Tóm tắt

Andors’s study portrays China’s industrial revolution not simply as an economic process but as a struggle over how to organize production in a socialist society. The book highlights the dynamic tension between ideology and efficiency, politics and expertise, central authority and local initiative. While it does not provide detailed economic assessments, it remains a valuable analysis of how industrial organization and political priorities shaped China’s development path from 1949 to the mid-1970s