The Dialectics of China's Foreign Aid: Interactions Shaping China's Aid Policy

China's foreign aid has received much attention, but the knowledge of its determinants is limited. We show how domestic political forces interact with international circumstances to shape Chinese aid policies. The article applies Carol Lancaster's framework on the interaction of domestic ideas, inst...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in复旦人文社会科学论丛:英文版 Vol. 8; no. 4; pp. 617 - 648
Main Author Ward Warmerdam Arjan de Haan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 2015
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Summary:China's foreign aid has received much attention, but the knowledge of its determinants is limited. We show how domestic political forces interact with international circumstances to shape Chinese aid policies. The article applies Carol Lancaster's framework on the interaction of domestic ideas, institutions, and in- terests in the development of foreign aid policy. We describe the dynamics of the Chinese domestic context and the interaction of these forces with international circumstances. The article concludes that shifts in ideology and interest both fa- cilitated and required changes in the foreign aid program. While other countries are subject to similar domestic political forces, China appears relatively unique as donor because of large oscillations and simultaneous continuity of its aid program under the pressure of these domestic political forces.
Bibliography:31-2000/C
Chinese foreign aid · Domestic political forces · Aid determinants · Geopolitics
China's foreign aid has received much attention, but the knowledge of its determinants is limited. We show how domestic political forces interact with international circumstances to shape Chinese aid policies. The article applies Carol Lancaster's framework on the interaction of domestic ideas, institutions, and in- terests in the development of foreign aid policy. We describe the dynamics of the Chinese domestic context and the interaction of these forces with international circumstances. The article concludes that shifts in ideology and interest both fa- cilitated and required changes in the foreign aid program. While other countries are subject to similar domestic political forces, China appears relatively unique as donor because of large oscillations and simultaneous continuity of its aid program under the pressure of these domestic political forces.
ISSN:1674-0750
2198-2600