamping the exchange rates and surveillance functions.

    Author response

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    Despite their importance in sexual differentiation and reproduction, Y chromosome genes are rarely described because they reside in repeat-rich regions that are difficult to study. Here, we show that Guy1, a unique Y chromosome gene of a major urban malaria mosquito Anopheles stephensi, confers 100% female lethality when placed on the autosomes. We show that the small GUY1 protein (56 amino acids in length) causes female lethality and that males carrying the transgene are reproductively more competitive than their non-transgenic siblings under laboratory conditions. The GUY1 protein is a primary signal from the Y chromosome that affects embryonic development in a sex-specific manner. Our results have demonstrated, for the first time in mosquitoes, the feasibility of stable transgenic manipulation of sex ratios using an endogenous gene from the male-determining chromosome. These results provide insights into the elusive M factor and suggest exciting opportunities to reduce mosquito populations and disease transmission
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