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1The ‘National Bourgeoisie’ consisted of indigenous entrepreneurs not allied with foreign investors, multinational corporations, foreign banks, or the military.
2For the situation of private entrepreneurship in the Maoist era, see Solinger (1984) and Heberer (1989). For more recent historical accounts of the rise of the private economy in post-Mao China, see, e.g. Zheng and Yang (2011), Coase and Wang (2013), Chen (2015), Wu and Ma (2016), and Lin (2017). See also Chen and Naughton (2017), who have proposed a sequence of three generations of a ‘China model’ of economic development.
3Since undisguised resistance would have been laden with risk, the peasants developed a strategy of permanent though limited fence-breaking by, for instance, ignoring legal restrictions of private economic activities, something James C. Scott has classified as ‘everyday forms of peasant resistance’ (Scott, 1985, 1989, see Chapter 3).
4The process of de-collectivization in agriculture was typical for later developments in the industrial and service sectors as well: Limited transgressions of laws or regulations which were tolerated by the regime induced copycat effects leading to an extensive practice of ‘fence-breaking’, first at the grassroots and soon across all administrative tiers (Fforde and de Vylder, 1996: 1). The success of the private shadow economy in solving supply-side shortages and creating jobs discouraged suppression by party leaders, once again inducing new transgressions of the law, to the extent that reforms in areas other than the economy were soon brought about as well.
5This was a somewhat arbitrary limit taken from a comment of Karl Marx made in Chapter 9 of the third volume of Capital according to which a capitalist enterprise with eight and more employees would appropriate the workers’ surplus value, hence committing capitalist exploitation.
6In 1988, the Chinese State Council enacted the ‘Provisional Regulations for Private Enterprises of the PR of China’ (Zhonghua Renmin Gongheguo siying qiye zanxing tiaoli), see Heberer (1989: 400–412) and, for the full text in Chinese, Renmin Ribao, 29 June 1988.
7The state constitution, which was amended in December 1982, stated in Article 11 that the individual economy was a supplement to the socialist public economy and was protected by the state.
8‘Let some become rich first’ (Rang yi bufen ren xian fuqilai), statement made by Deng Xiaoping on 23 October 1985, when meeting a delegation of U.S. entrepreneurs. http://cpc.people.com.cn/GB/34136/2569304.html (accessed 30 March 2018).
9The full text of the interview conducted by Thomas Heberer (in German) in Die Welt, 17 November 1986. Hu Deping’s book contains its Chinese part on private sector development.
10Article 11 of the 1982 constitution was revised as follows: ‘The State permits the private sector of the economy to exist and develop within the limits prescribed by law. The private sector of the economy is a supplement