The Coming Chinese Crackup
The endgame of communist rule in
China has begun, and Xi Jinping’s ruthless measures are only bringing the
country closer to a breaking point
By David Shambaugh in the Wall Street Journal
On Thursday, the National People’s
Congress convened in Beijing in what has become a familiar annual ritual. Some
3,000 “elected” delegates from all over the country—ranging from colorfully
clad ethnic minorities to urbane billionaires—will meet for a week to discuss
the state of the nation and to engage in the pretense of political
participation.
Some see this impressive gathering
as a sign of the strength of the Chinese political system—but it masks serious
weaknesses. Chinese politics has always had a theatrical veneer, with staged
events like the congress intended to project the power and stability of the
Chinese Communist Party, or CCP. Officials and citizens alike know that they
are supposed to conform to these rituals, participating cheerfully and parroting
back official slogans. This behavior is known in Chinese as biaotai,
“declaring where one stands,” but it is little more than an act of symbolic
compliance.
Despite appearances, China’s
political system is badly broken, and nobody knows it better than the Communist
Party itself. China’s strongman leader, Xi Jinping , is
hoping that a crackdown on dissent and corruption will shore up the party’s
rule. He is determined to avoid becoming the Mikhail Gorbachev of China,
presiding over the party’s collapse. But instead of being the antithesis of Mr.
Gorbachev, Mr. Xi may well wind up having the same effect. His despotism is
severely stressing China’s system and society—and bringing it closer to a
breaking point.
Predicting the demise of
authoritarian regimes is a risky business. Few Western experts forecast the
collapse of the Soviet Union before it occurred in 1991; the CIA missed it
entirely. The downfall of Eastern Europe’s communist states two years earlier
was similarly scorned as the wishful thinking of anticommunists—until it
happened. The post-Soviet “color revolutions” in Georgia, Ukraine and
Kyrgyzstan from 2003 to 2005, as well as the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings, all
burst forth unanticipated.
China-watchers have been on high
alert for telltale signs of regime decay and decline ever since the regime’s near-death experience in Tiananmen Square in 1989. Since then, several seasoned Sinologists have risked their
professional reputations by asserting that the collapse of CCP rule was
inevitable. Others were more cautious—myself included. But times change in
China, and so must our analyses.
The endgame of Chinese communist
rule has now begun, I believe, and it has progressed further than many think.
We don’t know what the pathway from now until the end will look like, of
course. It will probably be highly unstable and unsettled. But until the system
begins to unravel in some obvious way, those inside of it will play along—thus
contributing to the facade of stability.
Communist rule in China is unlikely
to end quietly. A single event is unlikely to trigger a peaceful implosion of
the regime. Its demise is likely to be protracted, messy and violent. I
wouldn’t rule out the possibility that Mr. Xi will be deposed in a power
struggle or coup d’état. With his aggressive anticorruption campaign—a focus of
this week’s National People’s Congress—he is overplaying a weak hand and deeply
aggravating key party, state, military and commercial constituencies.
The Chinese have a proverb, waiying,
neiruan—hard on the outside, soft on the inside. Mr. Xi is a genuinely
tough ruler. He exudes conviction and personal confidence. But this hard
personality belies a party and political system that is extremely fragile on
the inside.
Consider five telling indications of
the regime’s vulnerability and the party’s systemic weaknesses.
First, China’s economic elites have
one foot out the door, and they are ready to flee en masse if the system really
begins to crumble. In 2014, Shanghai’s Hurun Research Institute, which studies
China’s wealthy, found that 64% of the “high net worth individuals” whom it
polled—393 millionaires and billionaires—were either emigrating or planning to
do so. Rich Chinese are sending their children to study abroad in record
numbers (in itself, an indictment of the quality of the Chinese
higher-education system).
Just this week, the
Journal reported, federal agents searched several
Southern California locations that U.S. authorities allege are linked to
“multimillion-dollar birth-tourism businesses that enabled thousands of Chinese
women to travel here and return home with infants born as U.S. citizens.”
Wealthy Chinese are also buying property abroad at record levels and prices,
and they are parking their financial assets overseas, often in well-shielded
tax havens and shell companies.
Meanwhile, Beijing is trying to
extradite back to China a large number of alleged financial fugitives living
abroad. When a country’s elites—many of them party members—flee in such large
numbers, it is a telling sign of lack of confidence in the regime and the
country’s future.
Second, since taking office in 2012,
Mr. Xi has greatly intensified the political repression that has blanketed
China since 2009. The targets include the press, social media, film, arts and
literature, religious groups, the Internet, intellectuals, Tibetans and
Uighurs, dissidents, lawyers, NGOs, university students and textbooks. The
Central Committee sent a draconian order known as Document No. 9 down through
the party hierarchy in 2013, ordering all units to ferret out any seeming
endorsement of the West’s “universal values”—including constitutional
democracy, civil society, a free press and neoliberal economics.
A more secure and confident
government would not institute such a severe crackdown. It is a symptom of the
party leadership’s deep anxiety and insecurity.
Third, even many regime loyalists
are just going through the motions. It is hard to miss the theater of false
pretense that has permeated the Chinese body politic for the past few years.
Last summer, I was one of a handful of foreigners (and the only American) who
attended a conference about the “China Dream,” Mr. Xi’s signature concept, at a
party-affiliated think tank in Beijing. We sat through two days of
mind-numbing, nonstop presentations by two dozen party scholars—but their faces
were frozen, their body language was wooden, and their boredom was palpable.
They feigned compliance with the party and their leader’s latest
mantra. But it was evident that the propaganda
had lost its power, and the emperor had no clothes.
In December, I was back in Beijing
for a conference at the Central Party School, the party’s highest institution
of doctrinal instruction, and once again, the country’s top officials and foreign
policy experts recited their stock slogans verbatim. During lunch one day, I
went to the campus bookstore—always an important stop so that I can update
myself on what China’s leading cadres are being taught. Tomes on the store’s
shelves ranged from Lenin’s “Selected Works” to Condoleezza Rice’s memoirs, and
a table at the entrance was piled high with copies of a pamphlet by Mr. Xi on
his campaign to promote the “mass line”—that is, the party’s connection to the
masses. “How is this selling?” I asked the clerk. “Oh, it’s not,” she replied.
“We give it away.” The size of the stack suggested it was hardly a hot item.
Fourth, the corruption that riddles
the party-state and the military also pervades Chinese society as a whole. Mr.
Xi’s anticorruption campaign is more sustained and severe than any previous
one, but no campaign can eliminate the problem. It is stubbornly rooted in the
single-party system, patron-client networks, an economy utterly lacking in
transparency, a state-controlled media and the absence of the rule of law.
Moreover, Mr. Xi’s campaign is
turning out to be at least as much a selective purge as an antigraft campaign. Many of its targets to date have
been political clients and allies of former Chinese leader Jiang Zemin . Now 88,
Mr. Jiang is still the godfather figure of Chinese politics. Going after Mr.
Jiang’s patronage network while he is still alive is highly risky for Mr. Xi,
particularly since Mr. Xi doesn’t seem to have brought along his own coterie of
loyal clients to promote into positions of power. Another problem: Mr. Xi, a
child of China’s first-generation revolutionary elites, is one of the party’s
“princelings,” and his political ties largely extend to other princelings. This
silver-spoon generation is widely reviled in Chinese society at large.
Finally, China’s economy—for all the Western views of it as an unstoppable
juggernaut—is stuck in a series of systemic traps from which there is no easy
exit. In November 2013, Mr. Xi presided over the party’s Third Plenum, which
unveiled a huge package of proposed economic reforms, but so far, they are
sputtering on the launchpad. Yes, consumer spending has been rising, red tape
has been reduced, and some fiscal reforms have been introduced, but overall, Mr.
Xi’s ambitious goals have been stillborn. The reform package challenges
powerful, deeply entrenched interest groups—such as state-owned enterprises and
local party cadres—and they are plainly blocking its implementation.
These five increasingly evident
cracks in the regime’s control can be fixed only through political reform.
Until and unless China relaxes its draconian political controls, it will never
become an innovative society and a “knowledge economy”—a main goal of the Third
Plenum reforms. The political system has become the primary impediment to
China’s needed social and economic reforms. If Mr. Xi and party leaders don’t
relax their grip, they may be summoning precisely the fate they hope to avoid.
In the decades since the collapse of
the Soviet Union, the upper reaches of China’s leadership have been obsessed
with the fall of its fellow communist giant. Hundreds of Chinese postmortem
analyses have dissected the causes of the
Soviet disintegration.
Mr. Xi’s real “China Dream” has been
to avoid the Soviet nightmare. Just a few months into his tenure, he gave a
telling internal speech ruing the Soviet Union’s demise and bemoaning Mr.
Gorbachev’s betrayals, arguing that Moscow had lacked a “real man” to stand up
to its reformist last leader. Mr. Xi’s wave of repression today is meant to be
the opposite of Mr. Gorbachev’s perestroika and glasnost. Instead of opening
up, Mr. Xi is doubling down on controls over dissenters, the economy and even
rivals within the party.
But reaction and repression aren’t
Mr. Xi’s only option. His predecessors, Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao , drew
very different lessons from the Soviet collapse. From 2000 to 2008, they
instituted policies intended to open up the system with carefully limited
political reforms.
They strengthened local party
committees and experimented with voting for multicandidate party secretaries.
They recruited more businesspeople and intellectuals into the party. They
expanded party consultation with nonparty groups and made the Politburo’s
proceedings more transparent. They improved feedback mechanisms within the
party, implemented more meritocratic criteria for evaluation and promotion, and
created a system of mandatory midcareer training for all 45 million state and
party cadres. They enforced retirement requirements and rotated officials and
military officers between job assignments every couple of years.
In effect, for a while Mr. Jiang and
Mr. Hu sought to manage change, not to resist it. But Mr. Xi wants none of
this. Since 2009 (when even the heretofore open-minded Mr. Hu changed course
and started to clamp down), an increasingly anxious regime has rolled back
every single one of these political reforms (with the exception of the
cadre-training system). These reforms were masterminded by Mr. Jiang’s
political acolyte and former vice president, Zeng Qinghong, who retired in 2008
and is now under suspicion in Mr. Xi’s anticorruption campaign—another symbol
of Mr. Xi’s hostility to the measures that might ease the ills of a crumbling
system.
Some experts think that Mr. Xi’s
harsh tactics may actually presage a more open and reformist direction later in
his term. I don’t buy it. This leader and regime see politics in zero-sum
terms: Relaxing control, in their view, is a sure step toward the demise of the
system and their own downfall. They also take the conspiratorial view that the
U.S. is actively working to subvert Communist Party rule. None of this suggests
that sweeping reforms are just around the corner.
We cannot predict when Chinese
communism will collapse, but it is hard not to conclude that we are witnessing
its final phase. The CCP is the world’s second-longest ruling regime (behind
only North Korea), and no party can rule forever.
Looking ahead, China-watchers should
keep their eyes on the regime’s instruments of control and on those assigned to
use those instruments. Large numbers of citizens and party members alike are
already voting with their feet and leaving the country or displaying their
insincerity by pretending to comply with party dictates.
We should watch for the day when the
regime’s propaganda agents and its internal security apparatus start becoming
lax in enforcing the party’s writ—or when they begin to identify with
dissidents, like the East German Stasi agent in the film “The Lives of Others” who came to sympathize with the targets of his spying. When
human empathy starts to win out over ossified authority, the endgame of Chinese
communism will really have begun.
Dr. Shambaugh is a professor of
international affairs and the director of the China Policy Program at George
Washington University and a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution. His books include “China’s Communist Party: Atrophy and
Adaptation” and, most recently, “China Goes Global: The Partial Power.”
Poster’s comments:
1) Many
people have been predicting much the same for over a decade. As usual it is
easier to predict the breakup than the timing of the breakup.
2) What we
may end up with may be worse than what we have today. A good example would be
some amalgamation of warlords ruling their own fiefdoms, which is an historical
Chinese predilection. Said another way, China has a long history of not be able
to rule itself as one nation that goes back thousands of years.
3) WalMart and
Amazon type shoppers will probably suffer, too.
4) What we
may end up with may even be more like Hong Kong taking over China in many small
ways that add up.
5) Never
assume the status quo will go on forever.
6) Any change
in China, especially political change, will probably go on for over a decade of
turmoil.
7) What are
we to do if civil wars erupt, and some go nuclear, and fall out clouds rain
over Japan and Korea and Canada and the USA? Even the initial above ground
nuclear tests by the Chinese at Lop Nor resulted in a good dusting of
radioactive iodine in the USA in 1964.
8) Many lands
will benefit by the probable immigration of Chinese people to their land.
9) Last,
remember that today’s China is still very rural to many people(over 400 million
rounded off), and also still very traditional and Family oriented in more ways
than many people in the West think of. Even the nation has two major dialects,
like Mandarin (more Asian) and Cantonese (more Polynesian), and each with its
own differing heritage. Most people like their own heritage even when love and
marriage gets involved.
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