Party-state capitalism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Party-state capitalism (Chinese: 黨國資本主義), or Kuomintang-state capitalism (Chinese: 國民黨國資本主義), is a term used by some economists and sociologists to describe the economy of Taiwan under the authoritarian military government of the Kuomintang (KMT). The term is not used by the Kuomintang itself; it was coined by Taiwanese economists such as Chen Shih-meng and Cyrus Chu, in their research report Deconstructing the KMT-State Capitalism (解構黨國資本主義).

References[]

  • Chen Shih-meng (2006). 政治經濟: 現代理論與台灣應用 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). ISBN 957-41-3429-6.
  • Chu Wan-Wen (瞿宛文) (1995). "The Pole of the State in the Development of Capitalism in Taiwan: A Review of Party-State Capitalism (國家與台灣資本主義的發展-評論《解構黨國資本主義》)". 臺灣社會研究季刊 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). 20: 151–175.

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