Institutional borrowing and chiefdomization in Chinese cities

Feng Deng
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Abstract

The success of river chief system is spurring more types of chiefs in Chinese cities. This trend of chiefdomization can be viewed as a case of institutional borrowing: institutions in one field borrowing power from those in another field. In an authoritarian country, institutional borrowing often takes the form of imposing bureaucracy on natural resources and public goods, a change from open institutions to public institutions. It is argued that conditions for successful change include a collective “bad” being produced and severe mismatch between its consumer and producer. Several characteristics of the city make the institutional change difficult: people's high mobility, little mismatch between consumer and producer, difficulty in controlling open access as well as no physical collective good being produced. The case of chiefdomization in China illustrates the above analyses. Despite all the problems of chiefdomization, the trend may continue as long as bureaucracy remains a powerful institution in the country.

中国城市的制度借鉴与酋长领地化
河长制的成功促使中国城市出现了更多类型的河长。这种酋长制趋势可以被视为一种制度借鉴:一个领域的制度从另一个领域的制度中借用权力。在专制国家,制度借鉴的形式通常是将官僚体制强加于自然资源和公共产品,即从开放体制向公共体制的转变。有人认为,成功变革的条件包括集体 "坏事 "的产生,以及消费者和生产者之间的严重不匹配。城市的几个特点给制度变革带来了困难:人们的流动性大、消费者和生产者之间的不匹配程度低、难以控制开放的使用权以及不生产有形的集体物品。中国酋长制的案例说明了上述分析。尽管酋长制存在种种问题,但只要官僚机构在中国仍然是一个强大的机构,这一趋势就可能继续下去。
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