Contemporary Finance & Economics ›› 2014, Vol. 0 ›› Issue (03): 1675-.

Previous Articles    

De-Industrialization, Economic Development and Selection of China’s Industrial Path

WANG Qiu-shi, WANG Yi-xin   

  1. (Jiangxi University of Finance and Economics, Nanchang 330013, China)
  • Received:2013-07-21 Published:2021-01-21

Abstract: De-industrialization is an economic phenomenon that a country has to face when its economy develops to a certain extent. Different de-industrialization pattern would produce different effects on a country’s economy. A negative consequence resulted from the total de-industrialization is the industrial hollowing, which is a problem many developed countries are faced with in the process of economic development; while structural de-industrialization can better preserve the power sources of a country’s manufacturing sector and its economic growth. China is now about to enter the period of de-industrialization phase, its manufacturing industry is faced with rising costs, demographic dividend disappearing, rising exchange rate, competition from Southeast Asian countries and other unfavorable factors, while the re-industrialization behaviors of the developed countries also constitute a great challenge to China’s manufacturing industry. The structural de-industrialization is a pattern that China should adopt.

Key words: de-industrialization; economic development; industrial structure upgrading