China’s state-driven economic model is at a critical crossroads, and debates over its sustainability are often emotionally charged and ideologically driven. Zhong offers a fresh perspective by using Brazil’s past to illuminate China’s future. To avoid Brazil’s fate of economic burnout in the 1970s, China must confront the risks of financial mismanagement, overreliance on public investment, neglect of private sector dynamism, and declining human capital.

Key Takeaways

  1. Comparative insights: China’s economic trajectory shares striking similarities with that of Brazil in 20th century, offering critical lessons on how entrenched state-led development strategies can hinder sustainable growth.
  2. Policy missteps to avoid: Brazil’s reliance on public investment, financial mismanagement, weakened entrepreneurship, and human capital deficiencies from the 1950s to 1970s are cautionary signs for China’s current model.
  3. China must pull back from the “China Model”: To avoid Brazil’s fate, China needs urgently to reassess its development strategies and redirect its focus toward strengthening its institutions, fostering private-sector growth, and enhancing its overall human capital.
  4. Global implications: The “China Model” has served not only as a driver of national development but also as a symbol of China’s contribution to international economic governance. China’s economic choices will play a pivotal role in shaping its future global influence, but moving beyond such an entrenched system requires both determination and vision.

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Pitfalls of State-Led Development: Brazil’s Past Offers a Warning for China by Hoover Institution

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