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- China
- Chinese Economic Reform
-
- Two years after the death of Mao Zedong in 1976, it became apparent
- to many of China's leaders that economic reform was necessary. During his
- tenure as China's premier, Mao had encouraged social movements such as the
- Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution which had had as their bases
- ideologies such as serving the people and maintaining the class struggle.
- By 1978 "Chinese leaders were searching for a solution to serious economic
- problems produced by Hua Guofeng, the man who had succeeded Mao Zedong as
- CCP leader after Mao's death" (Shirk 35). Hua had demonstrated a desire to
- continue the ideologically based movements of Mao. Unfortunately, these
- movements had left China in a state where "agriculture was stagnant,
- industrial production was low, and the people's living standards had not
- increased in twenty years" (Nathan 200). This last area was particularly
- troubling. While "the gross output value of industry and agriculture
- increased by 810 percent and national income grew by 420 percent [between
- 1952 and 1980] ... average individual income increased by only 100 percent"
- (Ma Hong quoted in Shirk 28). However, attempts at economic reform in
- China were introduced not only due to some kind of generosity on the part
- of the Chinese Communist Party to increase the populace's living standards.
- It had become clear to members of the CCP that economic reform would
- fulfill a political purpose as well since the party felt, properly it would
- seem, that it had suffered a loss of support. As Susan L. Shirk describes
- the situation in The Political Logic of Economic Reform in China,
- restoring the CCP's prestige required improving
- economic performance and raising living standards.
- The traumatic experience of the Cultural Revolution
- had eroded popular trust in the moral and political
- virtue of the CCP. The party's leaders decided to
- shift the base of party legitimacy from virtue to
- competence, and to do that they had to demonstrate
- that they could deliver the goods.
- (23)
-
- This movement "from virtue to competence" seemed to mark a
- serious departure from orthodox Chinese political theory. Confucius
- himself had posited in the fifth century BCE that those individuals who
- best demonstrated what he referred to as moral force should lead the
- nation. Using this principle as a guide, China had for centuries attempted
- to choose at least its bureaucratic leaders by administering a test to
- determine their moral force. After the Communist takeover of the country,
- Mao continued this emphasis on moral force by demanding that Chinese
- citizens demonstrate what he referred to as "correct consciousness." This
- correct consciousness could be exhibited, Mao believed, by the way people
- lived. Needless to say, that which constituted correct consciousness was
- often determined and assessed by Mao. Nevertheless, the ideal of moral
- force was still a potent one in China even after the Communist takeover.
- It is noteworthy that Shirk feels that the Chinese Communist
- Party leaders saw economic reform as a way to regain their and their
- party's moral virtue even after Mao's death. Thus, paradoxically, by
- demonstrating their expertise in a more practical area of competence, the
- leaders of the CCP felt they could demonstrate how they were serving the
- people. To be sure, the move toward economic reform came about as a result
- of a "changed domestic and international environment, which altered the
- leadership's perception of the factors that affect China's national
- security and social stability" (Xu 247). But Shirk feels that, in those
- pre-Tienenmen days, such a move came about also as a result of an attempt
- by CCP leaders to demonstrate, in a more practical and thus less obviously
- ideological manner than Mao had done, their moral force.
- This is not to say that the idea of economic reform was
- embraced enthusiastically by all members of the leadership of the Chinese
- Communist Party in 1978. To a great extent, the issue of economic reform
- became politicized as the issue was used as a means by Deng Xiaoping to
- attain the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party. Mao's successor, Hua
- Guofeng, had "tried to prove himself a worthy successor to Mao by draping
- himself in the mantle of Maoist tradition. His approach to economic
- development was orthodox Maoism with an up-to-date, international twist"
- (Shirk 35). This approach was tied heavily to the development of China's
- oil reserves. "[W]hen [in 1978] estimates of the oil reserves were revised
- downward[,] commitments to import plants and expand heavy industry could
- not be sustained" (Shirk 35). Deng took advantage of this economic crisis
- to discredit Hua and aim for leadership of the party. "Reform policies
- became Deng's platform against Hua for post-Mao leadership" (Shirk 36).
- Given this history of economic reform, it is evident that "under the
- present system economic questions are necessarily political questions"
- (Dorn 43). Once Deng and his faction had prevailed, it was necessary for
- some sort of economic reform to evolve.
- The initial form the new economy took was not a radical one.
- China was "still a state in which the central government retain[ed] the
- dominant power in economic resource allocation and responsible local
- officials work[ed] for the interest of the units under their control"
- (Solinger 103). However, as time passed, some basic aspects of the old
- system were altered either by design or via the process of what might be
- called benign neglect. As Shirk points out, in rural areas,
- decollectivization was occurring: "decision making power [was being
- transferred] from collective production units (communes, brigades, and
- teams) to the family" (38); purchase prices for major farm products were
- increased (39). In 1985, further reforms were introduced. For example,
- long-term sales contracts between farmers and the government were
- established. In addition, in an effort to allow the market to determine
- prices, "city prices of fruit and vegetables, fish, meat, and eggs, were
- freed from government controls so they could respond to market demand"
- (Shirk 39). Most importantly, "a surge of private and collective industry
- and commerce in the countryside" (Shirk 39) occurred. This allowed a great
- percentage of the populace to become involved in private enterprise and
- investment in family or group ventures. The conditions also allowed rural
- Chinese to leave the villages and become involved in industry in urban
- centers (Shirk 40). The economy grew so quickly that inflation occurred
- and the government had to reinstitute price controls. China's economy
- retains these characteristics of potential for growth--and inflation--to
- this day.
- Another important aspect of Chinese economic reform was the
- decision of China to join the world economy. Deng Xiaoping and his allies
- hoped to effect this 1979 resolution in two ways: by expanding foreign
- trade, and by encouraging foreign companies to invest in Chinese
- enterprises. This policy--denoted the "Open Policy" (Shirk 47)--was a
- drastic removal from the policies of Mao Zedong and, in fact, from
- centuries of Chinese political culture. The Open Policy, which designated
- limited areas in China "as places with preferential conditions for foreign
- investment and bases for the development of exports" (Nathan 99), was
- extremely successful in the areas where it was implemented (Shirk 47).
- However, it was looked upon by many Chinese as nothing less than an avenue
- to "economic dependency" (Nathan 50). Indeed, when the policy was first
- implemented,
- many Chinese seem[ed] to fear that Deng's policies
- [were] drawing China back toward its former
- semi-colonial status as a "market where the
- imperialist countries dump their goods, a raw
- material base, a repair and assembly workshop,
- and an investment center."
- (Nathan 51)
-
- It is interesting to note the symptoms of a national character
- that would subscribe to the above sentiment. In an article written in
- 1981, just two years after the Open Policy was first proposed, Andrew J.
- Nathan noted the almost pathological resistance to foreign intervention in
- the Chinese economy: "Some Chinese fear that reliance on imported
- technology will encourage a dependent psychology ... [Many] Chinese
- perceive joint ventures as a costly form of acquisition. 'Some people
- worry: Won't we be suffering losses by letting foreigners make profits in
- our country?'" (52). The Chinese were as vociferous about issues of
- sovereignty. Nathan maintained that the Mao-led revolution, which
- culminated in victory in 1949, had been fueled by "an intense patriotism:
- ... once China had 'stood up,' no infringement on its sovereignty, no
- matter how small, should be permitted" (53). These feelings were
- manifested in denying foreign businessmen long-term, multiple entry visas,
- resisting "increased foreign economic contacts" and alteration of current
- ways of doing things, and disinclination to become involved in
- government-to-government loans and joint ventures lest Chinese become
- exploited in some way (Nathan 53-55). Given these hesitancies on the part
- of the Chinese society vis-a-vis foreign relations, it is impressive that
- Deng and his allies were able initially to create and implement the Open
- Policy since many members of the society at large were resistant to
- becoming involved in a policy so antithetical to the Chinese national
- character. However, once the successes of the Open Policy were apparent,
- resistance to the plan by the populace waned. Moreover, given the
- confluence of politics and economics in China, it seems apparent that some
- members of the CCP would also not be in favor of the plan. Nevertheless,
- the Open Policy was implemented and has become instrumental in the success
- of the burgeoning Chinese economy.
- The implementation of the Open Policy was so successful that by
- 1988 the leaders of the CCP were encouraged to create a new program called
- the "coastal development strategy." In this program, even more of the
- country was opened up to foreign investment--an area which, at the time,
- included nearly 200 million people. Moreover, by involving more overseas
- investors, "importing both capital and raw materials," and "exporting
- China's cheap excess labor power," the new policy was one of "'export-led
- growth' or 'export-oriented industrialization.' It [was] explicitly
- modeled on the experiences of Taiwan and the other Asian 'small dragons'"
- (Nathan 99).
- One analyst has maintained that "China now stands at the
- threshold of the greatest opportunity in human history: a new economic era
- promising greater wealth and achievement than any previous epoch" (Gilder
- 369). Illustrative of this optimistic feeling is Shanghai, an area that
- was designated for preferential conditions for foreign investment and as a
- base for the development of exports in 1988. This city and environs in the
- Yangtze Delta area have a population of approximately 400 million people
- and the city has become the nation's financial hub for international and
- national investors. For political reasons, this area was excluded from the
- original Open Policy designation in 1978, but is currently in the process
- of catching up with other areas so designated. Indeed, the increase in
- foreign investments in the last two years is striking. The area received
- 3.3 billion dollars in foreign investments during the 1980s. The area
- received the same amount from foreign investments in 1992 alone. In only
- the first ten months of 1993, the area had received over six billion
- dollars worth of foreign investments (Tyler A8).
- Western analysts have asserted that the Open Policy and the
- coastal development strategy have allowed Deng to entrench his political
- power (Shirk 47) and will allow his power to be sustained even after death.
- If this is true, Deng should be very popular in Shanghai. With its new
- designation, and with the billions of foreign dollars coming into the area,
- it has become necessary to improve the city's facilities. To that end
- forty billion dollars worth of public works projects have been allocated by
- the central government for Shanghai within the last year (Tyler A1). These
- public works projects include new sewers, a new water system, new gas
- lines, a new bridge, and extensive roadwork. Future plans include the
- construction of a second international airport, a container port, a new
- subway system, and more roads and bridges (Tyler A8). The financial
- district, which will feature a new stock exchange, is also being rebuilt by
- China and foreign investors in a joint venture. By being designated for
- preferential conditions, Shanghai received from the central government tax
- exemptions for enterprises doing business with foreign companies, tax
- holidays for new factories set up with foreign investments, and a bonded
- zone--the largest in China--for duty free imports of raw materials.
- Shanghai now has all the trappings of a modern city: discos, construction
- projects, and conspicuous consumption. In short, where "revered monuments
- and golden arches exist side by side" (Riboud 12), the appearance of the
- new Shanghai does nothing less than signal "the end of the ideological
- debate over China's free market experiments" (Tyler A8).
- Shanghai has joined the ranks of the modern metropolis.
- However, this is not necessarily a beneficial development. Inflation is
- rampant: prices have doubled in the industrial zones in the last five
- years. Nevertheless, the fact that Shanghai currently possesses the fifth
- most expensive office space in the world demonstrates that demand is high
- and that the prospects for future growth are promising (Tyler A8). Indeed,
- Pudong, a free export manufacturing zone described as "the future sight of
- Shanghai's Manhattan" (Tyler A8), boasts more than twenty factories built
- or being built with names like Siemens and Hitachi prominent. This area
- has become particularly attractive to foreign investors and companies
- because of its tax concessions, duty free imports of raw materials, and
- cheap labor. Shanghai stands to benefit, too, as it receives ancillary
- technology and discretionary spending from the workers and executives of
- the companies represented (Tyler A8). It is conditions like these that
- have caused at least one analyst to predict that China will be "the richest
- economy in the world within the next 25 years" (Gilder 372).
- Shanghai is by no means unique to this growth. Additional
- foreign investments have continued to pour into other areas of China. For
- example, the Boeing Company recently announced its intention to "invest
- $100 million in a plant in [Xian] China to make tail sections for 737
- jetliners" ("Boeing" D4). In addition, E.I. du Pont recently predicted
- "that its investments and business in China could increase as much as ten
- times by the end of the century" ("Du Pont" D2). Tellingly, du Pont's
- chairman attributed the company's negotiations of "as many as 28 new
- projects in China" to the fact "that the country's financial changes,
- improved infrastructure and rising disposable income has [sic] encouraged
- the company to expand its business activities" ("Du Pont" D2).
- The Chinese government has made conscientious attempts to
- promote the strength of the country's economy while protecting its
- citizens. Just a few weeks ago, the government instituted "tight-money
- policies, intended to control inflation and slow what has been the world's
- fastest growing major economy" (Shenon "China Halts" D1). However, after
- doing so, China's Securities Regulatory Commission was forced to stop the
- issuing of new issues on the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges because
- the value of the markets had decreased so greatly. This latter move was
- "meant to calm millions of first-time Chinese investors who evidently went
- into the market believing that stock prices could only go up" (Shenon
- "China Halts" D1). Might this policy show a union of economic and moral
- concern? If so, it demonstrates the desire on the part of the government
- to show some kind of responsibility, some moral force, to its citizenry.
- At the very least, the strategy appears to show a practical desire on the
- part of the government to take control over what could have been a bad
- economic situation. Indeed, after these measures were instituted, China's
- trade deficit decreased (Hansell D2) and the stock markets' volume attained
- record highs ("Stocks Surge" D2). To be sure, Chinese investors remain
- somewhat wary about the stock market and, ironically enough, more control
- of the stock markets appears to be necessary (Shenon "A Nail-Biting" D1).
- But, in discussing Chinese attempts to control inflation, Philip J. Suttle,
- head of emerging markets research at the investment firm of J.P. Morgan,
- has predicted that "[i]t looks as though the Chinese are going to have the
- soft landing they are aiming for" (quoted in Hansell D2).
- China's interest in stock markets is no longer restricted to
- within its own boundaries. This month, Shandong Huaneng Power Development
- Company, "the first mainland Chinese company to have its primary listing on
- the New York Stock Exchange" ("China Stock" D5), began trading shares. The
- stock should be an attractive one to investors: Chinese electrical "demand
- ... is expected to grow by a whopping 17 million kilowatts a year until the
- turn of the century" (Zuckerman D6). Moreover, China stands to gain from
- the issue's sales. "The company plans to use the $311 million dollars it
- received from the offering to retire $83 million in loans from ... Chinese
- state entities. It also plans to expand its overall generating capacity"
- (Zuckerman D6). Nor does this signify the only Chinese attempt of raising
- capital from foreign sources on foreign soil. "Three more power companies
- are expected to be listed in New York and Hong Kong in the coming months"
- (Zuckerman D6).
- Given the apparent strength of the Chinese economy as shown by
- huge public works projects, extensive foreign investments, participation in
- the world economy, and a generally higher standard of living by the
- populace, it would appear that China is now ready to join the world as a
- modern capitalistic and democratic society. However, this is not quite the
- case. The CCP retains vestiges of those characteristics of insularity and
- intransigence as discussed by Nathan. Because of its human rights record,
- the country's economic growth is being impeded. That is, the politics of
- China, which have always been allied with its economics, are now
- restricting international growth.
- The United States, especially, has been concerned with China's
- treatment of political dissidents. In May, President Clinton decided to
- end linking China's trade status with the United States with its record on
- human rights. The president has been criticized for this because of
- situations like the following: trials for "'counterrevolutionary
- activities' [including] ... plans to use a remote-controlled airplane to
- drop pro-democracy leaflets over ... Tienenmen Square" ("China cracks" A13)
- have recently begun for fifteen dissidents and labor organizers who were
- involved in the Tienenmen Square protests. These trials have "been delayed
- twice, first to avoid negative international reaction just before the
- decision last September on China's failed bid to host the 2000 Olympics and
- then this spring to avoid influencing Clinton's trade decision" ("China
- cracks" A13). In addition, China has instituted "new laws effective in
- June [which] give sweeping powers to China's State Security Bureau to clamp
- down on dissidents" ("China cracks" A13). China is fully aware of United
- States' concerns about its human rights record. Given the fact that the
- United States has made it clear to China that that record will be allied
- with trade status, China's timing of such restrictive activities has caused
- United States legislators and administrators to question China's sincerity
- in its desire to have a favored trade status with the United States.
- Indeed, just in the past few days, it took a
- last-minute lobbying campaign by President Clinton
- and his Cabinet [to head off a] potentially
- embarrassing vote by the House of Representatives to
- restrict trade with China as a way to punish Beijing
- for reported human rights violations.
- (Bradsher A7)
-
- But China's problems in joining the community of the world
- market have more to do than with its political ethos and practices. China
- appears not to understand or to be able to follow through on fundamental
- modern economic practices. For example, the United States has recently
- complained that "China has not complied with international rules on access
- to its markets and protection of copyrights and patents" (Gargan 14). Such
- non-compliance could make it difficult for China to become a founding
- member of the
- World Trade Organization, the successor to the
- General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and the body
- that is intended to promote global free trade by
- lowering tariffs and other barriers, [which] will
- be formally constituted on January 1, 1994.
- (Gargan 14)
-
- The specific nature of the United States' complaint has to do with China's
- pirating of musical compact disks, video laser disks and computer software.
- In fact, it is estimated that such pirating costs American companies a
- billion dollars a year. This phenomenon seems to have to do with the
- Chinese psychology as described by Nathan. In his 1981 essay he noted that
- China did not wish to become a "technological client of the west. The
- preferred solution is to buy one item and copy it" (Nathan 52). Clearly,
- this is not the way trade works today. It is the United States' position
- that China must adhere to the rules of trade before it can be included in a
- trade organization. Needless to say, exclusion from WTO would be
- disastrous for any country, but particularly for an emerging market such as
- China.
- Even on a day to day basis, China's economic leaders seem
- unable to understand how some aspects of a market economy work. In
- discussing the status of the Shanghai Stock Market, for example, one stock
- dealer referred to it as "crazy" ("Stocks Surge" D2). Moreover, American
- analysts have been amazed to discover in the Shanghai market "the lack of
- regulation and the poor disclosure requirements. Some companies have been
- listed for two or three years and have not issued an annual report"
- (Hansell D2). It is no wonder that Chinese investors become anxious about
- their investments.
- The issuance of shares in the Shandong Huaneng Power
- Development Company also demonstrates the lack of expertise on the part of
- the Chinese in the modern world market. In fact, according to one Hong
- Kong investment analyst, "'[t]he company wasn't really a company. It was
- just a bunch of discrete plants that they tied a bow around and wrote a
- prospectus on'" (Zuckerman D6). The prospectus guaranteed a fifteen
- percent annual return on investments. In fact, the return will no doubt be
- less than that because of prevailing currency exchange rates and debt that
- the company will have to assume.
- To be sure, the problems of the Shandong Huaneng Power
- Development Company and the Shanghai Stock Exchange may demonstrate only
- the problems of an immature economy. Nevertheless, if China wishes to
- become a viable member of the world economic community, such shortcomings
- will have to be eliminated quickly.
- These apparent problems may also be the result of an economic
- system that is run by the state. Certainly, one thing that the CCP has
- attempted to do is create a market economy while retaining a state
- controlled system. This structure may be possible but it does have its
- critics. Steven N.S. Cheung, in an essay written in 1989, argued for the
- "creation of private property by mandate" (31), feeling that privatization
- in China would lead to necessary additional investment in the society's
- infrastructure and the establishment of a "judicial system that is based
- firmly on the principle of equality before the law" (Cheung 32). Echoing
- Cheung's sentiments, James Dorn saw problems in the areas of Chinese
- banking and finance. In this arrangement, Dorn argued, "the state controls
- the bulk of investment resources. The lack of a private capital market has
- handicapped economic development in China and hampered rational investment
- decisionmaking" (43). In order to become a modern economic state Dorn
- argued for the necessity of circumventing "China's ruling elite who oppose
- the dismantling of state monopolies and who benefit from price fixing and
- nonprice rationing" (51). Xu Zhiming also saw the necessity for a
- revamping of the Chinese system: "We must throw off the traditional system
- completely" (249) in order for economic reform to thrive.
- Communist Party members, of course, articulate a different
- position. In a recent interview that appeared in the Beijing Review, Feng
- Bing, Deputy Secretary General of the State Commission for Restructuring
- the Economic System, spoke to the issue of economic reform in China. It is
- striking that Feng spoke of the benefits that the populace has received as
- a result of the economic reform now occurring in China. That is, his
- comments appeared to demonstrate the beneficence, or the moral force, of
- the Chinese Communist Party vis-a-vis economic reform. He noted that such
- reform involves the essence of socialism: "to liberate and develop
- productive forces; to eradicate exploitation; to remove polarization; and
- ... to attain the goal of common prosperity" ("Official" 12). Thus, CCP
- leaders still appear to see their roles as representatives of a moral
- force. CCP members and leaders wish economic reform not to be judged on
- just its practical merits, but also as an effect of the moral force of the
- leadership. Economic reform, then, becomes nothing less than a moral
- crusade and it is thus easy to see why, for example, China "has staked its
- national prestige on becoming a founding member of the World Trade
- Organization" (Gargan 14).
- Will China succeed in taking its place among the nations of the
- world market? Will the CCP succeed in retaining its political power given
- the drastic changes in the societal makeup of China that are occurring due
- to the changing economic realities? I would suggest that the chances are
- better for the former than for the latter. Once the Chinese attain more
- sophistication relative to international and national markets, institute a
- more manageable banking system, and make a good faith effort to insure
- acceptable human rights, the country may well become "the richest economy
- in the world within the next 25 years" (Gilder 372). However, whether or
- not these conditions can occur without a weakening of the state controlled
- system is problematic. The most impressive and far-reaching display of
- moral force by the CCP may well have to be a voluntary reduction of its
- power over the people. Paradoxically, by weakening itself politically, the
- party may demonstrate its true moral force by liberating, politically and
- economically, one billion Chinese citizens.
-
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