CREC-IEMS Eurasia Business Dialogue - Curbing capitalism: How is state capitalism in China changing?

8:00pm - 9:30pm
Online

Supporting the below United Nations Sustainable Development Goals:支持以下聯合國可持續發展目標:支持以下联合国可持续发展目标:

The China-Russia Eurasian Studies Center (CREC) is a collaborative platform jointly created by the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST), the New Economic School (NES), and the Moscow School of Management-SKOLKOVO to study the economic prospects and links between China, Russia, and the rest of Eurasia. Together with the Institute of Emerging Market Studies (IEMS) at both HKUST and SKOLKOVO, CREC will organize the Eurasia Business Dialogue to discuss how contemporary policy and socioeconomic issues affect the business landscapes of China, Russia and Central Asia. The first of these dialogues will be held on Thursday, 20 January 2022 on the subject “Curbing capitalism: How is state-led capitalism in China  changing?”.

講者/ 表演者:
Kellee TSAI
HKUST

Dean, School of Humanities and Social Science and Chair Professor of Social Science, HKUST

講者/ 表演者:
Albert PARK
ADB

Chief Economist, Asian Development Bank 

講者/ 表演者:
Xun WU
HKUST

Professor of Public Policy
Co-Director, China, Russia and Eurasia Studies Centre, HKUST

講者/ 表演者:
Ruben ENIKOLOPOV
New Economics School (Moscow)

Rector of the New Economics School

語言
英文
適合對象
校友
教職員
公眾
研究生
本科生
更多資訊

Synopsis

Recent policy and regulatory pronouncements point to significant changes in China’s business and economic landscape.  While the issues that have motivated a more intrusive and interventionist Chinese state – data security and protection, social fairness and “common prosperity”, and excessive borrowing and speculation in real estate – mirror concerns elsewhere, they also raise wider questions about the trajectory of the Chinese economy and its ability to make the transition to a productivity-led, innovation-driven one. A state that encroaches more extensively into the commercial realm and the private sector also challenges conventional notions of the developmental state and state capitalism: that as the economy grows and becomes more complex, the state recedes and the market (and private actors) play an ever larger role. To what extent do recent regulatory changes and policy pronouncements represent a major shift in China’s model of state capitalism, as opposed to a mere refinement? What do they imply for the future of innovation and entrepreneurship in China, much of which was driven by private actors in recent years? And how do these various efforts to curb (the excesses of) capitalism affect China’s near and long-term growth prospects?

Speakers

Party-State Capitalism in China
Prof Kellee TSAI
Dean, School of Humanities and Social Science and Chair Professor of Social Science, HKUST

Outlook for China’s Economy and the Common Prosperity Agenda
Prof Albert PARK
Chief Economist, Asian Development Bank 

China’s regulation of big tech: Implications for innovation and entrepreneurship
Prof Xun WU
Professor of Public Policy
Co-Director, China, Russia and Eurasia Studies Centre, HKUST

Comparative perspectives on China and Russia’s regulation of digital ecosystems

Prof Ruben ENIKOLOPOV
Rector of the New Economics School

Moderator

Prof Donald Low

Director, Institute for Emerging Market Studies, HKUST

主辦單位
HKUST Institute for Emerging Market Studies
聯絡方法
新增活動
請各校內團體將活動發布至大學活動日曆。