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Communism's collapse in USSR-China in 20C.
This book provides a comparative analysis of the different paths taken by China and the Soviet Union during their transition from communism to democracy and market economies. It argues that the rapid mobilization of previously excluded social groups during the reform phase was the most powerful explanation for the revolutionary outcome of initially limited political and economic reforms in both countries. The author provides empirical evidence through case studies of changes in both countries, and concludes that the costs of transition from communism are high and unavoidable, but that the evolutionary changes in China are more promising than the revolutionary changes that occurred in the Soviet Union. This book would be a good read for anyone interested in the history and politics of the Soviet Union and China, and for those interested in comparative political analysis.
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The demise of communism in the former Soviet Union and the massive political and economic changes in China are two major transformations of the 20th century. Two central questions are emerging: Why did different communist systems experience different patterns of transition? Why did partial reforms in the Soviet Union and China turn into revolutions? This analytical and empirical study shows that patterns of regime transition in communist states depend on the countries' pre-existing social structures and political and economic institutions. Minxin Pei identifies the rapid mobilization of previously excluded social groups during the reform phase as the most powerful explanation for the revolutionary outcome of initially limited political and economic reforms in the Soviet Union and China. Pei uses comparative data to analyze the different routes of transition to democracy and a market economy in the Soviet Union, China, and, to a lesser extent, other former communist states in Eastern Europe and Asia.
The theory is empirically tested in four case studies of changes in China and the Soviet Union - two on the development of the private sector in each country and two on the liberalization of the mass media. The author concludes with statements about regime transition from communism. He rejects the idealistic notion that democratization can, by itself, remove the structural obstacles to economic transformation, and he sees high economic and political costs as unavoidable in transition from communism along either the Soviet or the Chinese path. In comparing Soviet and Chinese transition costs, however, he implicitly endorses the evolutionary changes taking place in China and expresses strong doubt about the revolutionary changes that have occurred in the former Soviet Union.
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Communism's collapse in USSR-China in 20C.
This book provides a comparative analysis of the different paths taken by China and the Soviet Union during their transition from communism to democracy and market economies. It argues that the rapid mobilization of previously excluded social groups during the reform phase was the most powerful explanation for the revolutionary outcome of initially limited political and economic reforms in both countries. The author provides empirical evidence through case studies of changes in both countries, and concludes that the costs of transition from communism are high and unavoidable, but that the evolutionary changes in China are more promising than the revolutionary changes that occurred in the Soviet Union. This book would be a good read for anyone interested in the history and politics of the Soviet Union and China, and for those interested in comparative political analysis.
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