Carsten A.
HOLZ
Professor of Social Science, HKUST
E-mail: carstenholz@gmail.com
Photo CV
Research
interests: China's economy (in particular economic growth, regional economic
development, Chinese statistics)
Field in economics: development economics, applied macroeconomics and monetary
economics
ORCID 0000-0003-1293-5578
Google Scholar NIxNLlUAAAAJ
Scopus 6701402577
For publications
and courses scroll down beyond top section
A backup of this webpage is at https://hkust.carstenholz.com/.
(For a backup of linked webpages and documents replace, in their individual
URLs, the beginning section https://carstenholz.people.ust.hk/ [or, in earlier versions, https://ihome.../ ] by https://hkust.carstenholz.com/ .) The backup may not always be up to date.
China Studies
"Have China Scholars All Been Bought?" Far
Eastern Economic Review 170, no. 3 (April 2007): 36-40.
Article: free
at FEER website; as
pdf file. Criticism
and response.
Along a similar vein: Book review China’s 40 Years of Reform and Development 1978-2018, edited by Ross Garnaut, Ligang Song, and Cai Fang. Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2018. In China Journal, no. 83 (January 2020): 179-192. Review
Hong Kong Academic Freedom
“By academic freedom I
understand the right to search for truth and to publish and teach what one
holds to be true. This right implies also a duty: one must not conceal any part
of what one has recognized to be true. It is evident that any restriction
of academic freedom acts in such a way as to hamper the dissemination of
knowledge among people and thereby impedes rational judgment and action.” Albert
Einstein (Source)
3 September 2020.
“Is
Hong Kong Academia “Perfectly Safe” Or Is It “Dead?”,”
Written in response to a colleague’s Op-ed in the South China Morning Post. (Here.) More on the publication practices /
‘red lines’ of the South China Morning
Post is here.
20 September
2020. “Hong
Kong Academic Freedom – Is It ‘Safe’ or ‘Dead’ under the National Security Law?” Hong Kong
Free Press
”Silence
in the face of evil is evil itself” (Dietrich Bonhoeffer)
31 October
2020. Application for allocation from General Research Fund for project
“Academic Freedom at the Hong Kong University of Science & Technology” (here). Not
funded. Review
Panel comments, Comments by reviewer 1, 2, 3, 4. In the
next grant application round, I stop reviewing proposals for the Hong Kong
Research Grants Council (see item 2022-2-15 here).
19 November 2020. “University Rankings: Comparing Apples and Pears.” (Institutions of Higher Education without academic freedom have no place in university rankings) Here
29 December 2020. “Institutions of Higher Education without Academic Freedom Have No Place in University Rankings.” International Higher Education, no. 106 (Spring 2021): 3-5.
The article is, exceptionally, censored (omitted) in the Chinese language edition of this issue of International Higher Education, which appeared belatedly in March 2022. (My article was included in the earlier released Portuguese, Russian, and Vietnamese editions.)
17 April 2021. Reprinted in University World News as “World University Rankings Are Rewarding Totalitarianism.”
15 March
2021. “University
Rankings: Comparing Apples and Pears.” Academia
Letters, Article 290.
First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out— Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out— Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me. (Martin Niemöller) |
First they came for the democratic activists, and I did not speak out— Then they came for the independent parliamentarians, and I did not speak
out— Because I was not a
parliamentarian. Then they came for RTHK, and I did not speak out— Then they came for the independent judges, and I did not speak out— Then they came for the Professional Teachers’ Union, and I did not speak
out— Because I was just an ordinary member. Then they came for the academics—and there was no one left to speak out
for me. |
2 April 2021. A colleague in the Social Science Division
at HKUST is attacked in the “newspaper” of the “Liaison Office of the Central
People's Government in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.” My take on
the matter, shared with colleagues, is here (direct link to the email to colleagues here).
An article by Postiglione and Altbach in University
World News (“Hong
Kong higher education reaches an inflection point” (31 August 2021))
triggered a lengthy response by me (here),
a much revised version of which appeared as:
21 November 2021. “Hong
Kong Academia Is Well Past Its Inflection Point.” University World News. (Original
submission here)
27 January 2022. “Hong
Kong’s Contested Academic Freedom.” The
Diplomat (Original submission here.)
“For fear of losing his job, the schoolteacher teaches things he does not
believe; fearing for his future, the pupil repeats them after him; for fear of
not being allowed to continue his studies, [...].” Václav Havel (From
“Dear
Dr. Husák,” April 1975, letter addressed to Dr. Gustáv Husák, then general
secretary of the Czechoslovak Communist Party)
Others on
academic freedom in Hong Kong
Peter
Baehr (through 2021 Research Professor in Social
Theory, Lingnan University):
“Hong
Kong Must Now Rely on Its Own Efforts to Protect Academic Freedom” (2 June
2020)
“Dictatorship
and Responsibility in Hong Kong” (1 February 2021)
“Academic Life within
Hong Kong’s Increasingly Repressive Political Atmosphere” (33min, undated Quillette podcast interview, likely April/May 2021,
“Hong Kong
Universities in the Shadow of the National Security Law” (25 April 2022)
Sean
Tierney’s very personal
departing observations on the academic climate in Hong Kong today (9
December 2022), or here,
also raising the question of at what point, by staying in Hong Kong academia,
one endorses a system of, in his words “craven authoritarianism and malignant
stupidity.”
The story of a(nother)
academic leaving Hong Kong, this one out of fear of arrest, after his
university allegedly contacted the police over an article he had written (7
January 2023, here)
Michael
C. Davis. “Hong Kong: How Beijing
Perfected Repression.” With section on academic freedom. Journal of Democracy 33, no. 1 (January
2022): 100-15.
Hong Kong now has an academic freedom index of
0.23 (in 2022, bottom 10-20% worldwide, just below Russia, with the index down
from 0.89 in 1997, the year of the handover, here)
and ranks 140th worldwide in press freedom (2022 ranking, here).
On Hong Kong’s judicial independence also see, for example, here (in
Hong Kong via VPN only) and here (Financial Times, possibly paywalled)
On the intimidation and the exit of lawyers
see, for example, here.
On Hong Kong’s “invisible red lines” and their
constitutionality see, for example, here.
“So far, it is the worst in us which is being systematically
activated and enlarged--egotism, hypocrisy, indifference, cowardice, fear,
resignation, and the desire to escape every personal responsibility, regardless
of the general consequences.” Václav Havel (From “Dear
Dr. Husák”)
Hong Kong government and Hong Kong Basic Law regarding
academic freedom
October 2023. “A scholar at the Chinese University of Hong
Kong (CUHK) specialising in the 1989 Tiananmen
crackdown has had her work visa rejected by the Hong Kong government. Her
employment with CUHK was terminated immediately after the rejection” (here, as well as in the Financial Times and in many other,
international news outlets).
Basic Law (here)
Article 34. Hong Kong residents shall have freedom to engage in
academic research, literary and artistic creation, and other cultural
activities.
Article 137. Educational institutions of all kinds may retain their
autonomy and enjoy academic freedom. [...]
Definition of academic freedom (also
as promoted by HKUST president, here)
“[...] 5. Academic freedom gives both students and
faculty the right to study and do research on the topics they choose and to
draw what conclusions they find consistent with their research, though it does
not prevent others from judging whether their work is valuable and their
conclusions sound. [...] 6. Academic freedom means that the political,
religious, or philosophical beliefs of politicians, administrators, and members
of the public cannot be imposed on students or faculty. [...]”
”Academic freedom does not protect faculty members from
non-university penalties if they break
the law.” [Emphasis added]
Should a law—the “National Security Law” comes to
mind—trump the constitution with its constitutionally guaranteed “fundamental
rights:” The scholar in question has not
been (publicly) accused of violating any Hong Kong law, let alone been
convicted by a court for having violated one of Hong Kong’s laws.
“True enough, the
country is calm. Calm as a morgue or a grave, would you not say?” Václav Havel (From
“Dear
Dr. Husák”)
Academic freedom declarations at HKUST
HKUST’s first “core value” (here)
is: “Excellence, Integrity, and Academic Freedom. The University is committed
to being a leader in academic world through excellence in teaching, research
and people, while placing utmost value on the freedom to conduct academic
activities, subject to the highest standards of academic integrity and
honesty.”
7 September 2020.
HKUST President’s message to the HKUST community (emailed to all staff
and students) includes the passage
“We remain steadfast in our support for academic freedom
(see, e.g., https://www.freedomforuminstitute.org/about/faq/what-is-academic-freedom/;
https://www.britannica.com/topic/academic-freedom;
https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2010/12/21/defining-academic-freedom;)
and scholarly endeavours. If there are any concerns
that our values are being put to the test, it is up to us to show, first
ourselves, and then the rest of the world, that HKUST, consistent with our
established standing, can and will rise to the challenge. We are determined to
contribute our utmost efforts to the future of Hong Kong and beyond.”
26 March 2021.
HKUST President’s email to all staff and students titled “Our Position
Regarding Teaching, Research and Individual Conduct”:
“As exchanges and comments on matters related to teaching,
research and other activities of HKUST members are played out in public from
time to time, we wish to remind everyone that the University is guided by
certain principles:
(1) All activities of our members should comply with the
law. Hong Kong’s judicial system, through its due process, addresses
allegations of illegal conduct. The University has a responsibility to uphold
our own standards, and will assess and review the implications of members’
conduct after, not before, any legal process is concluded.
[...]
(4) Underpinning our activities as members of the
University is academic freedom, a principle so fundamental that it is enshrined
in Hong Kong’s Basic Law Article 137:
"Educational institutions of all kinds may retain
their autonomy and enjoy academic freedom."
HKUST’s curriculum, course contents, and delivery of
teaching are the province of the faculty, subject to the Senate’s oversight.
They are always handled transparently and openly through collective discussion
and debate by all Senate members, together with the University community. In
addition, academic freedom is an internationally respected norm, deemed
important to the successful pursuit of knowledge and the concomitant betterment
of society: scholars are supported to explore and communicate ideas and
evidence (including those that may be inconvenient, disagreeable, or
contentious to certain groups or individuals) without repercussion.
[...]”
-- Compare to the HKUST reality a few months later, here (half way through the article).
Fall 2022 greetings from (new) provost and message from
(new) president, fall 2023 president’s message (with no such fall 2024
message): No mentioning of academic freedom; focus on such things as
institution building, HKUST 3.0, and the adoption of a HKUST anthem. I am not
aware of these new managers raising the issue of academic freedom at other
occasions.
According to the (as of early 2023)
University Grants Council numbers, in the academic year 2021/22, 56 faculty
members (out of a total of approximately 490) left HKUST, compared to 24 in the
previous year. For all of Hong Kong, “of the 5,000 academic staff listed last
year, 362 had left their posts – up by about 30 per cent on the 277 who
departed the previous year and the highest figure since 1997-98.” (here) In 2022/23, 380 academic staff left Hong
Kong (here,
no numbers for HKUST).
Hong Kong’s firewall
Hong Kong telecommunications
providers nowadays block numerous websites, ranging from Hong Kong Watch (here)
to Samuel Bicket’s substack
(here).
At my home in Hong Kong (but not in downtown Hong Kong), even HKUST’s websites
have been blocked by the telecommunications provider; after I complained to the
telecommunications provider I regained access to the HKUST websites at home but
did not receive an explanation (here, July 2024). I wonder how Hong Kong
telecommunications providers decide which websites to block, and in which
geographic areas of Hong Kong to block HKUST (and possibly other employers’)
websites. It is only on campus that a VPN is not needed.
University
values
“University Values in Cooperation Projects,”
European University Association annual conference, write-up of presentation on
29 April 2022
Published as a European University Association ‘Expert
Voice:’ ”The irrelevance of “university values”.” 17 October 2022
“Forget
values statements. Universities need to support academic freedom” Times Higher Education, 16 November 2022.
Heavily edited version of the original submission here.
HKUST -- for many more of my initiatives
see here
2008.
The Hong Kong Model of Academia (March 2008) http://ihome.ust.hk/~socholz/HKUST-SOSC/HK-university-model-March08.pdf
2014. Open letter
to the Provost of HKUST (20 Feb. 2014) http://ihome.ust.hk/~socholz/OpenLetter.html
2014. My
experience with the HKUST grievance procedure 2013/2014. 22 December 2020.
(Opens new webpage: Here)
2018. “The >Gleichschaltung< of the Hong Kong University of Science
& Technology.” Mimeo, 3 December 2018. Paper
(or at Researchgate).
2020. HKUST (new)
Guangzhou (GZ) campus: Critique
(25 June 2020); earlier: Questions
for the Provost (16 April 2020)
2020 Reflections
on the Provost’s statements at the Social Science Division meeting on 7
December 2020 – A critique of the Provost’s view of current HKUST issues. 22 December
2020. Here
2020 HKUST’s pension fiasco. 13 September / 22 December 2020. Here
Publications (journals, books)
Abstracts of publications (through 2010)
“The Process of Economic Development in West Sichuan: The Case of Daocheng County.” The China Quarterly, no. 257 (March 2024): 119-35. (“First View” online published 20 July 2023.) Available at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741023000784. Appendices. An identical paper except for approx. 10% more article text and five times more footnote text (including more discussion and field work experiences), with all appendices appended, is here.
“PRC Industrial Policies Postdate Rather than Lead Economic Activity.” Chapter 8 in Erik Baark, Bert Hofman, and Jiwei QIAN (eds.), Innovation and China's Global Emergence, Singapore: National University of Singapore Press, August 2021. Chapter (27 November 2019), Chapter (22 June 2020)
“Understanding PRC Investment Statistics.” Mimeo, 12 April 2019. Paper including appendices (earlier version of 28 January 2019). Only appendices. China Economic Review 61 (June 2020), 19pp.
“The Unfinished Business of State-owned Enterprise Reform in the People’s Republic of China.” Mimeo, 2 December 2018. Paper.
“Industrial
Policies and the Changing Patterns of Investment in the PRC Economy.” The China Journal 81 (January 2019): 23-57. Paper
(including appendices). Solely
appendices. Earlier:
“The Changing Patterns of Investment in the PRC Economy.” 16 March 2017. (Here)
“Physical Capital Estimates for China’s Provinces, 1952-2015 and Beyond.” With SUN Yue. China Economic Review 51 (October 2018): 342-57. (Paper and Dataset/Results),
“China’s Investment Rate:
Implications and Data Reliability.” 1 November 2016 (Here).
Revised 13 May 2018 (Here).
Revised 22 April 2019 (Here).
Journal
submission experience.
“The Role of Investment in
Structural Change in the PRC,” ADB Consultant’s Report, 7 March 2017. (Here)
“Wage and Price Dynamics in China.” With Aaron Mehrotra. The World Economy 39, no. 8 (Aug. 2016): 1109-27. Also: “Wage and Price Dynamics in a Large Emerging Economy: the Case of China.” Stanford University, SCID Working Paper 474, 13 May 2013 (http://scid.stanford.edu/publicationsprofile/2575); Bank for International Settlements Working Papers No. 409, April 2013 (http://www.bis.org/publ/work409.htm); and The Bank of Finland Institute for Economies in Transition BOFIT Discussion Papers 3/2014, 20 January 2014 (http://www.suomenpankki.fi/bofit_en/tutkimus/tutkimusjulkaisut/dp/Pages/dp0314.aspx).
“The Quality of China’s GDP Statistics.” China Economic Review 30 (September 2014): 309-38. Also Stanford University, SCID Working Paper 487, 2 December 2013 (http://scid.stanford.edu/publicationsprofile/2681), or published version here. Appendices.
“Understanding Money Demand in the Transition from a Centrally Planned to a Market Economy.” With Anne-Laure Delatte and Julien Fouquau. Post-Communist Economies 26, no. 3 (September 2014): 376-400. Earlier version of October 2011 titled “Explaining Money Demand in China During the Transition from a Centrally Planned to a Market-based Monetary System” as Bank of Finland BOFIT Discussion Paper 27 (2011). At: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1949078.
“Wage Determination in China during the Reform Period.” The Bank of Finland Institute for Economies in Transition, BOFIT Discussion Paper 13/2014. 6 May 2014. Working paper of 25 June / 3 Oct. 2014.
“Chinese Statistics: Classification Systems and Data Sources.” Eurasian Geography and Economics 54, no. 5/6 (2013): 532-71. Earlier version: Stanford University, SCID Working Paper 471, 8 January 2013 (http://scid.stanford.edu/publicationsprofile/2557). Appendices (sectoral classification systems, representativeness of directly reporting industrial enterprises, data sources)
“Monthly Industrial Output in China 1980-2012.” China Economic Review 28 (March 2014): 1-16. Earlier version: Stanford University, SCID Working Paper 472, (revised version of) 12 September 2013 (http://scid.stanford.edu/publicationsprofile/2559).
“Chinese Statistics: Output Data.” (Not designed as journal article.) Stanford University, SCID Working Paper 473, 1 March 2013 (http://scid.stanford.edu/publicationsprofile/2561).
"The
Unbalanced Growth Hypothesis and the Role of the State: the Case of China's
State-owned Enterprises." Journal
of Development Economics 96, no. 2 (Nov. 2011): 220-38.
"No Razor's Edge:
Reexamining Alwyn Young's Evidence for Increasing Inter-Provincial Trade
Barriers in China." The Review of Economics and Statistics 91,
no. 3 (Aug. 2009): 599-616.
"China's
Economic Growth 1978-2025: What We Know Today about China's Economic Growth
Tomorrow." 26 Dec. 2006 (not final). (Appendices.)
World Development 36, no. 10 (Oct. 2008): 1665-1691. Appendices
of final version.
"China's
2004 Economic Census and 2006 Benchmark Revision of GDP Statistics: More
Questions Than Answers." The China Quarterly, no. 193
(March 2008): 150-63. Published
version. Copyright
holder: The China Quarterly / School of Oriental and African Studies.
"Spatial Price
Differences in China: Estimates and Implications." With Loren Brandt. Economic
Development and Cultural Change 55, no. 1 (Oct. 2006): 43-86.
"New Capital Estimates for China." China
Economic Review 17, no. 2 (2006): 142-85. Paper.
Appendices
Also in the same issue: "Response to Gregory C. Chow's 'New Capital
Estimates for China: Comments'," pp. 193-97.
"China's Reform Period Economic Growth: How
Reliable Are Angus Maddison's Estimates." Review of Income and Wealth
52, no. 1 (March 2006): 85-119. Paper.
Appendices.
My
response to Maddison's reply to my paper, published as: "China’s
Reform Period Economic Growth: How Reliable Are Angus Maddison’s Estimates?
Response to Angus Maddison’s Reply." Review of Income and Wealth 52,
no. 3 (Sept. 2006): 471-5.
"Deconstructing China's GDP Statistics."
China Economic Review 15, no. 2 (2004): 164-202. Paper.
"China's Statistical System in Transition:
Challenges, Data Problems, and Institutional Innovations." Review of
Income and Wealth 50, no. 3 (Sept. 2004): 381-409. Paper.
China's State-owned Enterprises between
Profitability and Bankruptcy. World
Scientific, 2003. (monograph)
Update
on the definition of "state-owned and state-controlled enterprises." Abstract and
table of contents
"'Fast, Clear and Accurate:' How Reliable Are
Chinese Output and Economic Growth Statistics?" The China Quarterly,
no. 173 (March 2003): 122-63. Paper.
"Long Live China's State-owned Enterprises:
Deflating the Myth of Poor Financial Performance." Journal of Asian
Economics 13, no. 4 (July/August 2002): 493-529. Paper.
"Institutional Constraints on the Quality of
Statistics in a Developing and Transitional Economy: the Case of China." China
Information 16, no 1 (2002): 25-67. Paper
"The 1997-1998 Break in Industrial
Statistics: Facts and Appraisal." With Yi-min Lin. Contribution to
symposium on China's statistics. China Economic Review 12, no. 4 (2001):
303-16. Paper.
"Pitfalls of China's Industrial Statistics:
Inconsistencies and Specification Problems." With Yi-min Lin. The China
Review 1, no. 1 (Fall 2001): 29-71. Paper.
"Identifying the Patterns of Profitability
Across Chinese State-owned Enterprises: Which Industrial State-owned
Enterprises in China Are Profitable?" Journal of Asian Business 17,
no. 2 (2001): 33-62. Paper.
"The Impact of the Liability-Asset Ratio on
Profitability in China's Industrial State-owned Enterprises." China
Economic Review 13, no. 1 (2002): 1-26. Paper.
"The Impact of Competition and Labor
Remuneration on Profitability in China's Industrial State-owned
Enterprises." Journal of Contemporary China 11, no. 32 (Aug.
2002): 515-38. Paper.
"Why Do Aggregate Production Functions Work?
Fisher's simulations, Shaik's Identity and Some New
Results." With Jesus Felipe. International Review of Applied Economics
15, no. 3 (July 2001): 261-85. Paper.
"Economic Reforms and State Sector Bankruptcy
in China." The China Quarterly, no. 166 (June 2001): 342-67. Paper.
Appendix.
"Banking and Enterprise Reform in the
People's Republic of China after the Asian Financial Crisis: An
Appraisal." With Tian Zhu. Asian Development Review 18, no. 1
(2001): 73-93. Paper.
"China's Monetary Reform: The
Counterrevolution from the Countryside." Journal of Contemporary China
10, no. 27 (2001): 189-217. Paper.
"The Changing Role of Money in China and Its
Implications." Comparative Economic Studies 42, no. 3 (Fall 2000):
77-100. Paper.
"Contractionary Investment Policies in China
1988/89: Accounting for the Implementation Difficulties and Successes." The
China Quarterly, no. 160 (Dec. 1999): 881-918. Paper.
The Role of Central Banking in China's Economic
Reforms. Cornell East Asia Series, No. 59.
Ithaca: Cornell University East Asia Program, 1992. (monograph)
Other publications
“In Memoriam
Universities Service Center.” October 2021. (here) Chapter in USC的故事 — Both links (to the USC
website) are broken as of July 2024. Alternatively, here
(in English) and here
(in Chinese).
“Is
Excessive Domestic Investment Hurting China?” MERICS China Monitor No. 29, 18
November 2015. (here)
“China’s GDP Data Are Better Than You Think.” Bloomberg Brief: Building China’s Data System, September 2014, p. 4. At: http://www.bloombergbriefs.com/content/uploads/sites/2/2014/09/EN-China_Data_System-WEB.pdf.
“Can We Trust the Numbers?” China Economic Quarterly 18, no. 1 (March 2014): 43-50.
“Here Be Dragons? China’s Economic Data May Not Be All Bad.” The Conversation, 3 March 2014 (https://theconversation.com/here-be-dragons-chinas-economic-data-may-not-be-all-bad-23047).
"Statistics." Entry in Encyclopedia
of Modern China, Charles Scribner's Sons / Gale Group, forthcoming.
"Have China Scholars All Been Bought?" Far
Eastern Economic Review 170, no. 3 (April 2007): 36-40.
Article: free
at FEER website; as
pdf file. Criticism
and response.
"More Number Games." China Economic
Quarterly 10, no. 3 (third quarter, 2006): 40-44.
"Why China's Growth is Sustainable." Far
Eastern Economic Review 169, no. 3 (April 2006): 41-6.
"Why China's New GDP Data Matters." Far
Eastern Economic Review 169, no. 1 (Jan./Feb. 2006): 54-7.
"The
Institutional Arrangements for the Production of Statistics." OECD---China
Governance Project. OECD Statistics working paper, STD/DOC (2005) 1, 19
Jan. 2005.
"China's Economic Growth Statistics:
Trustworthy in the Long Run, Less So in the Short Run." Asia-Pacific
Research Center, Stanford University, APARC Dispatch October 2004. For
full text click here.
Book reviews (since 2015)
Garnaut, Ross, Ligang Song, and Cai Fang (eds.).
China’s 40 Years of Reform and
Development 1978-2018. (Acton ACT, Australia: Australian National
University Press, 2018.) The China
Journal, no. 83 (January 2020). Here.
Subacci, Paola. The People’s Money: How China Is Building a
Global Currency. (New York: Columbia University Press, 2017.) China
Information 31, no. 2 (July 2017). Here.
Yueh,
Linda. China’s Growth: The Making of an Economic Superpower. (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2013.) The China Journal 74 (July 2015):
169-171. Here.
Xu, Yi-chong (ed.). The
Political Economy of State-owned Enterprises in China and India. (New York:
Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.) The Journal of Asian Studies 74, no. 2 (May 2015):
486-8. Here.
SHENG Hong, and ZHAO Nong. China’s State-owned
Enterprises: Nature, Performance, and Reform. (Singapore: World Scientific
Publishing Company, 2013.) The Journal of Asian Studies 74, no. 2 (May
2015): 482-3. Here.
Academic employment and qualifications
|
2022/23 |
Visiting Professor, Princeton School of Public and International
Affairs, Princeton University |
|
2014/15 |
Visiting Professor, Department of Economics, Harvard University
(on sabbatical leave) |
|
9/12-5/13 |
Visiting Professor, Stanford Center for International
Development, Stanford University |
|
8/10-5/12 |
Visiting Professor, Department of Economics, University of
Southern California |
7/10- |
|
Professor, Social Science Division, Hong Kong University of
Science & Technology (HKUST) |
|
9/07-6/08 |
Visiting Research Scholar, Princeton Institute for International
and Regional Studies, and Visiting Associate Professor, Department of
Economics and Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University |
|
8/03-7/04 |
Visiting Scholar, Asia-Pacific Research Center, Stanford
University (on sabbatical leave) |
7/02-6/10 |
|
Associate Professor, Social Science Division, Hong Kong
University of Science & Technology (HKUST) |
|
8/99-5/00 |
Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, Cornell
University |
8/95-6/02 |
|
Assistant Professor, Social Science Division, HKUST |
9/91-5/95 |
|
Ph.D., Department of Economics, Cornell University |
Earlier working papers and other research
"How
can a subset of industry produce more output than all of industry?"
2pp. note on 2006 and 2007 industrial value added. 27 Nov. 08
"The
Quantity and Quality of Labor in China 1978-2000-2025." (Manuscript
constructing labor data) May 2005. 81pp.
"Financing Constraints and Investment in
China's Township and Village Enterprises." e December 1999. Paper.
"China's Bad Loan Problem." 7 April
1999. Paper.
Course outlines
Most recent
SOSC 1440
Introduction to Economics (Fall
2023)
and
SOSC 1449 Understanding Our Economy (Fall
2023)
SPI594x
Economic Growth and Reform in China (Spring
2023), Master in Public Affairs program, School of Public and International
Affairs, Princeton University
SPI512b
Macroeconomics Analysis for Policymakers (Spring
2023), Master in Public Affairs program, School of Public and International
Affairs, Princeton University
SPI482
The Chinese Economy (Fall
2022), School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
SOSC 1440 Introduction to Economics (Spring
2018)
SOSC 4260 China’s Economic Transformation (Spring 2018, Spring
2024)
Earlier (course outlines on the HKUST teaching
server are apparently no longer accessible)
SOSC 181 Introduction to China's
Economy
http://teaching.ust.hk/~sosc181/
SOSC 260 China's Economy
http://teaching.ust.hk/~sosc260/
SOSC 301B Quantitative Methods in the Social
Sciences
http://teaching.ust.hk/~sosc301b
SOSC 340 International Monetary
and Financial Economics
SOSC 359 Money and Banking in
China
http://teaching.ust.hk/~sosc359/
Principles of Economics, Intermediate
Microeconomics, Introductory Macroeconomics, Intermediate Macroeconomics
(standard textbook courses)
SOSC 341 East Asian Economic Development [course outline
of spring 2009]
[syllabus
of spring 2008, as taught in the Economics Department at Princeton
University]
USC Econ 343 Economics
of East Asia
SOSC 511 Social Science Research
Methods
http://teaching.ust.hk/~sosc511/
SOSC 515 China's Economic Growth
[course outline of spring
1998]
SOSC 534 Quantitative Analysis
in the Social Sciences [course
outline of spring 2007]
The Chinese Economy [syllabus
of spring 2008, as taught in the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton
University]
SOSC 543 The Chinese Economy [fall
2008]
SOSC 543 / 323 The Chinese Economy [fall
2009]
USC Econ 346 Economics
of Transition and Development: China
SOSC 544 Economics of
Development [course
outline of spring 2010]
How to get to HKUST http://ihome.ust.hk/~socholz/directions.html
(Written up around 2000. Minibus 11 from Choi Hong to HKUST now stops at the back
gate of HKUST (2014). As of 2022, office allocations have changed with the
general office now on the 2nd floor, Room 2338, and my/Carsten’s
office at 2368.)
University homepage http://www.ust.hk
-> https://hkust.edu.hk/
Hong Kong model of academia, HKUST matters (webpage discontinued mid 2000s) http://ihome.ust.hk/~socholz/HKUST-SOSC.html
Social Science Division homepage https://sosc.hkust.edu.hk/
My mailing address: Carsten Holz, SOSC, HKUST,
Clear Water Bay, Kowloon, Hong Kong. [HK doesn't have zip codes.]
Tel. in Hong Kong (+852): 2358-7835 (office);
dept. general office 2358-7811.
Last (partial) update: 13 October 2023 (and I tend
to forget to update this date when I update the page)