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- <text id=93HT1443>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1985: Deng Xiaoping
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 6, 1986
- Man of the Year
- Deng Xiaoping
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Deng Xiaoping leads a far-reaching, audacious but Risky Second
- Revolution
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church. Reported by David Aikman/Washington,
- Richard Hornik/Peking and James O. Jackson/Moscow
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>"Marx sits up in heaven, and he is very powerful. He sees what</l>
- <l>we are doing, and he doesn't like it. So he has punished me by</l>
- <l>making me deaf."</l>
- <l>--Deng Xiaoping, 1985</l>
- </qt>
- <p> The leader of 1 billion Chinese was joking, of course; he lost
- part of the hearing in one ear long before he launched the
- world's most populous nation on an audacious effort to create
- what amounts almost to a new form of society. But, as might be
- expected from the diminutive (4 ft. 11 in.), steel-hard Deng,
- 81, it was a joke with a sharp point. If in his more solemn
- moments he still attempts to justify what he often calls his
- "second revolution" in the name of that patron saint of
- Communist revolution, Karl Marx, Deng is well aware that the
- system he is evolving in China either ignores or defies many of
- the precepts most cherished by traditional Marxists (especially
- those running the Soviet Union). In the Chinese spirit of
- balance between yin and yang, Deng's second revolution is an
- attempt on a monumental scale to blend seemingly irreconcilable
- elements: state ownership and private property, central
- planning and competitive markets, political dictatorship and
- limited economic and cultural freedom. Indeed, it is almost,
- or so it often seems to skeptics in both the Western and Marxist
- worlds, an attempt to combine Communism and capitalism.
- </p>
- <p> It is also a high-risk gamble. The elements may prove truly
- irreconcilable, and Deng's bold experiments could dissolve into
- economic chaos. It is even possible that they could give way,
- though probably not until after his death, to at least a partial
- restoration of the ironfisted, xenophobic rule and extreme
- regimentation imposed on China by Deng's predecessor Mao
- Tse-tung. But in 1985 Deng gave fresh evidence of his
- determination to push his reforms through to their conclusion,
- whatever that might be. Having essentially completed a
- transformation in the countryside, where 80% of China's masses
- live, by freeing peasants to grow what they wish and to start
- private businesses, Deng concentrated on what may be the harder
- job of bringing change to China's cities and requiring the
- managers of state-owned enterprises to behave like
- profit-hungry, innovative capitalists.
- </p>
- <p> Whether this second state of the second revolution can fulfill
- Deng's dream of hauling China out of its still desperate
- backwardness into the 20th century by the time the century ends
- is anyone's guess. It got off to a somewhat rocky start, and
- is encountering more opposition than the first, rural stage did.
- But if it should succeed, the transformation would have
- profound and enormous consequences throughout the world.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet Union, which has historically feared the Chinese
- masses on its southeastern border, would face a neighbor
- considerably strengthened by a triumphant heresy. Communists
- everywhere, notably in the Third World, would see an alternative
- to the failures of Soviet-style Marxism. Many of China's
- neighbors in the Far East, including Taiwan and South Korea,
- would find that a political foe had been tamed into a trading
- partner, while an economic weakling had become a mighty
- competitor. Most important, perhaps, the U.S. and other Western
- countries would see the crusading faith that has made the
- Marxist third of the world an enemy converted into a system
- that the West could live with and in some respects, though
- certainly not all, applaud.
- </p>
- <p> Already Deng has changed the daily lives of his nation's
- citizens to a greater extent than any other world leader.
- Foreigners revisiting China after a lapse of only a few years
- can scarcely believe that they are in the same country: the
- free and well-stocked food markets, the neat little homes and
- humming village industries springing up throughout the
- countryside, the openness to foreign influences ranging from
- computer technology to rock music are like nothing they or their
- hosts have seen before. Neither is the willingness of
- intellectuals, like Deng impatient with ideology, to discuss how
- much of it can be dumped in the interest of still faster growth.
- It is primarily because his continuing reform of China and
- Marxism holds more promise for changing the course of history
- than anything else that occurred during 1985 that Deng Xiaoping
- is TIME's Man of the Year.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, other personalities and events dominated the
- day-to-day headlines. After the deaths of three infirm leaders
- in four years, the Kremlin finally chose a chief, Mikhail
- Gorbachev, who at 54 is young enough to give the U.S.S.R.
- vigorous leadership for the rest of the century. Gorbachev
- moved quickly to consolidate his power, firing old-line
- bureaucrats by the score and wooing popular support by touring
- Soviet farms and factories in the manner of a handshaking,
- baby-kissing Western politician. He broke the long, frozen
- silence between the nuclear superpowers by agreeing to meet
- President Ronald Reagan in Geneva for the first Soviet-American
- summit in six years. Their November talks in front of a cozy
- fire moved none of the substantive issues closer to solution.
- On the paramount question of arms control, though both have
- proposed a 50% cut in offensive nuclear weapons, agreement is
- still being blocked primarily by Reagan's insistence on
- continuing his Strategic Defense Initiative and Gorbachev's
- vehement demand that it be abandoned. It was notable, however,
- that despite Gorbachev's pre-summit threat that nothing else
- could be accomplished unless this demand was met, he chose to
- present himself as moderately satisfied with the summit and to
- continue the dialogue--leading most observers to award Reagan
- a summit "victory."
- </p>
- <p> Other long-festering dangers kept the world in turmoil.
- Terrorist murders and kidnapings became more brazen: the
- hijackings of TWA Flight 847 in June, an Egypt Air jetliner in
- November and the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro in October
- were only the most spectacular incidents. Though governments
- did finally begin to fight back, their efforts illustrated the
- complexities and perils of antiterrorist action: the U.S.
- capture of the Achille Lauro hijackers strained relations with
- Egypt and Italy, while 60 passengers on the Egypt Air jet were
- dead after Egyptian commandos stormed the grounded plan in
- Malta. But in Argentina the elected civilian government of
- President Raul Alfonsin sentenced to long prison terms five
- members of the former military junta who were convicted of
- practicing what might be called state terrorism: the kidnaping,
- torture and killing of innocent citizens.
- </p>
- <p> There was no such progress in other familiar trouble spots.
- South Africa was torn by unremitting violence as blacks demanded
- abolition of apartheid and whites were willing to accept only
- gradual change. Guerrilla wars in Central America raged
- unchecked, and the so-called peace process in the Middle East
- made no discernible headway. Nature joined politics in
- contributing to human misery as earthquakes in Mexico City, a
- volcano eruption in Columbia and a cyclone in Bangladesh claimed
- tens of thousands of victims. In the U.S., Reagan became the
- first President to confer the full powers of his office
- voluntarily on his Vice President, George Bush, though only for
- eight hours, while surgeons removed a cancerous growth from
- Reagan's colon. The President recovered quickly and apparently
- completely, but apart from the summit his political momentum
- seemed to wane. Reagan's success in pushing a tax-reform bill
- through the House at year's end demonstrated that he is hardly
- a lame duck yet. Nonetheless, whether he can win a final bill
- at all close to his desires--or indeed any bill--is one of the
- major questions of 1986. Spy scandals, headed by the exposure
- of the Walker-family espionage ring, proliferated as rarely, if
- ever, before. The scare of the year was medical: the spread
- of AIDS touched off public anxiety and hysteria far beyond
- anything warranted by the facts, though the facts were surely
- grim enough. Of 15,775 people who had caught the disease, 8,122
- were known to have died.
- </p>
- <p> Of all these turbulent and momentous events and phenomena,
- however, only the ascension of Gorbachev to the Soviet
- leadership could eventually rival for long-range importance to
- the world the sweeping changes Deng is pushing through in China.
- But for all the panache he displayed on taking power and all
- the headlines and television time he and Reagan commanded at the
- summit, Gorbachev's impact on history by year's end was still
- far more potential than actual. The freshness and vigor of his
- personal style far outweighed the importance of any changes he
- had made in Soviet foreign or domestic policy. Indeed, though
- Gorbachev, like Deng, has made pepping up his country's economy
- and improving the material lives of its citizens his top
- priority, the caution of Gorbachev's opening moves only
- highlights by contrast the far more radical and fundamental
- nature of the reforms Deng has already carried out in China.
- Says Richard Holbrooke, who was U.S. Assistant Secretary of
- State for East Asian Affairs when Washington restored full
- diplomatic relations with China in 1979: "There is no other
- leader in the world who is doing anything even remotely in
- Deng's league."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev, Deng and the heads of almost every Marxist country
- face the same fundamental problem. In a 1984 interview with the
- Italian Communist daily L'Unita, Hu Yaobang, General Secretary
- of the Chinese Communist Party, phrased it this way: "since the
- October Revolution [of 1917, which enthroned Soviet Marxism],
- more than 60 years have passed. How is it that many socialist
- countries have not been able to overtake capitalists ones in
- terms of development? What was it that did not work?"
- </p>
- <p> That something has failed, and failed badly, is no longer
- seriously disputed, even by many Marxist experts. Before Deng,
- the failure was more starkly obvious in China. The average
- peasant or city worker was little better off, if at all, when
- Mao died in 1976 than he or she had been in the 1950s. But even
- the Soviet Union has long since had to forget Nikita
- Khrushchev's hollow boast that it would inevitably "bury" the
- U.S. by surpassing the American standard of living. Quite the
- opposite: the U.S.S.R.'s economic growth rate has slipped to
- about half the pace of the 1960s, and its citizens still have
- to stand in long lines for such minor amenities of life as
- toilet paper and detergent powder. On the most basic level,
- Moscow must import huge tonnages of grain from the capitalist
- world to keep the Soviet populace properly fed.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev has been unsparing in his criticisms of Soviet
- economic performance. "You squander countless resources in
- every industry," he told party workers in Leningrad last May.
- But so far he has been unwilling to modify in any essential way
- the system of centralized state control of every aspect of
- economic life fashioned by Joseph Stalin; he has been trying
- only to make it work better. While promising to "restructure"
- the economy, Gorbachev pointedly avoids using the word reform,
- apparently because it implies a more drastic change than any he
- is ready to contemplate.
- </p>
- <p> In practice, Gorbachev's program so far consists largely of
- public scolding of inefficient industry managers and incessant
- calls for "discipline" and "imaginative, honest and
- conscientious work from every individual, from worker to
- minister." His most striking measure to improve productivity
- has been to crack down on alcoholism by restricting production
- and consumption of vodka and other spirits.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev is extending experiments to give selected industrial
- and farm managers slightly greater freedom in pricing and
- production decisions. His closest economic adviser, Abel
- Aganbegyan, has called for a reallocation of investments to
- modernize factories rather than build new ones and to improve
- the quality of products. But this rechanneling is to be carried
- out by the central planners. So, as Gorbachev suggested in his
- August interview with TIME, his program rather contradictorily
- appears to call for a loosening of state control in some areas
- and a tightening in others--at the same time.
- </p>
- <p> Deng, shortly after emerging from his third period of disgrace
- and returning to power in 1978, faced squarely the heretical
- thought that the system of state control was itself the problem.
- He set about to replace it with a hybrid not quite like
- anything seen before. The Chinese system is still so new that
- it does not have an agreed name. Outside analysts often call it
- "market socialism," and some Chinese speak of creating a
- "commodity economy." Dent's formulation is a rather uninspiring
- "socialism with Chinese characteristics." But then Deng, a
- thoroughgoing pragmatist, has never been much for labels. His
- most celebrated saying is a homely metaphor to the effect that
- it does not matter whether a cat is black or white so long as
- it catches mice.
- </p>
- <p> The animating spirit of Deng's reforms has been to liberate the
- productive energies of the individual, a daring concept not just
- for a Marxist but for a Chinese (the concept of individualism
- has a negative connotation in Chinese society). He began,
- appropriately, with agriculture, which had been collectivized
- by Mao to a degree extreme even for the Communist world. The
- land was worked by communes that grew what the state directed
- and turned over all food produced to the state for distribution.
- Pay was based on a system of "work points" that bore little
- relation to production: a peasant would accumulate a certain
- number of work points for planting rice seedlings, for example,
- but he or she would fare no better if the eventual crop was
- large than if it was small.
- </p>
- <p> Deng's reforms abolished the communes and replaced them with a
- contract system. Though the state continues to own all land,
- it leases plots, mostly to individual families. Rent is paid
- by delivery of a set quantity of rice, wheat or whatever to the
- state at a fixed price. But once that obligation is met,
- families can grow anything else they wish and sell it in free
- markets for whatever price they can get (though the state does
- set limits on how much some prices can fluctuate).
- </p>
- <p> Most of the first leases were for two or three years, but they
- are now being extended, usually for 15 years and as long as 30
- years on grazing land. Under a 1985 law the leases can be
- inherited. Peasants own their draft animals, and those who
- prosper can buy machinery; ownership of tractors has burgeoned
- from 90,000 to 290,000 in the past two years. Though the state
- retains the power to cancel a peasant family's lease and award
- it to someone else, that power is rarely exercised. Farm
- families are increasingly regarding the good earth as theirs and
- using it about the way the would if they owned it outright.
- </p>
- <p> Farmers are allowed, indeed encouraged, to build privately
- owned houses on their state-owned land. Roads all over rural
- China have been narrowed by piles of bricks dumped along the
- shoulders to be picked up by peasants who are erecting homes or
- even paying others to do it for them. Compared with the days
- of Mao, when many peasants were required to live in dormitories
- and eat in communal mess halls, the change in life-style alone
- is almost revolutionary.
- </p>
- <p> The results have been phenomenal. Freed to prosper by hard
- work, Chinese farmers have increased food production around 8%
- in each year since 1978, about 2 1/2 times the rate in the
- preceding 26 years. Variety has increased along with quantity;
- besides rice and wheat, the Chinese are growing and eating more
- poultry and pork (China has the world's largest pig population,
- though many are scrawny beasts quite unlike the corn-fattened
- hogs of Iowa or Nebraska). The biggest payoff of all: Vaclav
- Smil, a Canadian geographer, calculates that in China, "today's
- diets appear to supply, on the average enough energy and protein
- for normal growth and healthy life." In a country that has been
- racked by periodic famines throughout four millenniums of
- recorded history, the average citizen has, finally, enough to
- eat.
- </p>
- <p> Private enterprise began as a king of offshoot of the
- agricultural reforms. Mao's "people's communes," for all their
- faults, at least guaranteed everyone in the rural economy a job
- of sorts. Deng and his lieutenants feared that breaking up the
- communes would cause masses of jobless peasants to descend on
- the cities, where there might be no work for them either. So
- beginning in the late 1970s, individual farmers and village
- collectives were permitted to start sideline businesses and keep
- any profits.
- </p>
- <p> The first enterprises were connected with farming: a group of
- peasants would set up a roadside market to sell their crops and
- perhaps buy a truck to haul their own produce as well as, for
- a fee, food grown by other peasants. But private entrepreneurs
- and village collectives have now expanded to all kinds of other
- businesses--inns, restaurants, stores, tailor shops, beauty
- parlors and light manufacturing like assembly of TV sets--often
- in competition with government-owned businesses. Some
- entrepreneurs have even opened services in major cities to
- recruit maids and other household help for busy urban families.
- Businessmen can hire workers privately, a practice that
- conventional Marxists regard as inherently exploitative.
- Legally, not private entrepreneur is supposed to employ more
- than 15 hired hands, but local Communist Party officials often
- ignore that limit.
- </p>
- <p> However, private and collective enterprises, though they are
- growing rapidly, are still a relatively minor force. At last
- count, 10.6 million registered private businesses with sales of
- $8 billion employed 15 million workers, or 4.5% of China's
- nonfarm work force. Roughly 1.7 million collectives employ an
- additional 100 million workers; in several provinces they have
- become the dominant form of business. Nationwide, though, more
- than 85,000 state-owned enterprises account for a heavy majority
- of jobs and four-fifths of China's industrial output. Until
- very recently they operated under a system that Mao had copied
- from Stalin: ministries in Peking assigned all raw materials
- and dictated all investments, told every factory manager what
- and how much to produce and where to sell it and at what price,
- set wages and assigned jobs, took all profits and subsidized any
- losses. As late as 1984, one factory manager in Shanghai says,
- he had a discretionary fund of only $33 that he could spend
- without getting permission.
- </p>
- <p> Early on, Deng's government began revising this system too. In
- 1979, it halted a Stalin-style Five-Year Plan that emphasized
- heavy industry, like steel mills, and redirected much investment
- into consumer goods: refrigerators, washing machines, TV sets.
- Some of the controls have been progressively loosened. In 1982
- Peking stopped dictating all garment styles and freed the city's
- factories to adopt their own designs. Result: though perhaps
- 80% of any randomly assorted crowd are still dressed in baggy
- Mao suits, there is a generous sprinkling of blue jeans,
- Western-style business suits and coats, skirts and knee-high
- leather boots.
- </p>
- <p> Now Deng and his lieutenants think the time has come to take a
- much longer step toward a full-fledged market system. Under a
- plan that went into effect in late 1984, state industry is also
- run under a contract system. Central planners still set broad
- production goals, but they directly assign only a portion of raw
- materials and distribute at fixed prices only a set quota of a
- factory's output. Managers otherwise are allowed and even
- required to line up their own suppliers, decide for themselves
- what to make beyond the goods that must be sold to the state and
- find buyers for the merchandise at prices that can fluctuate.
- They pay a 55% corporate income tax and keep the rest of their
- profits to use for reinvestment, bonuses and social welfare such
- as housing, medical care and recreation. Most investment
- capital is still supplied by state-owned banks. But managers
- have to compete for loans, and pay interest of 5% (up from 1%
- as recently as the late 1970s).
- </p>
- <p> The avowed goal is to replace "administrative planning"--that
- is, direct orders on what and how much to produce--with a looser
- system of "guidance planning." Central planning, explains Huan
- Xiang, director general of Peking's Center for International
- Studies, "seriously hampered the initiative and creativity of
- enterprises and workers and to a great extend emasculated what
- would otherwise have been a vigorous economy. The more
- centralized, the more rigid; the more rigid, the lazier the
- people; the lazier the people, the poorer they are." Managers
- now are supposed to hustle in response to the same
- signals--interest rates, market demand, prices, profit--that
- guide Western businessmen. And just as the state will no
- longer take all profits, it will eventually stop subsidizing
- losses. Deng's planners bluntly assert that they are prepared
- to let inefficient state enterprises go bust.
- </p>
- <p> This ambitious scheme has got off to a somewhat stumbling and
- chaotic start. State bankers at the end of 1984 overused their
- new authority and went on such a wild lending spree that the
- People's Bank of China, the country's central bank, had to tell
- them to stop. Factory bosses, in contrast, widely complain that
- they are still waiting for confirmation from local party and
- government officials that they can begin exercising the new
- freedoms they supposedly were granted at the start of 1985. For
- the first time, Deng is proposing to crimp seriously the powers
- and privileges of tens of thousands of national, provincial and
- local party bosses who are accustomed to exerting life-and-death
- authority over the economy. Ominously but not surprisingly,
- many seem to be dragging their feet, if not blocking the reforms
- outright.
- </p>
- <p> Some popular opposition is developing. To give the nascent
- market system a chance to work, Peking abolished some subsidies
- for food, clothing and utility production and gradually freed
- some industrial prices. One result was a whiff of that old
- capitalist evil, inflation: in some cities, food prices jumped
- 35% in early 1985. The blow was softened by a continuation of
- wage increases begun immediately after Mao's death. Nonetheless
- the price boosts stirred widespread grumbling, particularly
- among older Chinese who retain bitter memories of the
- hyper-inflation that preceded the Communist takeover in 1949.
- </p>
- <p> Actually the price reforms have much further to go. China at
- the moment has a two-tier system of state-set and market
- prices, sometimes on the same goods. Vice Premier Li Peng
- estimates that Peking still fixes prices on 70% of the products
- sold by state industries. there are other reminders of the
- heavy presence of the state. At Zhongshan University in Canton,
- 30% of the graduates are assigned to their first jobs by the
- State Labor Ministry in Peking. The remaining 70% are placed by
- university authorities after consultation with state industries
- and agencies; the graduates' wishes are considered but do not
- always prevail. That is a marked improvement over a few years
- ago when the state made all assignments, but it underscores an
- important point: whatever the Chinese system might be called,
- it is a long way from anything that could be termed capitalism.
- </p>
- <p> But it is at least a system that can cooperate with real,
- full-blown capitalism to a greater degree than any other in the
- Communist world. In the centuries-old Chinese debate between
- those who are eager to learn from the more modern world outside
- and those who shun it, Mao came down completely on the side of
- xenophobia and cut China off almost totally from foreign goods,
- money and culture. Deng has opened the country to imports of
- everything from machinery to the ubiquitous tape recorders and
- portable stereos. He has proclaimed an "open-door policy"
- toward foreign investment--unperturbed by the reminiscences the
- phrase evokes of an era early in the century when foreigners
- enjoyed extra-territorial privileges bitterly resented by many
- Chinese.
- </p>
- <p> The door certainly is not that far open yet; Deng's policy might
- be better described as an air lock through which China lets in
- carefully selected foreign investments. Still, more than 2,000
- foreign business had put some money into China by the end of
- 1984. Most were owned by the overseas Chinese, who have
- prospered throughout Asia, but the total includes 70 U.S., 67
- Japanese and 42 British, West German or French companies. A
- burgeoning trend is toward ventures jointly owned by Chinese
- state enterprises and foreign firms; 687 were registered in the
- first half of 1985 alone, or almost as many as in all of 1984.
- Peking has even allowed 94 factories wholly owned by foreigners
- to be built. They include 3M China Ltd., a fully owned
- subsidiary of Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Corp., which
- has set up a factory near Shanghai to make insulation tapes and
- other products.
- </p>
- <p> The stated reason is to speed China's modernization by
- welcoming foreign capital, technology and management methods.
- To that end, China has set up four "special economic zones"
- where foreign investors get unusual privileges to import raw
- materials and semifinished goods and, to a certain degree, hire
- workers. But many other foreign investments are simply
- introducing the Chinese to some amenities, real or alleged, of
- live elsewhere: fast food, Coca-Cola, Pierre Cardin fashion
- shows, golf courses, amusement parks, even a Peking branch of
- Paris' famed Maxim's restaurant.
- </p>
- <p> There has been a reaction. Chinese Communist purists blame
- foreign influences for such trends as a revival of pornography
- and prostitution. University students have staged several
- demonstrations in downtown Peking and other major cities. While
- ostensibly aimed at Japan's commercial presence, or, as was the
- case last week, at China's nuclear testing program, the
- demonstrations seemed to be directed more broadly at Deng's
- reforms because of the corruption and nepotism that have
- accompanied them.
- </p>
- <p> Deng admitted recently that showcase projects like the Special
- Economic Zones have yet to prove their value. On the whole,
- though, he remains committed to welcoming foreign goods and
- capital. "There are those who say we should not open our
- windows, because open windows let in flies and other insects,"
- he remarked in October. "They want the windows to stay closed,
- so we all expire from lack of air. But we say, `Open the
- windows, breathe the fresh air and at the same time fight the
- flies and insects.'"
- </p>
- <p> Politically and culturally, that fight has waxed and waned.
- China is still a one-party dictatorship and Deng has no
- intention of letting it become anything else. Rights taken for
- granted in the U.S., such as freedom of speech and assembly, are
- strictly controlled; some limited freedom of religion has been
- granted. Even so, a revised constitution adopted in 1982 marked
- a step toward making China a society governed by law rather than
- the whim of party officials.
- </p>
- <p> In other ways, too, the dictatorship is less oppressive. Deng
- has permitted a popular press to spring up. Hundreds of new
- publications have appeared all over China; they cannot criticize
- policy, but they print lurid exposes of prostitution,
- pornography, corruption and black-marketeering by party
- officials (indeed, they sometimes seem to report little else).
- Culturally, Deng in 1983 permitted officials to start a
- crackdown on writers and artists, in the guise of a campaign
- against "spiritual pollution," probably as a gesture toward
- conservatives concerned that the pace of change was too rapid.
- But Deng speedily announced that the campaign had gone too far
- and called it off, leaving citizens and party officials alike
- in a quandary over just what is permitted and what is not.
- </p>
- <p> One example is Jin Ping Mei (The Golden Lotus), a highly erotic
- literary classic form the Ming Dynasty (A.D. 1368-1644). Mao
- would let it be seen only by party officials of ministerial rank
- or higher. Wei Junyi, head of the People's Literature Press,
- prepared an expurgated edition for somewhat wider distribution,
- put it off during the campaign against spiritual pollution, and
- finally let it be printed in 1985 for distribution to writers
- and scholars, who snapped up 10,000 copies immediately at $6.65
- per copy.
- </p>
- <p> In foreign policy, the motto under Deng seems to be: try to
- get along with everyone so that the nation's energies can be
- concentrated on economic development. China has cautiously
- resumed trade and cultural exchanges with the Soviet Union.
- Peking has spared little effort in trying to convince the
- non-Communist nations of Asia that it intends to be a peaceful
- neighbor. It stopped aid to Communist rebels in Thailand in the
- late 1970s, and today disavows any idea of helping those in
- Malaysia, Indonesia or the Philippines. The only guerrillas
- China is aiding today are those battling the Soviet army in
- Afghanistan and the Soviet-backed Vietnamese occupiers of
- Kampuchea.
- </p>
- <p> The most striking achievement of this don't-rock-any-boats
- policy is a deal signed with Britain a year ago under which
- Peking in 1997 will assume sovereignty over Hong Kong on a
- pledge to maintain Hong Kong's wide-open, laissez-faire
- capitalist system for at least 50 years after that. Peking is
- now touting an even more lenient version of this "one nation,
- two systems" approach as a model for a reunification deal with
- Taiwan, which it once threatened to take by force. Peking
- proposes to let Taiwan retain not only a capitalist economy but
- independent armed forces. Taiwan so far is not buying. Eager
- for more trade and investment, Deng is trying to make China a
- partner in the non-Communist world economic system. In 1986
- Peking expects to apply for full membership in the General
- Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the 90-nation organization that
- monitors world-trade rules.
- </p>
- <p> As striking as the transformation of China into a power
- dedicated to stability has been, it is economic rather than
- foreign policy that will determine Deng's place in history. He
- has staked everything on the success of his economic reforms,
- arguing that whatever their theoretical justification or lack
- of it, they will work. And so far they generally do.
- </p>
- <p> True, China is still a poor country by any measure. Deng's goal
- is to lift per capita income to $800 by the year 2000. That
- would compare with a 1980 level of $300 and would be sufficient
- to admit China to the ranks of middle-income countries. But as
- recently as 1982, average incomes in China were about equal to
- those in poverty-ridden Haiti. Travelers in Sichuan province
- note that many peasants still use wheelbarrows with wooden
- wheels and iron rims and till the fields with wooden plows--this
- in a country where museums display iron plows from the Han
- dynasty 2,000 years ago.
- </p>
- <p> But life is getting better, fast, for many Chinese. Industrial
- production has leaped along with food output. Early in 1985 it
- was increasing at an annual rate of 23%, a pace Deng and his
- planners judged too rapid. They ordered a slowdown to avoid
- shortages and worsening inflation. In Mao's days, Chinese
- consumers dreamed of buying the "three bigs": a bicycle, a
- wristwatch and a sewing machine. Now the three bigs are a
- refrigerator, a washing machine and a TV set. "Imagine," says
- a Western diplomat. "Some people living in the heart of Guizhou
- province now see the evening news, with film from Beirut and New
- York. Three years ago, they did not know anybody lived on the
- other side of the nearest hill."
- </p>
- <p> In Yunnan province, Liang Weifeng got a state bank loan of $965
- to buy a two-wheel tractor; he earned enough hauling firewood,
- bricks and grain for his neighbors to pay off the loan in eight
- months. Liang now clears about $1,660 a year from his business,
- which his wife Su Yongchang supplements with about $230 earned
- by raising rice and vegetables on a plot of a bit less than an
- acre. Su claims to know little about Deng or politics: "I only
- know that the policies now are good, so that we can get rich."
- </p>
- <p> Consciously or unconsciously, she is echoing a line of argument
- often voiced by Deng and his supporters. In the name of
- economic growth, they are quite deliberately fostering a growing
- inequality of incomes. Says Deng: "Some people will become
- prosperous first, and then others will become prosperous later."
- But since honoring and emulating the rich goes against the
- Marxist grain, Deng and his allies have developed an elaborate
- justification: there is nothing wrong with wealth so long as
- it is earned by one's own labor rather than by the exploitation
- of the labor of others, which Marx condemned. Or, in the words
- of a onetime slogan that Writer Orville Schell turned into the
- title of a book, "To Get Rich Is Glorious."
- </p>
- <p> Such heretical thoughts are heard often enough these days to
- raise an insistent question: Can the system they are erecting
- still be called Marxist? It is far more than a matter of
- semantics. Marxism has demonstrated dramatic power to shake the
- world, and thus any debate as to what it does and does not
- consist of is of paramount importance.
- </p>
- <p> The question, however, is far from easy to answer. Since Marx
- died in 1883, his admirers have written innumerable explanations
- of his work. They have frequently, and often fanatically,
- denounced one another as revisionists or worse. But Bertell
- Ollman, a professor at New York University and an avowed
- Marxist, observes that "Marx had very little to say of a
- concrete nature about socialism," the transitional society that
- would follow the revolution Marx preached. (In strict Marxist
- terminology, "Communism" is the ideal stateless society to be
- reached as an ultimate goal.) The only way to get a definitive
- opinion on the features of Marxist socialism, says Harry
- Harding, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, would be
- "to bring Karl back to speak for himself."
- </p>
- <p> The version of Marxist thought that eventually won out, because
- it achieved power, was Marxism-Leninism, after V.I. Lenin, the
- leader of the Bolshevik Revolution. According to Lenin, Marx's
- call for a "dictatorship of the proletariat" meant that a
- tightly organized Communist Party was to be the exclusive
- dominating force in transforming society. Among the millions
- attracted by this prescription were two young Chinese, named Mao
- Tse-tung and Deng Xiaoping, who saw in it a way to change their
- country from a weak, backward state pushed around by foreign
- powers to a mighty modern nation. Deng has remained a model
- Leninist in the sense of countenancing no challenge to the
- Communist Party's role in leading society, even when portions
- of the party balk at carrying out his reforms.
- </p>
- <p> In matters of economic organization, however, even Lenin was a
- backslider of sorts. In 1921, when his "war Communism" stirred
- dangerously strong opposition, he shifted to the New Economic
- Policy, which sounds almost like a preview of Deng's reforms.
- Under the N.E.P., the new Soviet state owned and operated only
- what Lenin called the "commanding heights" of the economy, that
- is, the basic industries. Peasants could grow and sell
- privately what they wished after paying a tax in produce to the
- state; small-scale private enterprise was permitted; foreign
- capital was invited in.
- </p>
- <p> But while Deng intends his reforms to be permanent, Lenin viewed
- the N.E.P. as a strategic retreat. Stalin put an end to it and
- launched the Soviet Union on a nearly total collectivization of
- agriculture and nationalization of industry. Stalin's system
- became the dominant version of Marxism, if only because the
- U.S.S.R for decades was the sole significant officially Marxist
- state and remains its most powerful one.
- </p>
- <p> One of Mao's main contributions to Marxist theory was to stress
- the role of the peasants, rather than the industrial workers
- exalted by Marx. Another was the doctrine of perpetual
- revolution, which reached chaotic extremes during the Great
- Proletarian Cultural Revolution that began in 1966. Party
- bureaucrats and intellectuals were banished to factories and
- into the countryside to "learn from the people" by working with
- their hands, and teenage Red Guards rampaged through China
- assaulting supposed "bourgeois rightists." One was Deng, who was
- paraded through Peking with a dunce cap on his head and mocked
- as a "capitalist roader."
- </p>
- <p> He is not exactly that, but to the extend that he bothers with
- ideology, which is not very far, he certainly tends to a
- minimalist definition of Marxism. As Deng told TIME: "In
- carrying on socialism, I think we should uphold two things.
- First, public ownership should always play a dominant role in
- our economy. Second, we should try to avoid [class]
- polarization and we should always keep to the road of common
- prosperity." Beyond that, he implies, pretty much anything goes
- if it "will lead China to development."
- </p>
- <p> Chinese intellectuals are engaged in a spirited debate about
- just what can be accommodated under a Marxism stripped to its
- barest essentials. The sale of stock in a business? Yes, says
- one theoretician, as long as the shares are bought by employees,
- or possibly their neighbors if an enterprise happens to be a
- collective (a few of which have in fact sold shares). An
- exchange on which employees and neighbors could trade the shares
- among themselves? "That is under study." A social scientist
- specializing in Marxist ideology goes so far as to suggest that
- since Marxism-Leninism purports to be a science, even nonparty
- people should have the right to re-examine it. Says he:
- "Science belongs to everybody."
- </p>
- <p> At the minimum, the spirit of Deng's course is very different
- from that of classic Marxism. While Marx can be read as
- allowing the market to coexist with socialism for a while, he
- regarded the market as an exploitative device that would
- eventually disappear. It seems doubtful that he would have
- approved any attempt to revive it after it had disappeared.
- Most of all, Deng's version of Marxism lacks the crusading zeal
- of the classic variety. Marx preached his revolution as
- history's final showdown between the forces of light and those
- of darkness. It strains the imagination to conjure what he
- might have thought of a second revolution that seeks, in Deng's
- words, "to adept useful things [from] the capitalist system."
- </p>
- <p> Oddly, though, the guardians of Marxist purity in Moscow are
- not making anything like the case against Deng that might be
- expected. In private, they fear that China will become an even
- greater military threat if the reforms succeed. But in public,
- Soviet journals have noted China's economic progress and
- expressed only mild doctrinal qualms. The Soviets must avoid
- name calling if they want to continue smoothing political
- relations with Peking. Also, suggests an Asian diplomat in
- Moscow, they "may want to keep their options open in case they
- decide, five years from now, that they want to try some of
- these things themselves. They will not be inviting capitalists
- into special economic zones, perhaps, but they might be
- interested in a `managed' market system."
- </p>
- <p> Soviet officials scoff at the idea that there is anything the
- highly industrialized U.S.S.R. could learn from agrarian China.
- But they have at least been inquisitive about Deng's reforms,
- and by some indications more impressed than they like to admit.
- Dwayne Andreas, chairman of Archer Daniels Midland Co. (a giant
- U.S. corporation dealing in farm produce) and a frequent visitor
- to China, journeyed to Moscow in 1984 and had a two-hour private
- talk with Gorbachev, who was then still in charge of Soviet
- agriculture. "He was very curious about what I told him
- concerning the reforms," Andreas recalls. "He particularly
- wanted to hear how China's joint-venture system with foreign
- companies worked."
- </p>
- <p> Long range, though, the prospect of China's creating a modern
- society by following a heretical brand of Marxism constitutes
- a deadly ideological danger to the Soviets. They are having
- enough trouble as it is getting their allies, not to mention
- Communist movements that have not yet come to power, to follow
- their leadership. China's example can only encourage such
- countries as Yugoslavia and Hungary to continue their efforts
- to blend market elements into state-dictated economies, and lead
- out-of-power Marxist parties to think they do not have to copy
- the Soviet line either.
- </p>
- <p> Italian Communist leaders have praised the Chinese for asking
- the right questions about why Soviet-style Marxism has failed
- economically, and a highly sympathetic account of the Chinese
- reforms appeared in East Germany's official newspaper Neues
- Deutschland. Svetozar Stojanovic, a Yugoslav social scientist
- now serving as a visiting scholar in the U.S., goes so far as
- to say that "in the eyes of many people, the Chinese have become
- the new vanguard in the Communist world." More surprising still
- are the views of Silviu Brucan, professor of sociology at the
- University of Bucharest in Rumania, a nation formally allied
- with Moscow in the Warsaw Pact. Writing in the American magazine
- World Policy Journal, Brucan opines that if China succeeds in
- building a modern economy "the Kremlin will then be confronted
- with a dramatic choice: to cling to the old ways and rely more
- and more on military power to exert its influence, or to take
- the bull by the horns and proceed with a radical change in both
- economic policy and global strategy. The issue of leadership
- in the Communist movement will depend on that choice."
- </p>
- <p> Brucan, in common with Western analysts, also believes that
- successful Chinese modernization "is bound to acquire a
- tremendous following, particularly in the Third World." Many
- African and Asian leaders are committed to Marxism as the
- leading anticolonial ideology but suspicious of the Soviet
- version. Marxists in Africa talk about an "African socialism"
- that seems to embrace just about anything that can be
- accommodated with a one-party state. China's example seems
- likely to encourage them to believe that they can develop their
- economies and remain theoretically Marxist without following
- the U.S.S.R.
- </p>
- <p> In Asia, however, there are two complicating factors. Some
- countries, notably Indonesia, fear that a strong, modern China
- may eventually try to reduce them to a kind of political
- vassalage. A much more immediate consideration: China is
- already becoming a powerful economic competitor for such
- industrializing pacific Rim countries as Taiwan, Thailand,
- Singapore and South Korea. Rising agricultural output has
- enabled China to become a net exporter of grain. Exports of
- other goods as diverse as toys and oil are increasing too. Low
- wages enable China to compete on price with any of the
- developing countries. And China can offer its trading partners
- in the industrialized world the lure of access to a potentially
- gigantic market.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, it is very much in the U.S. interest to do
- everything it can to encourage Deng's reforms by opening its own
- markets to China's exports and smoothing China's entrance into
- the free-world trading system. That will not be easy, in view
- of protectionist pressures in all industrialized nations,
- including the U.S. A glaring example of what not to do is the
- Jenkins bill, named for Georgia's Congressman Edgar L. Jenkins.
- The bill, which calls for restrictions on textile imports from
- China and other Asian nations, passed both houses of Congress,
- but Reagan killed it with a veto.
- </p>
- <p> All calculations of China's potential role in the world,
- however, rest on two critical assumptions: that Deng's reforms
- will be continued and broadened, and that they will yield the
- promised payoff in a relatively short period. Unhappily,
- neither is at all certain.
- </p>
- <p> There is no reason to doubt Deng's own commitment. "This is the
- only road China can take," he told TIME. "Other roads would
- only lead to poverty and backwardness." At a Communist Party
- conference in September, Deng and his allies succeeded in
- getting supporters of the reforms promoted to many high- and
- mid-level positions in the government and the party. Deng, says
- a Western analyst, "has prepared not only his own succession but
- the succession below that as well."
- </p>
- <p> But that same party conference provided a striking indication
- of the depth of the opposition Deng faces in the form of a
- speech by Chen Yun, 80, a Politburo member who likens the
- economy to a bird that must be kept in a cage. "A planned
- economy must remain as our primary goal; a market economy can
- only be a supplementary measure for temporary adjustment," said
- Chen. More generally, he complained that "everything for money
- is the decadent capitalist idea which has gradually prevailed
- in our party and society." Even if that point of view should
- eventually win out, a return to full-fledged Maoism seems most
- unlikely. The sufferings of party officials and intellectuals
- during the Cultural Revolution, the economic stagnation under
- Mao and the rapid growth achieved during the first stage of
- Deng's policy all argue against it, even to Chen and other
- conservatives. On the whole they approve of Deng's rural
- reforms.
- </p>
- <p> Yet it is possible to foresee a crackdown after Deng passes.
- Support for greater central control of the economy could come
- from party officials fearful of losing control and from ordinary
- citizens envious of the new rich class. The Chinese press
- already reports many stories about this "red-eyed disease," like
- one about a peasant woman who poisoned all the ducks of a
- prosperous neighboring farmer.
- </p>
- <p> The deciding factor undoubtedly will be the further success, or
- lack of it, of the reforms. Deng's formula for overcoming
- opposition is a simple one: leave the critics alone and let
- them see for themselves that the system works and that they
- would be better off if they went along. "We will let practice
- dissipate their worries and misgivings," he says.
- </p>
- <p> But success cannot be taken for granted either. Along with
- growth, the reforms have produced some "evil winds," as the
- Chinese call them. The most ominous is an upsurge in bribery,
- black-marketeering and other forms of corruption. Chen Yun
- reported that in the past year alone party and government
- officials or their children have started 20,000 private
- businesses, "a considerable number of which collaborate with
- lawbreakers and unscrupulous foreign businessmen" to get rich
- in ways that are decidedly not glorious. Among the crimes he
- accused them of were peddling counterfeit medicine and "the
- sale of obscene videotapes." It is widely estimated that about
- half the managers of state-owned enterprises pursue profit by
- cheating on corporate income taxes. The most sensational
- scandal involved a ring of party and government officials on
- Hainan Island who sold $1.5 billion of goods illegally imported
- through Hong Kong, including Mercedes limousines and color TV
- sets, before they were caught. It is at least possible that
- conservatives can muster support for the idea that the only way
- to stamp out corruption is to cut back on modernization.
- </p>
- <p> The reforms could fail in other ways too. Industry managers
- have never been trained in the complex skills needed to make a
- market economy work. Indiana University's Hans Thorelli, who
- served as a visiting professor of marketing in Shanghai and
- Dalian in the early 1980s, recalls being asked in all
- earnestness by his students, "What is a salesman?" There is
- always the threat, too, that population growth will swallow up
- any production increases.
- </p>
- <p> A deeper question is whether Deng can bring himself, and lower
- officials, to free the market enough for it to work properly.
- Werner Gerich, 66, a West German manager who was hired to run
- a state-owned diesel-engine plant in Wuhan, found his factory,
- like many others in China, heavily over-staffed. "If I fired
- 700 people [out of a total of 2,140], we could make the same
- number of engines with better quality because we would have
- money," he says. But he quit in despair because party officials
- would not let him make that and other changes he considered
- essential. Mao's tradition of "the iron rice bowl"--that is,
- lifetime employment--dies hard.
- </p>
- <p> One top economic official in Shanghai gives this reason for
- retaining at least some production quotas: "Of course we cannot
- give each factory the right to decide what to produce. What
- would happen if all of our garment factories produced blue jeans
- and none produced coats?" The capitalist answer would be that
- a free price system would prevent that. The price of jeans
- would plummet, and the price of coats would soar; many
- jeansmakers would, so to speak, lose their shirts and be happy
- to switch to turning out coats. But Deng and his planner seem
- unwilling to let prices fluctuate freely enough to guide
- investment decisions in that manner.
- </p>
- <p> The deepest dilemma is whether China can achieve even the
- relatively free economy Deng is trying to create without
- undermining Leninist control of politics and society. There are
- many Chinese, not all Chen Yun types, who doubt that, in the
- long run, economic freedom can exist without greater political
- liberty. They are already debating what course the nation will
- take if they are proved right.
- </p>
- <p> One Chinese social scientist states the dilemma pithily. Says
- he: "If the party does not continue the reforms, the economic
- situation will get worse. But if the reforms continue, the
- party itself will lose power" to newly rich peasants and newly
- independent factory managers. His conclusion is that the party
- will cut back on, if not reverse, the reforms rather than let
- that happen. But Zhao Fusan, a senior scholar at the Chinese
- Academy of Social Sciences, states flatly that "the process of
- economic reforms will naturally bring about a process of
- democratization, the setting up of checks and balances in
- political life and the rule of law." If so, and if the Chinese
- are willing to reinterpret Lenin as well as Marx, the potential
- consequences for both the Communist and non-Communist worlds
- would be truly staggering.
- </p>
- <p> That may be too much to hope for, at least anytime soon. The
- history of China in the 20th century has been one of repeated
- upheavals, of which Deng's own career is a prime example. But
- there is at least a chance that Deng will bequeath to his nation
- an economic system working well enough that his successors will
- not want to reverse it, and thus that China will also gain a
- measure of the political stability it has so long and so
- disastrously lacked. If so, the inventive energies of the
- Chinese, which gave the world tea, paper, movable type,
- gunpowder and the first functioning bureaucracy, would be freed
- to carve out a unique role for the nation. China would enter
- the modern world on its own terms rather than on any dictated by
- Western capitalists, Soviet Marxists or anyone else. And Man
- of the Year Deng Xiaoping would expand what he alone among
- world leaders already seems to possess: a secure place in the
- history books to be written in the next century.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-