The development of China's solar photovoltaic industry: why industrial policy failed

被引:20
|
作者
Chen, Tain-Jy [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Taiwan Univ, Taipei 10764, Taiwan
关键词
Industrial policy; Institution; China; Loosely coupled system; L52; O25; TRANSITIONAL ECONOMY; ORGANIZATIONS; STATE;
D O I
10.1093/cje/bev014
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This article studies China's central-local government relations in the formation and implementation of an industry policy. In China, the central government is responsible for policy formation and the local governments are responsible for policy implementation, where local governments are allowed ample flexibility in the ways to achieve the policy mandate. This arrangement is conducive to local competition, but there is no built-in mechanism in the system to regulate such competition. The system is defective in the execution of an industrial policy in that it fails to discipline the recipients of policy favours and to make efficient exit selections. Because local competition involves policy resources as well as economic resources, the outcome of competition is not necessarily consistent with the comparative advantage of the region. The more that policy is emphasised in industrial development, the more that competition tends to favour large and rich cities. After a certain period of hands-off local competition, the timing of which is unpredictable but will come when the industry runs into troubles, the central government holds the ultimate power to determine the winners. The central government typically picks the 'large and strong' firms as the winners, which are crowned as a national team and became eligible for further policy support. This institutional set-up produces a rapidly growing industry, which often results in over-capacity but not necessarily a competitive industry. I use the case of China's solar photovoltaic industry to illustrate these points.
引用
收藏
页码:755 / 774
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Study on China's Legal Policy System of Development of Solar Photovoltaic Industry in WTO Framework
    Dong, Yajing
    Li, Ying
    [J]. 2015 2nd International Conference on Creative Education (ICCE 2015), Pt 1, 2015, 10 : 319 - 324
  • [2] The Impact of Fiscal Policy on the Sustainable Development of China's Photovoltaic Industry
    Tong, Xin
    You, Mingyang
    Gu, Liangjie
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2022, 10
  • [3] The role of local governments in the development of China's solar photovoltaic industry
    Corwin, Samuel
    Johnson, Timothy L.
    [J]. ENERGY POLICY, 2019, 130 : 283 - 293
  • [4] China's solar photovoltaic industry development: The status quo, problems and approaches
    Sun Honghang
    Zhi Qiang
    Wang Yibo
    Yao Qiang
    Su Jun
    [J]. APPLIED ENERGY, 2014, 118 : 221 - 230
  • [5] Solar Industry Development and Policy Support in China
    Zhong Shuiying
    Liu Chi
    Qin Liqiong
    [J]. 2010 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENERGY, ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT (ICEED2010), 2011, 5 : 768 - 773
  • [6] Industrial Policy OF CHINA'S AVIATION INDUSTRY
    Su Xing
    [J]. China's Foreign Trade, 1996, (05) : 14 - 15+4
  • [7] Analysis of the policy effects of downstream Feed-In Tariff on China's solar photovoltaic industry
    Wang, Hongwei
    Zheng, Shilin
    Zhang, Yanhua
    Zhang, Kai
    [J]. ENERGY POLICY, 2016, 95 : 479 - 488
  • [8] Shaping the solar future: An analysis of policy evolution, prospects and implications in China's photovoltaic industry
    Bai, Bo
    Wang, Zheng
    Chen, Jing
    [J]. ENERGY STRATEGY REVIEWS, 2024, 54
  • [9] The contagious effect of China's energy policy on stock markets: The case of the solar photovoltaic industry
    Hsiao, Cody Yu-Ling
    Ai, Dan
    Wei, Xinyang
    Sheng, Ni
    [J]. RENEWABLE ENERGY, 2021, 164 : 74 - 86
  • [10] China's solar photovoltaic policy: An analysis based on policy instruments
    Zhi Qiang
    Sun Honghang
    Li Yanxi
    Xu Yurui
    Su Jun
    [J]. APPLIED ENERGY, 2014, 129 : 308 - 319