Skip to main content
Top

2022 | Book

Studies on the Chinese Economy During the Mao Era

insite
SEARCH

About this book

This book focuses on several specific features characterizing China’s economy in the Mao era (1952–1976), and discusses whether and how they are related to the new economic strategy called “reforms and opening-up” under Deng Xiaoping’s leadership with the result of the aftermath of well-known rapid growth.

It provides the reader with basic knowledge of the continuity and discontinuity between the Mao and Deng eras. Readers are provided with some important clues for thinking about how Maoist China could have contributed to or alternatively prevented today’s economic development. The topics addressed here include a brief overview of economic development under Mao, significant differences between Mao and Deng economics, and socialist transformations during the early Mao era. These include collectivization as well as communization and the effects on agricultural productivity; water supply construction drives utilizing a vast amount of rural surplus labor; rural finance; the effects on national savings, and the development of heavy and light industry. Also considered are the effects on the socialist industrialization, rural small-scale industries during the Cultural Revolution and their aftermath, and the realities of social life in a Third-front construction site promoted by Mao’s military strategy in the 1960s. This book is highly recommended to readers who are interested in contemporary China’s economy, particularly to scholars and students. The volume gives new insight into the background or preconditions that made possible historically rare miracles of the Chinese economy after Mao.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction: Economic Performance and Background of the Mao Era
Abstract
What macroeconomic changes and achievements have the Chinese economy undergone during the Mao era? We first summarize the economic achievements and characteristics of the Mao era from several aspects, then consider the mechanisms that caused the growth and changes, and finally briefly review the institutional and policy backgrounds that enabled or created such a performance.
Katsuji Nakagane
Chapter 2. Mao Zedong’s Political Economics and Deng Xiaoping’s Economics
Abstract
Often described as an “anti-economics” person, Mao Zedong caused the national economy to fall into chaos, such as the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution. He thought that the economy was nothing but a means for his politics. Deng Xiaoping, on the other hand, succeeded in reconstructing the Chinese economy confused by Mao’s politics by displaying his economic thinking. We first analyze Mao’s “political economics”, contrast it with Deng’s economics, and finally evaluate Mao’s political economy from today’s perspective.
Katsuji Nakagane
Chapter 3. From “New Democracy” to “Socialist Transformation”: Bankers and Commercial Associations in 1950s Chongqing
Abstract
This chapter examines the socialist transformation by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), focusing on the case of the reorganization of intermediate associations in Chongqing. The socialist transformation of the Trade Associations promoted in the 1950s brought together the various organizations, practices, and social relations that had colored China's social economy into a consolidation centered on the CCP. In this sense, the socialist transformation by the CCP was an attempt to ensure stability by restricting the free operation of the social economy and keeping economic activity within each region through centralization of power and profit in the regime and the containment of critical forces. In contrast, the socialist transformation promoted by the CCP was also an attempt to introduce other-oriented and broad-based rules backed by state power. This seemingly contradictory situation glimpsed in the socialist transformation led to the formation of another principle of decentralization and the development of the so-called “Economies of Feudal Princes (zhuhou jingji)” after the Reform and Opening-up policy, which coexisted with the orientation toward the integration of development dictatorship. In this sense, the 1950s can be said to be the starting point for the formation of “regions” in modern China.
Koji Hayashi
Chapter 4. Examination of Collective Farming from Production Cost Survey
Abstract
This chapter examines the profit structures of farm management under the People's Commune by using a production cost survey and re-calculated the amount of net revenue utilizing our hypothetical wage for agricultural labor. The estimated results showed that the levels of hypothetical wages were consistently lower than those of official standard wage for major crops. Moreover, the amount of net revenue for major crops by use of the hypothetical wage recorded consistent surplus during the Mao era. These results suggested that production teams generated positive revenues from agricultural production and the surpluses were siphoned off through higher-level organizations such as brigades and communes to urban areas.
Hisatoshi Hoken
Chapter 5. People’s Communes: A Microanalysis Based on Accounting Data of Production Team X in Jiangsu Province (1965–81)
Abstract
Through microanalysis of an accounting data of Production Team X in Jiangsu Province, this chapter reproduces the specific economic activities of Team X during the people’s commune period and the economic relationship between Team X and the peasants, to reveal the basic characteristics of the commune system. The results show that this system is not only one institutional device to realize the national industrialization strategy, but also the community to maintain the basic life of rural residents, which is a special product of the Mao era.
Shanping Yan
Chapter 6. Water Use Construction: Flood Control and Irrigation Projects and Labor Accumulation
Abstract
This paper investigates the process and economic performance of water conservancy construction from the perspective of labor accumulation. In the Mao era, in which there were insufficient capital and surplus labor, the labor-intensive water construction played a particular role in improving agricultural infrastructure and increasing agricultural production. On the other hand, the socialist authoritarian regime could over-mobilized the agricultural labor force and resulted in tragic consequences.
Huanzhen Luo
Chapter 7. Rural Finance: State Banks and Rural Credit Cooperatives in the Context of Fund Transfers
Abstract
During the period of planned economy when China’s strategic priority was to develop the heavy industry, did rural financial institutions function as “pumps” to provide funds for the development of urban industrialization? Or did they function as “blood transfusion” mechanism by injecting funds into programs designed to improve agricultural productivity? Based on the data from 1949 to 1978, this paper examines rural capital flow and the impact of Rural Finance on agricultural development under the planned economy system. The results indicate that: first, from 1952 to 1978, the total net outflow of funds in rural areas through financial institutions was 14.771 billion yuan. Second, the way in which the flow of rural funds through financial channels varied during the different time periods. For instance, during the early stage of the planned economy (1953–1957), funds continuously flowed into rural areas through financial channels, with a small and stable inflow scale; during the later period of economic development (1971–1978), rural funds continued to flow out through financial institutions, and the scale of capital outflow showed a “U” shape. Third, agricultural loans significantly improved the level of agricultural development during the period of planned economy. The above findings shed light on our understanding of the positive role played by rural finance during the period of the planned economy.
Cheng Tang
Chapter 8. Heavy Industry: Heavy Industrialization and Its Evaluation
Abstract
This chapter inspects the heavy industrialization during the Mao era and examines its legacy to the Deng era. Heavy industrialization in the Mao era laid the foundations of heavy industry, providing favorable conditions for economic development in the reform and opening-up era. The presence of heavy industry was maintained during the Deng era. Moreover, during the Mao era, the embryonic forms of some of the reform and opening-up policies could be found in the policies related to heavy industrialization, such as the utilization of foreign plants, technology, and funds, and the exploration for a better SOE management system. On the other hand, heavy-industry-oriented development strategy during the Mao era aimed at strengthening national defense, and as a result, investment efficiency was not improved. However, the challenge of improving investment efficiency was also a difficult issue during the Deng era.
Nariaki Kai
Chapter 9. Light Industry: Socialist Industrialization and the Textile Industry
Abstract
This chapter examines the impact of socialist industrialization policies implemented during the Mao era on the long-term industrialization process of China, focusing on the light industrial sector, especially the textile industry. The textile industry was the core of the rise of China's modern industry after the latter half of the nineteenth century while the traditional handicraft sector coexisted. Significant changes in the textile industry by the introduction of a socialist system in the 1950s and the “heavy-industry-oriented strategy” were seen in four specific aspects: (i) governmental control of raw materials and product distribution, (ii) nationalization and semi-nationalization of modern industrial sectors, (iii) reorganization of the traditional handicraft sector, and (iv) restraint of investment in the textile industry. As a result, the development of the textile industry was relatively suppressed in both the modern industrial and traditional handicrafts sectors throughout the Mao era, while the textile industry contributed to the socialist industrialization policy by earning relatively high profits and foreign currency through export. The post-1978 rapid expansion of the textile industry mainly by small-and-medium-sized enterprises suggests that the textile industry, suppressed under the socialist system, revived in the market economy after the reform and opening-up policy.
Jun Kajima
Chapter 10. Rural Industry: Policy on Five Small Industries with a Special Emphasis on the Fertilizer and Cement Industries
Abstract
China during the Mao era attempted to set up a geographically dispersed production structure in rural areas. This chapter analyzes the policy of rural industries with a special reference to the fertilizer and cement industries.
Takeshi Mine
Chapter 11. Chinese Societies During the Mao Era: Work and Life in the “Shanghai Small Third Front”
Abstract
Several million workers and engineers moved inland from the coastal and northeastern provinces during the 1960s for the construction of the “Third Front”—a vast geographical area in China’s interior where basic and military industries were developed and constructed. They experienced the most drastic changes in their lives because the factories were situated in the valleys of mountainous regions in inland provinces to conceal them from airstrikes. This chapter explores the work and life of those who moved from Shanghai to the “Shanghai Small Third Front,” which was a huge military industry complex located in Southern Anhui province having 81 factories and facilities and 67 thousand employees. It was an isolated enclave of Shanghai in the mountainous region of Anhui province, and therefore the employees depended heavily on their firms for the provision of various services and means of living, such as residence, food, entertainment, education for children, medical care, public security, and even spouses. This chapter describes how the complex operated, how people lived there, and how the complex was closed.
Tomoo Marukawa
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Studies on the Chinese Economy During the Mao Era
Editor
Katsuji Nakagane
Copyright Year
2022
Publisher
Springer Nature Singapore
Electronic ISBN
978-981-19-5410-8
Print ISBN
978-981-19-5409-2
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-5410-8