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The Second Phase of SOE

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Title: The Second Phase of SOE


1
Chapter 6
  • The Second Phase of SOE
  • Reform
  • 1984-1988

2
Main Themes
  • New reform strategy
  • Seventh Five Year Plan
  • Details of major reforms
  • Assessment

3
Zhao Ziyangs New Reform Strategy in 1984
  • Goal to convert Chinas economy to a market
    economy by the end of 1980s
  • How to do it?
  • Expand market forces by limiting the scope of
    planning, fostering entry, and improving
    incentives and autonomy for SOEs
  • A dual track (plan and market) economy
  • Previously, very cautious and uneven adoption of
    this strategy
  • Now push for a coherent and broad implementation
    of marketization

4
The Reform Package Had Two Concrete Measures
  • (1) Enterprise reform
  • Renewal and radicalization of incentives to
    expand enterprise autonomy
  • (2) Consolidation and expansion of the dual track
    plan and market system
  • Outside-plan transactions were guided by market
    prices

5
May 1984 Enterprise Bill of Rights Gave More
Autonomy
  • Right to sell above-plan output
  • Right to price above-plan output at market prices
    (up to - 20 of plan prices)
  • Right to name own management team (subject to
    approval)
  • Right to promote 3 of workers annually

6
In 1985, Zhao Ziyangs Suggestions for 7th Five
Year Plan
  • State management of SOEs should be gradually
    converted from direct to indirect control by
    employing economic and legal measures
  • Prices of consumer goods with few exceptions will
    be gradually decontrolled.
  • For producer goods, the central control on prices
    should be progressively shrunk.
  • Will gradually adjust planned prices -- to close
    the gap between plan and market prices.

7
Notables
  • Key was expansion of the scope of the market
    endorsed by the Communist Party Congress
  • For the first time, the official description of
    the reform was reasonably concrete and realistic
  • Again it was based on projection not set-target

8
October 1987 13th Party Congress
  • Hu Yaobang was ousted no more political
    liberalization or bourgeois liberalization
  • Zhao Ziyang (First Party Secretary) pushed for
    the social market system and stressed indirect
    management
  • He reported to the Congress Planning must be
    based on commodity exchange and the law of value

9
Progress of the Reform
  • 1984 A renewed commitment
  • 1984-1985 Reorientation of policy at the top of
    the political system
  • 1985-1988 Progressively implemented at the
    enterprise level

10
What Were Major Enterprise Reforms During This
Period?
  • Managerial reform
  • Labor reform
  • Wages and bonuses
  • Wage determination within the factory
  • Contract labor system
  • Cutting redundant workers
  • Financial reforms

11
Enterprise Bill of Rights (May 1984) Contained
Specific Measures for Enterprise Reform
  • Factory manger responsibility system
  • Authority to draw production plan
  • System for linking total wage bill to profit
  • Long-term contracting over profit remittances
    between factories and superiors

12
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13
Managerial Reform
  • Pushed by Deng Xiaoping
  • Restricted partys control of Nomenkalutura
  • Removed the party secretarys involvement in
    decision making
  • Controversial -- resistant and worry about the
    loss of worker right and there was corruption
  • Not a smooth ride, but steady progress until
    Tiananmen Square Incidence

14
Some Notables on Labor Reform
15
Notables on Financial Reform
  • Adoption of long-term profit contracting
    (Chengbao)

16
Financial Reform (continued)--Ownership Reforms
  • Experimentation privatization was not
    permitted, but local governments were able to
    sell enterprises , e.g., in Guangdong and Hebei
  • Like state firms sold to collectives
  • Leasing or contracting of enterprises
  • Stock system

17
Stock System was Much Discussed in 1980s
18
Some Notables on the Dual-Track System
  • The plan portion was fixed gt Growing Out of the
    Plan!
  • The system was particularly apparent for raw
    material and intermediate good sectors such as
    steel and energy
  • Shortages of energy and raw materials made state
    controls necessary
  • See Figures 6.2 and 6.3 and Table 6.1

19
Problems with the Dual-Track System
  • Slowed down the tax and price reforms
  • Corruption
  • Nearly every good had more than one price.
  • Income can be made by transforming the status of
    a good.
  • One can purchase a good at low state-set price
    and resell at higher market price
  • Example in 1985, a standard truck sold for a
    plan price of 20,000 yuan, but a market price of
    35,000 yuan.

20
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21
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22
Overall Assessment of Second Phase
  • The dual-track economic system was embraced.
  • Progress in reform was identified.
  • Second-stage reforms were internally consistent,
    and achieved substantial success,
  • Premier Zhao Ziyang tended toward a piecemeal
    approach, but pushed for adoption of quite
    radical reforms.

23
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24
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