From the BBC:
“Changing China: Why Xi
Jinping is leading a way back to socialism”
For decades life in China had
evolved around its home-grown version of let-it-rip capitalism. Despite being
technically a "communist" country, the government had put its faith
in trickle-down economics, believing that allowing some people to become
extremely rich would benefit all of society by dragging it out of the
disastrous quagmire of Chairman Mao's Cultural Revolution as quickly as
possible. To an extent it worked. A large middle class has emerged and people
in virtually all strata of society now have better living standards as a
result.
Wealth disparity
(An elderly woman pushes a cart
after searching through rubbish bins to collect recyclable items to sell, along
a street near the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.)
From the stagnation of the 1970s
China has been thrust to the top of the pile, now challenging the United States
for global economic dominance. But it left a chasm of income disparity. It is
there to be seen in the children of those who were in the right place and the
right time. Parents who were able to take over factories in the 1980s made
exorbitant profits which have paid for their progeny to now drive flashy sports
cars around gleaming cities, zooming past the construction workers who wonder
how they will ever be able to afford to buy a home. The get-out-of jail card
for the Party had always been the phrase "with Chinese
characteristics". The concept of socialism - "with Chinese
characteristics" - allowed the government massive philosophical leeway to
run a society which, in many ways, was not very socialist at all. General
Secretary Xi Jinping appears to have decided that this is no longer acceptable.
The Chinese government, under his leadership, has started putting the Communist
back in the Communist Party, at least to some extent. The new catchphrase is
"common prosperity". It hasn't really appeared yet on the street side
propaganda posters but this can't be far off. It is now the cornerstone of what
China's leader is doing.
Crackdowns on daily life Under
this banner, targeting tax evasion by the wealthy makes more sense, as do moves
to make education more equitable by banning private tutoring companies. The
ongoing crackdown on the country's tech giants can also be seen as part of the
plan. So does Xi Jinping really believe in this idea of a communist project? It
is hard to be 100% sure but some observers would say it certainly seems that
way. As a comparison, in the past it didn't feel like that with many other
Party officials. The thing is that - along with the wealth redistribution
aspects of the communist path - Mr Xi also seems to believe that this means
thrusting the Party back into most aspects of daily life, as the only realistic
way of achieving what needs to be done. Kids are being lazy, wasting away their
youth playing video games? Party to the rescue: three-hour gaming limit. Teenagers
having their minds poisoned with silly, idol-worshipping television? Party to
the rescue: "sissy looking" boys banned from programmes. Football, cinema, music, philosophy,
babies, language, science… the Party has the answers.
At odds with his father's
beliefs To try to understand what has made Xi Jinping the leader he is
today you have to take a look at his background. His father, Xi
Zhongxun, was a Communist Party war hero, known as a moderate, who was later
purged and imprisoned in the Mao era. At the time Mr Xi's mother was
forced to denounce his father. After his father's official rehabilitation in
1978, he pushed for economic liberalisation in Guangdong Province and
reportedly defended one of China's most progressive leaders Hu Yaobang. Given
the persecution of Mr Xi's father at the hands of Communist Party zealots,
given his father's inclination towards reform, many have asked why Xi Jinping
now seems to be taking the Party in a direction which would appear to be at
odds with his father's beliefs? There are various possible explanations.
Perhaps he simply disagrees with his father's line on certain political
matters. Or maybe China's leader intends to pursue a plan which, while
different in emphasis to the priorities of his father, will not end up anywhere
near the policies of the Mao era. At least not intentionally. However, it does
still seem quite remarkable. When his father was sent to prison, Xi
Jinping, at the age of 15, was made to go to work in the fields for years,
living in a cave house. These tumultuous times clearly toughened him up
but could just have easily transformed into a hatred of politics, especially of
a hard-line variety.
Some China watchers have
speculated that he perhaps believes that only a strong leader can guarantee
that China will not return to the chaos of the 1960s and 70s. And remember the
rules have now been changed so that he can remain in power for as long as he
likes. One reason for all this guess work is that we never hear him explain
what he is doing in terms of his decisions. China's leaders do not give
interviews even with the compliant Party-controlled media. Mr Xi turns up in
rural villages for television opportunities and is welcomed by orchestrated
crowds of cheering locals who receive his wisdom on corn growing or other
aspects of their work and then he leaves. So it is hard to predict what new
rules, restrictions or guidelines might be placed on economic activity in China
or how far any of this will go. In recent times, barely a week has gone by
without a major change to the regulations governing one part of the Chinese
system or another. It has been, frankly, difficult to keep up with them. Many
of these changes have come completely out of the blue. It is not that there is
an innate problem with the state controlling various levers of production here.
That is for economists to debate in terms of what is most efficient. The
problem has been the sudden uncertainty. There are those here who see the whole
process as a natural part of the country "growing up". In areas which
had been unregulated there have needed to be regulations. If this is the case,
then this period of shock tactic transition may be only a temporary state which
will eventually calm down as new rules become clear. But it is by no means
clear what the length or breadth of these moves will be. One thing that is
certain is that any shift should be seen through the prism of Xi's "common
prosperity" drive at a time when the Party will not give up an inch of its
power while implementing it and, in China, you can either get on board this
truck or get run over by it.
^ There is no real Communist
country anymore (even North Korea has had to adapt Capitalism to a certain
extent.) There are many Dictatorships though like: North Korea, China, Cuba and
Vietnam. The Chinese Government is trying hard to keep control over their
Billion Citizens and this latest push may not be widely accepted by the people –
who could easily overthrow their Government or force the Dictatorship to
collapse if they wanted to. ^
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