Getting Ahead in the Communist Party: Explaining the Advancement of Central Committee Members in China
University of Washington · Peking University
Abstract
Spectacular economic growth in China suggests the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has somehow gotten it right. A key hypothesis in both economics and political science is that the CCP's cadre evaluation system, combined with China's geography-based governing logic, has motivated local administrators to compete with one another to generate high growth. We raise a number of theoretical and empirical challenges to this claim. Using a new biographical database of Central Committee members, a previously overlooked feature of CCP reporting, and a novel Bayesian method that can estimate individual-level correlates of partially observed ranks, we find no evidence that strong growth performance was rewarded with…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 177.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 107
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Communism
- Elite
- China
- Promotion (chess)
- Politics
- Political science
- Revenue
- Ranking (information retrieval)
- Decent work and economic growth