State Capitalism
China's hybrid economic model — how the state and market interact, the role of SOEs, and the tensions in the system.
The Hybrid Model
China's economy defies simple categorisation. It is neither a free market nor a traditional command economy, but a hybrid where the state maintains strategic control while allowing — and encouraging — private enterprise in many sectors. State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) dominate banking, energy, telecommunications, and heavy industry, while private companies drive innovation in technology, consumer goods, and services.
The party maintains economic control through several mechanisms: the state banking system directs credit to favoured sectors, five-year plans set strategic priorities, industrial policy (like 'Made in China 2025') targets specific technologies, and party committees are embedded in private companies above a certain size. The line between state and private is deliberately blurred.