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(Re)Centralization: How China is Balancing Central and Local Power in Science, Technology, and Innovation

March 25, 2024
Siwen Xiao and Yaosheng Xu

Policy Brief
(Re)Centralization: How China is Balancing Central and Local Power in Science, Technology, and Innovation

Chinese policymakers have designed “central-local joint action” mechanisms that balance the powers of central and local authorities in an effort to centralize its science and technology (S&T) sector while mitigating the costs of centralization. In this policy brief, Siwen Xiao and Yaosheng Xu detail how these mechanisms are being implemented across three programs, and explore the challenges they pose.

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China is centralizing its science and technology (S&T) sector while attempting to mitigate the costs of centralization. To this end, policymakers have designed “central-local joint action” mechanisms that balance the powers of central and local authorities. These mechanisms involve consultative processes led by the central government that aim to negotiate shared S&T investments in national priority areas with local authorities. In this policy brief, Siwen Xiao and Yaosheng Xu, research associates at IGCC, detail how these mechanisms are being implemented across three programs: the National Key Research and Development Program, the National Guidance Fund for Technology Transfer and Commercialization, and the National Centers of Technological Innovation. They also explore the challenges associated with recentralization and power balancing, which threaten to diminish China’s ambitious S&T goals to mere slogans, rather than unified and well-resourced national efforts.

This brief is part of a special series organized jointly by the University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC) and the Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS). This analysis was originally presented at the Conference on the Chinese National Innovation and Techno-Industrial Ecosystems in Berlin, September 5–6, 2023.

Thumbnail credit: MEA (Flickr)

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