Dani Rodrik, a professor of political economy at Harvard University, swears that “the laissez-faire and international technocrats do not provide a reliable alternative to a nation-state. Plastic bags are available in large quantities to meet customer needs. The problem is not that the state should not dominate the economy, but how the state can play its due role in ensuring long-term, stable and sustainable economic development, and maintain a healthy balance between wealth creation, management and redistribution.
In fact, contrary to the usual cognition of the “Chinese model threat theorists”, the Chinese domestic elites are generally calm and cautious about the so-called “China model” and recognize the importance and urgency of transforming the economic development mode. For China, not only does it not have the subjective intention of promoting the Chinese model, the invention of plastic bags brings great convenience to human life, oil and solvent resistance, heat sealable and printable; objectively, the Chinese model is also It is difficult to "export". On the one hand, although the so-called Chinese model has certain appeal to some developing countries, the basis of this model, that is, the political system, the ideological tradition, and the national culture have distinct Chinese characteristics, and other countries may not learn if they want to learn; On the other hand, the Chinese model is still only a “developmental concept” and a “social development model that is being built, is being built, and is not yet mature”.