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- <text id=93TT0561>
- <title>
- Nov. 29, 1993: Watch Out For China
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 29, 1993 Is Freud Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ASIA, Page 36
- Watch Out For China
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>It may still call itself communist, but its economy looks more
- and more capitalist
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by David Aikman/Washington, Sandra Burton/Hong Kong
- and Jaime A. FlorCruz and Mia Turner/Beijing
- </p>
- <p> It was called the Middle Kingdom, a self-absorbed and xenophobic
- empire. Its massive indifference to the outside world remained
- in place for millenniums, through dynasties and revolutions.
- Until, suddenly, the communists in Beijing cast aside their
- Marxist zeal and set their country on the road to capitalism.
- Only 15 years later, China--with a fifth of the globe's population--is a candidate superpower, more involved in international
- life than ever before in its history. The impact of its emergence
- is so profound that scholars are predicting relations between
- China and the U.S. will shape the world in the 21st century.
- </p>
- <p> For that reason, Bill Clinton and his advisers regarded his
- talks with Chinese President Jiang Zemin in Seattle last week
- as the most important of the summit with 15 Asian and Pacific
- leaders. Their hour-plus session was the highest-level contact
- between the U.S. and China since the massacre of pro-democracy
- demonstrators in Beijing in 1989. Though it was essentially
- a getting-to-know-you meeting and made no progress on bilateral
- issues, Clinton said afterward that he and Jiang "agreed on
- the need to work on improving our relationship."
- </p>
- <p> Like Presidents before him, Clinton has learned that China is
- just too big to bully and too important to ignore. With relations
- getting worse almost from the time he took office, Clinton had
- to face the real possibility that if Congress refuses to renew
- China's most-favored-nation tariff status next June, it could
- lead to a serious, even dangerous, breach with the world's next
- superpower.
- </p>
- <p> There are compelling reasons for the U.S. to pay attention to
- China. While the country ran an $18.3 billion trade surplus
- with the U.S. in 1992, in the process it bought $7.5 billion
- in U.S. exports, which meant jobs for thousands of Americans.
- To curb the proliferation of nuclear weapons and missiles, Washington
- has to entice Beijing into new and better-enforced arms control
- agreements. China's cooperation will also be essential if any
- international action--diplomatic or military--is taken to
- halt North Korea's push to develop nuclear weapons. The Clinton
- Administration hopes that what it calls "enhanced engagement"
- with Beijing will enable them to talk through such contentious
- issues without endangering the entire relationship.
- </p>
- <p> China's leap forward is still hampered by its rigid politics--and the prospect that the system could soon change dramatically.
- The man who was not there in Seattle but who figuratively sat
- in on all the meetings was Deng Xiaoping, China's senior leader
- and chief reformer. Deng, now 89 and very frail, is China's
- last emperor--the tail end of the charismatic generation of
- military and political leaders who held power alone, and he
- is not likely to rule China much longer.
- </p>
- <p> As Deng slips away--"going to meet Marx," he jests--the
- key question is whether his economic reforms will remain in
- place or be overturned by elderly hard-liners who survive him.
- Can the Communist Party, with waning legitimacy and faith, provide
- the stability to keep the vast country on track and under control?
- Can China, like neighboring Singapore or South Korea, strike
- a lasting balance between authoritarian politics and free-for-all
- capitalism?
- </p>
- <p> So convincingly has he left his stamp on the country that many
- Chinese will find it difficult to envision a China without Deng.
- After the ruinous years of the Cultural Revolution and the death
- of Mao Zedong, Deng consolidated his power. In 1978 he dropped
- Marxist orthodoxy to begin economic reforms he hoped would make
- China "a modern, powerful socialist country." He and his disciples
- insist they are creating a "socialist market economy," an oxymoron
- they interpret officially as "socialism with Chinese characteristics."
- While they cling to such slogans to bolster their positions,
- in practice they are producing capitalism with Chinese characteristics.
- </p>
- <p> Though the formerly totalitarian government is now simply authoritarian,
- the leaders make no pretense of easing the hard hand of the
- police state to permit any political diversity or plurality,
- let alone real democracy. Dissidents are still arrested and
- thrown into prison. Even so, the high-energy drive for economic
- diversity and the freedom that offers to talented people have
- helped open the society--so long as individuals do not challenge
- the state. "There is more openness in China now," says a senior
- Western diplomat in Beijing, "than at any time in the past,
- and far more than under Gorbachev in Russia."
- </p>
- <p> The effects of Deng's economic revolution are astounding. In
- Mao's time, leveling was the rule, and everyone aimed at a drab,
- fanatical egalitarianism. The nation dressed in rumpled blue
- tunics that made it difficult to tell men from women, and waxed
- so proletarian that even army officers removed their badges
- of rank. Today the society is brazenly materialistic, roaring
- through cycles of boom and bust that have made millions rich.
- The free-for-all has also left hundreds of millions in the dust
- but still eager to get theirs. "People are thinking only about
- money," says a Chinese professor of philosophy in Beijing. "We
- are only interested in seizing the opportunity brought by this
- economic change," agrees 23-year-old photographer Nie Zheng.
- </p>
- <p> In the 15 years since Deng abolished the agricultural communes
- and opened the door to cooperative business and private enterprise,
- China's economy has mushroomed, growing an average of 9% a year,
- doubling the size of the economy every 10 years. In 1992 gross
- domestic product increased 12.8%, and this year it is growing
- at 13% despite a series of austerity measures. Though per capita
- income is only about $380, by some calculations of purchasing
- power China has the third largest economy in the world (after
- the U.S. and Japan) and could become No. 1 in two decades.
- </p>
- <p> Some provinces are even more gung-ho for growth than the bosses
- in Beijing. Hainan in the far south plans to build itself into
- another Hong Kong. Guangdong and Shandong hope to catch up with
- such Asian powerhouses as South Korea and Singapore by 2015.
- The special economic zone of Shenzhen is two hours' drive from
- the southern city of Guangzhou, where bustling construction
- sites and rows of town houses, factories and shopping centers
- line the road through the Pearl River delta. In Shanghai, China's
- New York City, shop windows are crammed with chic imports, electronic
- pagers and fancy cuts of meat.
- </p>
- <p> Nearby in the Pudong economic zone, which was swampy farmland
- only two years ago, modern highways, bridges and office buildings
- are taking shape. Shanghai will soon emerge as "the national
- and international financial center," boasts Huang Ju, the city's
- mayor. It will be "the dragon's head that will pull the body
- of the Yangtse River valley," home to a third of China's 1.2
- billion people, into a new age of prosperity.
- </p>
- <p> Individual lives are similarly transformed. More than a million
- Chinese have become dakuan, or dollar millionaires, and as much
- as 5% of the population is affluent by Chinese standards. In
- 1978 Li Xiaohua was a cook in a Beijing restaurant. Today he
- is a business tycoon who wears a diamond-studded Rolex watch
- and owns two Mercedes-Benz and a red Ferrari. Ten years ago,
- Chen Xiaohan was a steelworker in a mill near Beijing. Now he
- manages a state-owned import-export company and drives around
- in a Cadillac with a mobile phone. Wang Guoqing quit his job
- at the Bank of China in Xian three years ago and is now a multimillionaire
- retailer, restaurateur and real estate developer who wears Pierre
- Cardin suits, Italian shoes and a $2,000 Swiss watch.
- </p>
- <p> Deng says, "To get rich is glorious." That is undoubtedly true
- for people like Li and Wang, but for the vast Chinese nation
- getting rich is a mixed blessing. The rigid discipline of the
- party and its apparatus is slipping, and crime is on the increase.
- Corruption--payoffs and connections--is the rule at every
- level. Wealth is growing unevenly: very fast in the special
- zones, in big cities and along the seaboard, but slowly in the
- great agricultural interior. Both rural and urban incomes have
- increased significantly in the past 15 years, but farmers still
- average less than half of the city worker's wages. Agriculture
- Minister Liu Jiang warns, "The profitability of farming is declining,
- and farmers are losing their motivation."
- </p>
- <p> While perhaps 200 million coastal dwellers are now prosperous,
- and tens of millions of township and village enterprises are
- thriving, 90 million hamlet dwellers in the interior are still
- stuck in subsistence farming and near feudal conditions. "Beijing
- has no extra money to spend on us," says an official in northern
- Shanxi province. "We were told we would be helped after the
- reforms took off in the south." Much of the north is still waiting.
- A businessman from Gansu province, where a quarter of the population
- is illiterate, complains, "We will always be 10 years behind
- Shenzhen." At least 100 million peasants have left the land
- to search for quick riches and are floating rootlessly from
- job to job in the cities, increasing the crime rate and the
- profits of resurgent drug rings.
- </p>
- <p> As party control slacked off and the drive to make money was
- legitimized, provincial and city officials went into business
- for themselves, creating their own special-enterprise zones
- to attract outside investment. The money and loans to finance
- these schemes usually came from local branches of the state
- bank; many of the banks used all their money for such investments
- and ended up having to pay farmers for their harvest in promissory
- notes of doubtful value. The leaders in Beijing called these
- unregulated investment programs "warlord economies" and set
- out to control them.
- </p>
- <p> Like Russia, China is trying to create a market-based economy
- out of one that had been planned and commanded from the center
- for decades. It is running into some of the same problems Boris
- Yeltsin and his reformers have encountered, including a shortage
- of capitalist institutions and a surplus of recalcitrant bureaucrats.
- In principle, the way to privatize a socialist economy is to
- get the government out. In practice, the market cannot function
- well if large parts of the economy are controlled by the state.
- And in China the banking system still functions in response
- to political rather than economic rules.
- </p>
- <p> Because leaders have not institutionalized capitalist tools
- like interest rates and money supply to control growth and inflation,
- the country repeatedly goes through periods of fast growth followed
- by frantic clamps on credit to slow down inflation. Through
- most of this year inflation has been in the double digits, and
- above 20% in the cities. In June, Beijing ordered a freeze on
- new bank credit and called in $17 billion in loans. Howls of
- protest erupted from regional officials and bosses of the big
- state corporations--two-thirds of which are unprofitable--that had to cut back production because they ran out of credit.
- So the austerity program is being eased even though urban inflation
- is still over 17%.
- </p>
- <p> This lesson jolted the central leaders into the realization
- that Beijing's ability to control the country is far more limited
- than it was a few years ago. Those who take over from Deng,
- whether in the next weeks or months, will face two immediate
- challenges. They will have to make sure his reforms and the
- growth they bring survive, and they will need to hold the country
- together while the economic revolution is completed.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, a Communist Party Central Committee plenum adopted
- a 25-page, 50-point reform outline they called "a program of
- action to restructure the economy." The plan focuses on two
- central problems: the hugely inefficient state-held factories
- and the chaotic fiscal and monetary systems. The state owns
- and operates more than 50% of China's industry and dominates
- machinery production, transportation, energy and finance. The
- party plan calls for turning some enterprises into stock corporations
- and allowing competition to drive some out of business. Resistance
- from managers and local officials will be furious, because shutting
- down the giant corporations will bring large-scale unemployment
- and possibly civil unrest.
- </p>
- <p> The second part of the program lays out the need to reform both
- the tax system, which now shortchanges Beijing and weakens its
- hand with the provinces, and the central-banking operation,
- which is essentially unregulated. "China suffers not from too
- much central control but too little," says Richard Margolis,
- corporate finance director of Smith New Court Ltd. in Hong Kong.
- </p>
- <p> Though the party document calls itself the definitive reform
- plan for the 1990s, analysts in Beijing have doubts about how
- definitive it is. One Western diplomat detects a continuing
- struggle between those who make growth their top priority and
- those who want it to slow down. ``I think," he says, "there
- are party elders lurking in the background who are not 100%
- disciples of Deng's economics." Because the reforms the country
- is pushing through are so "far-reaching in their implications,"
- he wonders if Deng's heirs may be "playing too close to the
- edge."
- </p>
- <p> The men who will have to implement this plan will lack the personal
- authority Deng has exercised for so long, and could be forced
- into a collective leadership, which is communist jargon for
- rule by committee, or even a wrenching power struggle. President
- Jiang, 67, is Deng's choice as successor, and he already heads
- the party as well as the government. But many experts do not
- expect him to hold on to his position. Hard-line Premier Li
- Peng, 65, is still a contender, but he has been ill, and was
- out of sight for several weeks last summer. If Jiang self-destructs,
- the leading role could go to either Vice Premier Zhu Rongji,
- 65, the economic policy chief who is a committed and pragmatic
- reformer, or National People's Congress chairman Qiao Shi, 68,
- a former overseer of the intelligence and security services
- who is known as a fence straddler but leans toward reform.
- </p>
- <p> Even if succession were assured, there are many other uncertainties.
- No former communist state has subsequently managed a full emergence
- into a market economy. Certainly none has made the journey while
- under a government that still calls itself communist. Chinese
- officials sometimes say, without irony, that their ambition
- is to achieve the authoritarian and wealthy status of tiny Singapore.
- China's history of strongman rule goes back 3,800 years. So,
- with a Communist Party drained of Marxist ideology, perhaps
- it no longer matters what the rulers call themselves. Their
- subjects are united behind the central plank of their political
- platform: the glory is in getting rich.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-