Railway Governance and Power Structure in China
Lee Jinjing
International Journal of Railway, vol. 1, no. 4, pp.129-133, 2008
Abstract : Over the last 15 ~ 20 years, many countries have adopted policies of railway privatization to keep up with increasing
competition from road and air transport. Although each country and case has its own history, market characteristics,
political context as well as administrative process, railway privatizations (including railway restructure, concession etc.)
in the west usually are accompanied with the establishment of new regulatory regimes. Therefore, railway governance
has been innovating towards an interaction of government, regulator, industry bodies, user groups, trade unions and other
interested groups within the regulatory framework. However, it is not the case in China. Although China had seen a partial
privatization in some branch lines and is experiencing a much larger-scale privatization by establishing joint-ventures
to build and operate high-speed passenger lines and implementing an asset-based securitization program,
administrative control still occupies absolutely dominant position in the railway governance in China. Ministry of Railway
(MOR) acts as the administrator, operator as well as regulator. There is no national policy that clearly positions railway
in the transportation network and clarifies the role of government in railway development. There is also little
participation from interested groups in the railway policy making, pricing, service standard or safety matter. Railway in
China is solely governed by the mere executive agency. Efficiency-focused economic perspective explanation is far from
satisfaction. A wider research perspective from political and social regime is of great potential to better explain and solve
the problem. In the west, separation and constrains of power had long been established as a fundamental rule. In addition
to internal separation of political power(legislation, execution and jurisdiction), rise of corporation in the 19th century
and association revolution in the 20th century greatly fostered the growth of economic and social power. Therefore,
political, social and economic organizations cooperate and compete with each other, which leads to a balanced and reasonable
power structure. While in China, political power, mainly party-controlled administrative power has been keeping
a dominated position since the time of plan economy. Although the economic reform promoted the growth of
economic power of enterprises, it is still not strong enough to compete with political power. Furthermore, under rigid
political control, social organizations usually are affiliated to government, independent social power is still too weak to
function. So, duo to the limited and slow reform in political and social regime in China, there is an unbalanced power
structure within which political power is dominant, economic power expanding while social power still absent. Totally
different power structure in China determines the fundamental institutional environment of her railway privatization and
governance. It is expected that the exploration of who act behind railway governance and their acting strength (a power
theory) will present us a better picture of railway governance as a relevant transportation mode. The paper first examines
the railway governance in China and preliminarily establishes a linkage between railway governance and its fundamental
institutional environment, i.e. power structure in a specific country. Secondly, the reason why there is no national
policy in China is explored in the view of political power. In China, legislative power is more symbolic while party-controlled
administrative power dominates political process and plays a fundamental role in Chinese railway governance.
And then, in the part three railway finance reform is analyzed in the view of economic power, esp. the relationship o f
political power and economic power.
Keyword : Governance, Finance Reform, Privatization |