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Local Initiative and National Reform: The Wenzhou Model of Development*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

The “Wenzhou model” is a controversial one in China. Wenzhou, situated in south-eastern Zhejiang Province, is characterized by its lively private or unofficial economy. This pattern of development caused Wenzhou to be pulled into the vortex of national politics, policy-making and reform in the 1980s. As a result, policy implementation and development in Wenzhou has a wider significance than just as an example of local variation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1993

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References

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40. One successful entrepreneur told me that he refused to have his photograph in the newspaper for fear of a backlash of envy against him. Interview no. 40, Wenzhou, April 1989.

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48. Interviews no. 29, 36, 41, Wenzhou, March 1989.

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50. Renmin ribao (RMRB) (People's Daily), 8 December 1983; Shijie jingji daobao (World Economic Herald), 30 January 1983, p. 6 and 13 February 1984, p. 8.

51. Shijie jingji daobao, 13 February 1984, p. 8.

52. RMRB, 27 November 1986; WZRB, 3 September 1985.

53. On Du's relationship with Zhao seeShambaugh, David, The Making of a Premier: Zhao Ziyang's Provincial Career (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 23Google Scholar;

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56. Fang, Wang, “An investigation of Wenzhou's rural development situation,” Hongqi (Red Flag), No. 3 (1986), pp. 1619Google Scholar;

57. WZRB, 3 December 1985.

58. SeeJianwen, Yang et al. , “The Wenzhou model,” pp. 3435Google Scholar;Ping, Song, “The State Council and State Planning Commission chief's speech on viewing Wenzhou,” Jiaoyan ziliao, 2 12 1986, p. 17Google Scholar;Rongfei, He, “The basic experience offered by Wenzhou's economic pattern,” Wenzhou luntan, No. 5 (02 1987)Google Scholar;

59. See for example,Yunhe, Li, “A discussion regarding the leadership position of publicly-owned means of production,” Wenzhou luntan, No. 6 (1988), p. 5Google Scholar;Yuansong, Ouyang, “How should we understand the Wenzhou economic pattern,” Zhejiang xuekan, No. 5 (1988), p. 34Google Scholar;Xiang, Wu, “Comrade Wu Xiang's talk during the dialogue with theoretical and practical workers,” Wenzhou luntan, No. 4 (1987), p. 5Google Scholar;

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61. Xiangui, Jin, “A discussion of the 'status' of Wenzhou's commodity economy,” Wenzhou luntan, No. 5 (1987), pp. 4849Google Scholar; see alsoYongchang, Wang, “Thoughts concerning several problems with Wenzhou's rural economic and social development,” Wenzhou luntan, No. 3 (1987), pp. 812Google Scholar;

62. Ibid. p. 47.

63. For a sympathetic account of Yuan's career see“Writing history in the midst of practice,” in Bai, Lin (ed.), Wenzhou de ganbu (Wenzhou's Cadres) (Guangxi: Renmin chubanshe, 1987), pp. 4960Google Scholar;

64. His return to provincial level could be seen as a promotion but he was also removed from his position in the provincial standing committee and given a post in the far less influential judiciary. This had less immediate power and less potential upward mobility. One provincial level cadre suggested that he was removed because he was too aggressive as an advocate of Wenzhou. Interviews suggest that he was not always a diplomatic politician and may have offended a number of people within the province.

65. Interviews no. 29, 41, 43, Wenzhou, March and April 1989.

66. Chen Yonggui is the most obvious example. As a county leader involved in the promotion of the Dazhai model he gained a position on the Politburo in the 1970s.

67. “Zhao Ziyang discusses rural private companies and wage labour problems,” in Anhui Provincial Party Propaganda Bureau's Xuanchuan gongzuo (Propaganda Work), No. 16(1986).

68. “Comrade Hu Yaobang discusses the rural private company and wage labour problems,” in Xuanchuan gongzuo, No. 19 (1986). In the published version the recommendation of Wenzhou's as the first experimental point appears as part of Hu's speech. Knowledgeable individuals working in Wenzhou, however, maintain that this is a misprint and the recommendation is Zhao's. Since Hu had never visited Wenzhou, and because of Zhao's long and close association with Du Runsheng, Zhao is more likely.

69. WZRB, 13 November 1986.

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73. These regulations are published in Wenzhou shiyanqu youguan tiaolie huibian (Handbook of Wenzhou Experimental Zone Regulations) ( Wenzhou, : Zhongyang wenzhou shiwei bangongshi, 11 1987)Google Scholar;

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81. See for example letters to the editor, Zhenan ribao, 5 and 8 March 1983.

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92. Information on the People Run Business Association is drawn from Wenzhou gongshang (Wenzhou Industry and Commerce), 25 January 1989 and from interviews no. 39, 40, 41, March 1989.

93. Bonnin, Michel and Chevrier, Yves, “The intellectual and the state: social dynamics of intellectual autonomy during the post-Mao era,” The China Quarterly, No. 127 (09 1991), p. 57Google Scholar;

94. Originally created in the 1950s as the officially administered mass organization for the private sector operating under the auspices of the United Front, the Federation lost any real function after the “transformation to socialism” was completed. In the 1980s it was revived as part of the United Front in Deng Xiaoping's reform effort.

95. Socialism, the people's dictatorship, Party leadership, Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought.

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97. Jingji ribao (Economics Daily), 21 October 1989, p. 2.

98. RMRB (overseas edition), 29 April 1990, p. 3.

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