Assessing the impact of the 'one-child policy' in China: A synthetic control approach

Author(s): Xuehui Han, Yuan Cheng

Publisher: PLoS ONE

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0220170

Online url: View online

Abstract

Public–private partnerships (PPPs), although widely used to build infrastructure and deliver public services around the world, have confronted transaction hazards of uncertainty, asset specificity, information asymmetry, and contract incompleteness. Drawing from contracting theories, this article takes a holistic approach to identifying eight governance mechanisms to address transaction hazards: cognition and flexibility for uncertainty, safeguards and credibility for asset specificity, transparency and competition for information asymmetry, and reputation and trust for contract incompleteness. We then conduct a comparative study of two PPP power projects, one successful in China and the other failed in India, to illustrate how governance mechanisms function to address those transaction hazards. Among eight governance mechanisms, flexibility, credibility, and competition are especially critical to determine the success or failure of PPP projects.

Citation

Han, X. and Cheng, Y. (2019). Assessing the impact of the “one-child policy” in China: A synthetic control approach. PLoS ONE, 14(11), e0220170.