
What are the costs of the Chinese regime's fixation on quelling dissent in the name of political order, or "stability?" In Welfare for Autocrats, Jennifer Pan shows that China has reshaped its major social assistance program, Dibao, around this preoccupation, turning an effort to alleviate poverty into a tool of surveillance and repression. This distortion of Dibao damages perceptions of government competence and legitimacy and can trigger unrest among those denied benefits. Pan traces how China's approach to enforcing order transformed at the turn of the 21st century and identifies a phenomenon she calls seepage whereby one policy--in this case, quelling dissent--alters the allocation of resources and goals of unrelated areas of government. Using novel datasets and a variety of methodologies, Welfare for Autocrats challenges the view that concessions and repression are distinct strategies and departs from the assumption that all tools of repression were originally designed as such. Pan reaches the startling conclusion that China's preoccupation with order not only comes at great human cost but in the case of Dibao may well backfire.
This book investigates how the Chinese government utilizes social assistance programs as instruments of political control rather than purely for poverty alleviation. Jennifer Pan, a political scientist, examines the transformation of the Dibao program at the turn of the 21st century. By analyzing how the pursuit of political stability influences unrelated policy areas, she argues that the regime's focus on quelling dissent fundamentally distorts the distribution of social resources and may ultimately undermine government legitimacy.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in political science and Chinese studies recognize this work as a rigorous examination of how authoritarian regimes repurpose administrative tools for political survival. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the precision of the empirical methodology employed by the author.
Page Count:
248
Publication Date:
2020-05-29
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190087439
ISBN-13:
9780190087432
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