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 (A)
 (1) Yasheng Huang, Zhejiang Province: A Free-Market Success Story;
 China's Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces seem similar, but household income in
 entrepreneurial Zhejiang shows an economic model to be followed.
 BusinessWeek, Oct. 20, 2008.
 http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/oct2008/gb20081020_124170.htm
 
 Note: Professor Yasheng Huang's web profile
 http://web.mit.edu/yshuang/www/
 does not include his education (and I cannot find it in the web). But it is
 certain that he was born in China, not Taiwan.
 
 (2) Prof. Huang has eyed the two provinces for quite some time (alas, not
 Gunagdong province).
 
 His papers about the two provinces in reserse chronological order:
 
 (a) Huang, Yasheng, Ownership Biases and FDI in China: Evidence from Two
 Provinces (2007). Business and Politics: Vol. 9 : Iss. 1, Article 1.
 http://www.bepress.com/bap/vol9/iss1/art1/
 (abstract)
 
 My comment: But unless you are an economy major, you probably cannot sit
 tight to read this academic paper. Click "download" in the right column to
 read the full text. The same applies to the next paper.
 
 (b) "R-Squared" (a screen name),  A tale of two Chinese provinces: “Indians
 ” in China. Development Bank Research Bulletin (DBRB), Apr. 17, 2006.
 http://www.bankresearch.org/economicpolicyblog/2006/04/a_tale_of_two_c.html
 (synopsis)
 
 introducing
 
 Huang, Yasheng and Di, Wenhua, A Tale of Two Provinces: The Institutional
 Environment and Foreign Ownership in China (April 2004). MIT Sloan Working
 Paper No. 4482-04; William Davidson Institute Working Paper No. 667.
 (direct electronic link provided)
 
 (c) Yasheng Huang and Tarum Khanna, Can India Overtake China?  Foreign
 Policy, July/August, 2003, pages 74-81.
 http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/tkhanna/docs/fp_india-china_june2003.pdf
 (subtitle: "What’s the fastest route to economic development? Welcome
 foreign direct investment (FDI), says China, and most policy experts agree.
 But a comparison with long-time laggard India suggests that FDI is not the
 only path to prosperity. Indeed, India’s homegrown entrepreneurs may give
 it a long-term advantage over a China hamstrung by inefficient banks and
 capital markets.")
 
 The article mentioned (and compared) the two provinces only at p. 80. To
 save your time, that paragraph is reproduced here.
 
 "Consider the contrasting strategies of Jiangsu
 and Zhejiang, two coastal provinces that were at
 similar levels of economic development when China’s
 reforms began. Jiangsu has relied largely on fdi to
 fuel its growth. Zhejiang, by contrast, has placed
 heavier emphasis on indigenous entrepreneurs and
 organic development. During the last two decades,
 Zhejiang’s economy has grown at an annual rate of
 about 1 percent faster than Jiangsu’s. Twenty years
 ago, Zhejiang was the poorer of the two provinces;
 now it is unquestionably more prosperous.
 
 (3) My comment: What is the conclusions of Prof. Huang? This is it, I think.
 
 (a) Yasheng Huang, Private Ownership: The Real Source of China’s Economic
 Miracle. Even many Western economists think China has discovered its own
 road to prosperity, dependent largely on state financing and control. They
 are quite wrong. McKinsey Quarterly, December, 2008.
 http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Private_ownership_The_real_source_of_Chinas_economic_miracle_2279
 
 From the author (but required payment to read):
 Yasheng Huang, China and India: The race to growth. McKinsey Quarterly,
 December, 2004.
 http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/China_and_India_The_race_to_growth_1487?pagenum=2
 
 (b) He had a new book.
 
 Yasheng Huang, Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics; Entrepreneurship and
 the State. Cambridge University Press, September 2008.
 http://cambridge.org/us/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521898102&ss=fro
 
 Also discussing the two provinces extensively, Chapter four of the book is
 titled "What Is Wrong With Shanghai?"
 
 (i) In fact, one can read it (chapter) free online:
 http://www.princeton.edu/~piirs/calendars/HuangD&Dpaper.pdf
 
 (ii) Again, a summary is supplied in two parts at theglobalist.com. Though
 the summary gives you an idea, it is jerky, not well written.
 http://www.theglobalist.com/StoryId.aspx?StoryId=7406
 http://www.theglobalist.com/storyid.aspx?StoryId=7407
 
 (B) At last, I wish to say this.
 
 (1) I left Taiwan in 1984. Under the two presidents Chiang (father and son),
 China was taught in geography and history classes, as well as Chinese
 literature. That is the China under Republican rule; nothing after 1949 was
 incorporated. Thus, railways, highways were few (and easier for students).
 The pertinent to this topic is that we were told the north of Jiangsu was
 agrarian and very poor. It may still be so at present, dragging the whole
 province down.
 
 (2)
 (a) Debin Ma, Industrial Revolution in the Prewar Lower Yangzi Region of
 China: A Quantitative and Institutional Interpretation. Center for the Study
 of Economics and Society (CSES), Working paper No. 17, January 2004.
 http://www.economyandsociety.org/publications/wp16_Ma_04.pdf
 
 The pertinent quotation comparing Lower Yangtze Delta (as a whole; not
 distinguishing Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Shanghai) and Taiwan are as follows.
 
 "The result shows that the 1933 Lower Yangzi per capita GDP, was about 60% higher than China’s national average and 40-50% higher than those of the Japanese controlled Korea and Manchuria, only ranked lower than Japan and Taiwan. Back-projection based on the Lower Yangzi 1930s benchmark estimate indicates a magnitude of structural change and per-capita income growth comparable to Japan and her colonies between the 1910s and 1930s, with an economic structure significantly removed from a traditional agrarian economy." Pages 4-5.
 
 "Preliminary comparisons based on the 1930s exchange rates also show that per-capita income in the Lower Yangzi, were far higher than those of Korea and Manchuria, ranked third only after Japan and Taiwan. But with its population almost the size of Japan and more than 10 times that of Taiwan in the 1930s, Lower Yangzi had clearly emerged as the second largest industrial region in the entire East Asia (perhaps Asia)." Page 24.
 
 My comment: The bottom line is under Japan's colonial rule, Taiwan had a
 higher living standard than Lower Yangtze Delta. As to Taiwan's against
 Shanghai's, no paper is written yet.
 
 (b) Dr. Debin Ma is another Chinese-born economist who has done research in
 Japan and, recently, England.
 http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/economicHistory/whosWho/profiles/d.ma1@lse.ac.uk.htm
 
 (3) Do not forget that all papers and the book were all written prior to the Great Recession (maybe published after the start of the Recession). Lower Yangtze Delta is not immune. See
 
 Zhao Hejuan, Yangtze Delta: Begins its Tough Transition. Caijing magazine, Feb. 1, 2009.
 http://english.caijing.com.cn/2009-02-01/110051787.html
 
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