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Articles

An analysis of the Chinese Football Reform of 2015: why then and not earlier?

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Pages 1-18 | Received 04 Jun 2018, Accepted 08 Oct 2018, Published online: 14 Nov 2018
 

ABSTRACT

In March 2015, the Chinese government issued the Overall Plan for Chinese Football Reform and Development, which aimed to develop football in China from the grassroots level to the elite level. The salient element of the plan was to separate the Chinese Football Association (CFA) from direct government control. Considering the previous failed attempts to reform the CFA, this paper asks the question ‘why the reform occurred in 2015 and not earlier?’ and aims to: 1) identify the potential sources of the policy change through the lens of the Multiple Streams Framework (MSF) and 2) examine the timing and conditions under which the Chinese government initiated the football reform. Public policy documents and media reports from 1993 to 2017 were collected and analysed; 17 interviews were conducted with key policy actors within the CFA and professional football clubs in varying tiers of Chinese football leagues. The findings suggest that the failure of previous policy attempts at improving Chinese football (policy stream), match-fixing scandals and the continuing under-performance of the national men’s team (problem stream), the increasingly critical national mood towards football and the turnover of Presidency (political stream) combined in the mid-2010s opened a ‘policy window’ which facilitated this significant change. This research is the first paper to apply the MSF theory to explain the Chinese football reform that occurred in 2015. It extends the application of MSF to a different political and cultural environment and has implications for the policy-making in China.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1. Some interviewees were involved in writing early reports analysing the Chinese football development situation for the central government, which eventually became part of the Reform Plan.

2. In 2001, the ‘Jia B Five Rats Incident’ reported five football teams to be involved in a series of fixed matches in the final round of the Jia B League.

3. The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection is a standing committee body set up under the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) for managing party disciplinary inspections nationwide.

4. Juguo Tizhi: A system which encompasses the full range of state activities in sports (Hu and Henry Citation2017).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Qi Peng

Qi Peng is Lecturer in Sport Management at the Manchester Metropolitan University. Her research focuses on sport policy and organisational change with a special interest in the Chinese football development.

James Skinner

James Skinner is the Director of the Institute for Sport Business and Professor of Sport Business at Loughborough University, London. His primary research interests are in leadership, culture, innovation and change in sport.

Barrie Houlihan

Barrie Houlihan is Emeritus Professor Sport Policy at Loughborough University and Visiting Professor at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences. His main research interests are in the policy process for sport particularly in the areas of doping, and sport development.

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