Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2026

DOI

10.65963/jgeoecon.2026.61748

Publication Title

Journal of Geoeconomics

Volume

1

Pages

e2661748

Abstract

China’s rapid economic rise and unique development trajectory have long been the subject of scholarly debate, often framed through the concept of the “Beijing Consensus” as an alternative to the Washington Consensus. While initial conceptualizations highlight innovation, sustainability, and national sovereignty, later analyses highlighted elements like state capitalism and authoritarianism, particularly in the wake of the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. This paper argues that the Beijing Consensus is undergoing a significant evolution under Chairman Xi Jinping, increasingly prioritizing the Chinese Communist Party’s political security, regime stability, and ideological control at the expense of economic growth. This marks a notable departure from earlier pragmatic, growth-oriented policies. To substantiate these claims, the article examines three case studies: China’s economic response to the 2008 Financial Crisis, the implementation of the Zero-COVID policy (2020–2022), and the regulatory crackdown on the technology sector from 2020 onward. By analyzing the trade-offs between political imperatives and economic optimization in these instances, the paper demonstrates a consistent pattern in which political control takes precedence. These findings reorient the understanding of the Beijing Consensus and underscore the central role of the CCP’s drive for political control in shaping China’s development model, carrying significant implications for its future economic trajectory and global engagement.

Rights

© 2026 The Author.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License.

ORCID

0009-0007-4856-2896 (Murphy)

Original Publication Citation

Murphy, I. (2026). The evolving Beijing Consensus: Chinese Communist Party political control and economic trade-offs. Journal of Geoeconomics, 1, Article e2661748. https://doi.org/10.65963/jgeoecon.2026.61748

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