Description
Unbundles corruption into different types, examining corruption as access money in China through a comparative-historical lens.
About the Author
Yuen Yuen Ang is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Michigan. Her book How China Escaped the Poverty Trap (2016) received the Peter Katzenstein Book Prize in Political Economy and the Viviana Zelizer Book Award in Economic Sociology. She has been named an Andrew Carnegie Fellow for 'high-caliber scholarship [on] some of the most pressing issues of our times'. In addition, she has received grants, fellowships, and an essay prize from the American Council of Learned Societies, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Chiang Ching Kuo Foundation, Gates Foundation, and Smith Richardson Foundation. Her commentaries and interviews have appeared on the BBC and CGTN, and in Foreign Affairs, The New York Times, Project Syndicate, The Wall Street Journal, and media outlets around the world.
Reviews
'A thought-provoking new book... The book is not a defence of corruption. Like steroids, access money promotes unbalanced growth, it notes.' David Rennie, The Economist
'This path-breaking study will change how we think about the link between corruption and growth ... original and convincing.' Bruce Dickson, George Washington University
'Yuen Yuen Ang has emerged as her generation's leading analyst and public interpreter of China's development experience, and the distinctive strategies underpinning it. Her latest offering is broadly important, intellectually solid, immensely interesting and uniquely accessible to scholars, lay readers and practitioners alike. It will be an academic blockbuster.' Michael Woolcock, World Bank and Harvard University
'Skillfully unbundling forms of corruption and placing China's 'Gilded Age' firmly in comparative and historical perspective, Yuen Yuen Ang brings a fresh and penetrating new perspective to one of the central puzzles of the current era - and reminds Americans of the deep-seated corruption of their own early period of rapid industrialization.' Andrew G. Walder, Stanford University
'Both Xi Jinping and critics of the Chinese government agree corruption is bad for development. Transgressing this simplistic notion, Ang shows that not all corruption is equally bad for growth. Her brilliant analysis explains China's hyper growth and warns of the troubles ahead.' Ho-fung Hung, John Hopkins University
'This book will generate substantial debate. Ang stakes out a unique position in the debate over the role of corruption in China's economic development and the effect it will have on China's future. Ang makes a valuable contribution in unbundling corruption, methodically demonstrating the ways that both corruption and corrupt actors differ. After reading this book, no one should be able to maintain that corruption is a unitary phenomenon; it manifests itself in many ways.' Philip Nichols, Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
'An important book not only for many who try to understand the roots of China's success but for a much more sober and less Western-centric view of corruption.' Branko Milanovic, Global Policy
'She's incredibly thorough - digging into official stats, media reports, interviewing 400 people and building new databases from scratch to lift the veil on an elusive issue - how corruption works under autocracy.' Duncan Green, author of From Poverty to Power
'... Yuen Yuen Ang has produced an extraordinary piece of scholarly work that will significantly impact the way anticorruption research is done in the future.' Joseph Pozsgai-Alvarez, Governance
'... Ang's book provides a very rich basis for economists as well as for scholars interested in governance and corruption to embark on this path.' Carolin Kautz, Journal of Chinese Political Science
'China's Gilded Age presents the most sophisticated analysis of corruption to date.' Diego Castaneda Garza, London School of Economics Review of Books
'... an extraordinary piece.' Joseph Pozsgai-Alvarez, Governance
Book Information
ISBN 9781108745956
Author Yuen Yuen Ang
Format Paperback
Page Count 273
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 450g
Dimensions(mm) 228mm * 152mm * 18mm