What is it about?
This work explores how China’s central government, led by Xi Jinping, manages relationships with local (provincial) governments under the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The BRI, introduced in 2013, is China's ambitious project to improve global trade links, but it also has important implications within China.
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Why is it important?
China's provinces are diverse, with different economic strengths and local needs. Coordinating all provinces under the central BRI framework helps the central government maintain unity, but it also reveals tensions. Managing these relationships is essential to avoid regional inequalities or conflicts, which could destabilize China domestically. By looking at how BRI projects are managed at the local level, we gain insights into the challenges of implementing large-scale policies in a vast and complex country like China. The ongoing competition between provinces highlights the difficulties of aligning local and national interests in an authoritarian system.
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This page is a summary of: The Belt and Road Initiative, Centralisation of Local Interests and Centre-province Relations, October 2024, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/9789004691087_009.
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