Abstract
The article is devoted to the analysis of modern political trends in China. The author considers approaches to explaining the essence of political processes in the People's Republic of China, analyzes the prerequisites for reforms and the main obstacles for the government of the country. The author identifies several main trends that have been observed over the past few years: Xi Jinping as the "main" leader, the spread of leading small groups, a new generation of Xi Jinping's cadres, new anti-corruption measures and the eradication of Jiang Zemin, one-party constitutionalism, the Chinese party-state structure. It is pointed out that China's political economy is at a political crossroads between the reconciling demands of party control and the market, between the competing demands of sustainable economic reform and the continued use of diverse incentives. The article analyzes the current political economy of the current leader in the aspect of combating the crisis and the decline in economic activity. In his conclusions, the author emphasized that China's political economy is at a political crossroads between the demands of party control and the market
Keywords
References
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