Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dair.nps.edu/handle/123456789/4170
Title: China’s Efforts in Civil-Military Integration, Its Impact on the Development of China’s Acquisition System, and Implications for the U.S.
Authors: Tai Ming Cheung
Eric Hagt
Keywords: China
Defense Industry
Military-Civil Fusion
Innovation System
State-Owned Enterprises
Issue Date: 3-Sep-2020
Publisher: Acquisition Research Program
Citation: Published--Unlimited Distribution
Series/Report no.: China’s Acquisition System;UCSD-AM-20-031
Abstract: Under the leadership of Xi Jinping China is significantly stepping up its efforts to pursue military-civil fusion (MCF) as an integral component of its whole of whole of nation development strategy of building a technologically advanced and militarily powerful state within the next 1-2 decades. This paper examines the making, nature and implementation of Xi’s grand MCF undertaking. This paper offers an analytical framework that seeks to provide a coherent and holistic view of the many moving parts and disparate elements of MCF through an innovation systems perspective. This framework identifies seven categories of factors that are important in shaping the structure and process of the MCF system: catalytic, input, institutional, organizational, networks, contextual, and output factors. Key dynamics that are examined in detail in the paper includes the high-level leadership engagement, the influence of the external threat and technology environments, application of new financial mechanisms such as hybrid state-private sector investment funds, the role of key state and military agencies, and the evolution of the Chinese defense acquisition system to embrace MCF. This analytical perspective also helps highlight the barriers to implementing the MCF project, particularly as it moves beyond central level planning to execution within a complex subnational political economy. The paper concludes with analysis of how the MCF grand strategy is impacting China’s own military modernization efforts and what the implications are for the United States and its defense acquisition base.
Description: Acquisition Management / Grant-funded Research
URI: https://dair.nps.edu/handle/123456789/4170
Appears in Collections:Sponsored Acquisition Research & Technical Reports

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