In March, David Shambaugh, a professor at George Washington University, wrote a major essay for the
Wall Street Journal
titled “The Coming Chinese Crackup.” Shambaugh’s main point was that
“The endgame of Chinese communist rule has now begun . . . and it has
progressed further than many think.” Shambaugh admits that his view is
not universally accepted, but the fact that a scholar of his reputation
has reached this conclusion is significant.
Shambaugh gives five reasons for thinking that the Chinese regime
suffers from systemic and ultimately fatal weaknesses. The first is that
the Chinese elites have lost confidence in the system, as demonstrated
by the fact that they are fleeing from the country
en masse. He
quotes a study by the Hurun Research Institute in Shanghai that found
that 64 percent of the “high net worth individuals” whom it
polled—nearly 400 billionaires and millionaires—were either already
emigrating or planning to. They are also sending their children to study
abroad in record numbers.
The second reason that he believes China is headed toward trouble is
the dramatic increase in political repression under President Xi
Jinping. Shambaugh believes this is a symptom of the leadership’s “deep
anxiety and insecurity.” The repression has been across-the-board and
has affected journalists and religious groups, artists and writers, NGO
activists and university students, Tibetan and Uighur minority groups,
and lawyers like Gao Zhisheng, Pu Zhiqiang, and Xu Zhiyong, the founder
of the New Citizens Movement. What seems to frighten the regime is the
potential appeal of what Document No. 9, a party directive issued in
2013, calls the “seven perils,” among them constitutional democracy,
press freedom, market economy, and universal values. This explains
Education Minister Yuan Guiren’s declaration
at a recent conference that “textbooks promoting Western values” would
not be permitted in classrooms. The fact that government officials,
according to a report in the
Economist,
have been using “the harshest terms heard in years” to warn against the
danger of Western values shows how attractive they think such values
are to Chinese youth and why this appeal therefore poses a threat to the
Chinese regime.
Related Essay
Taiwan’s Vote Against Beijing
Gordon G. Chang | essay
In
November Taiwan’s ruling party, the Kuomintang, suffered its worst
defeat ever in an election that became a referendum on its long-held
policies to integrate the island into China.
At the root of the regime’s fear of Western values is its own
ideological bankruptcy, which is Shambaugh’s third reason for thinking
that the party is doomed. The “China Dream” is Xi’s signature concept,
meant to give the country’s economic boom a nationalist uplift, but
Shambaugh, who visits China frequently, writes that he has been unable
to find any genuine interest in the idea among scholars and ordinary
people. Some elites that he has encountered pretend to believe in this
new party line, but he can’t escape the conclusion “that the propaganda
had lost its power, and the emperor had no clothes.”
The fourth reason for a dim view of China’s prospects flows from and
further underlines the regime’s ideological bankruptcy. It is, as
Shambaugh writes, that “the corruption that riddles the party-state and
the military also pervades Chinese society as a whole.” Xi’s
anticorruption campaign has generated some popularity and has succeeded
in purging a number of potential political opponents. But it’s
ultimately futile since the problem of corruption remains rooted in the
closed Chinese political system, and any effort to make the system more
open and accountable would be blocked by powerful interests within the
establishment.
This brings us to Shambaugh’s fifth reason, which is that Xi has been
unable to make any progress on the ambitious package of economic
reforms he proposed at the party’s Third Plenum in 2013. The purpose of
the reform package was to enable China to address problems of rising
inequality and corruption and to become an innovative “knowledge
economy” able to compete in the global marketplace. Unlike earlier
reforms, such as Deng Xiaoping’s decollectivization of agriculture and
Hu Jintao’s reform of social security, the kinds of reforms that are
needed today—ending state monopolies in critical sectors, for example,
or giving the judiciary more independence—would encounter stiff
resistance from deeply entrenched interest groups and local party cadres
that want to preserve their privileges in the present system.
China, therefore, has reached an impasse. It cannot move forward on
the path of reform because of the threats this poses to the legitimacy
of the overseers of the status quo. And since the path forward is a
minefield of bureaucratic obstacles, there are prominent elements in the
leadership that want to tighten their hold on power and to take China
backwards toward greater repression and business cronyism.
Whether China is actually approaching
the crackup Shambaugh predicts is impossible to say. Youwei, a pseudonym
used by a scholar in China, writes in a recent issue of
Foreign Affairs
that while “authoritarian adaptation” has hit a wall, the regime has
built up its internal security apparatus to such an extent that “even as
grievances proliferate, the balance of power between the state and
society leans overwhelmingly toward the former.” Yet even the
pessimistic Youwei warns that “the regime has not developed a coherent,
contemporary ideological discourse to justify” the determination of
Communist Party officials to retain power despite the need for the
market economy to operate according to an “impersonal legal system.”
Even friends of the Chinese democracy movement differ on the
stability and resilience of the regime. Columbia political science
professor Andrew Nathan believes that Xi’s anticorruption campaign has
been politically effective because he cleverly targeted only a narrow
network of newly ascendant party and business leaders and has thus
received support from both the broad public and the “princelings,” the
powerful group that descends from the founding Communist leaders. But
Xiao Qiang, a UC Berkeley professor and founder of
China Digital Times,
doubts that Xi can succeed in the long run because his campaign exposes
how rotten the system is and therefore undermines the regime’s
legitimacy. Minxin Pei, director of the Keck Center for International
and Strategic Studies at Claremont McKenna College, sees the regime
caught in a Catch-22 situation: It’s impossible to root out corruption
“in a one-party system without press freedom, a robust civil society, or
the rule of law. Yet these are precisely the ‘Western values’ that the
CCP [Chinese Communist Party] apparatchiks are attempting to eliminate.”
We can’t know how the conflict between Xi’s assault on liberal values
and the economy’s need for accountability and the rule of law will play
out. But there is convincing evidence that the campaign of repression
has so far failed to achieve its objective of stifling civil society and
popular protest. Despite the crackdown, a major Freedom House report
titled “The Politburo’s Predicament: Confronting the Limitations of
Chinese Communist Party Repression,” finds that more people are joining
rights-defense activities, information is spreading despite censorship,
the fear of repression is waning, and the disillusionment with party
corruption is growing.
The labor activist Han Dongfang believes that there is actually now
more space than before for social-media platforms dealing with
“livelihood issues” like forced housing removal, landgrabs,
environmental damage, and labor disputes. He says that while the
politically sensitive word “strike” used to be inaccessible online, it
is now possible to link to stories on strikes and other “livelihood
issues” on social-media platforms like Baidu. He speculates that social
media platforms are “slowly opening up” because they offer the
government a way to get accurate information about what is happening on
the ground. The picture may not be as bright as Han suggests since the
space for advocacy NGOs is less than it is for those that deliver
services, as Jessica Teets points out in her study
Civil Society under Authoritarianism: The China Model.
But Han makes an important point nonetheless: that civil society
organizations are “becoming more permanent because they have gained
stronger support from the relevant social groups.”
He thinks this is especially true of labor NGOs that help workers
organize, engage in strikes, and establish collective bargaining
agreements. Among the many examples he gives to back up his hopeful
point of view was an incident just last month in Panyu, in the southern
city of Guangzhou, when more than a hundred workers at a shoe factory
met in a local restaurant to discuss bargaining strategy on social
insurance payments and compensation for contract termination. The
meeting, which was facilitated by the Panyu Dagongzu Workers’ Center,
elected 20 worker representatives, although while it was in progress,
100 uniformed police broke in and arrested all the representatives along
with the staff person from the workers’ center.
What followed is revealing. Within 10 minutes, news of the arrests
was on Weibo and WeChat with pictures of the police clashing with the
workers. Within an hour, several hundred workers from the shoe factory
were demonstrating in front of the local police branch demanding the
release of the 21 people arrested. Not only was their demand met almost
immediately, but the local government promised to arrange bargaining
meetings between the workers and their employer.
Han documents many similar incidents where workers have gone on
strike over grievances, after which the local population rallied to
their defense and the local authorities and police retreated, fearful of
triggering “the huge anger” of workers whose rights and dignity are
being systematically violated. For Han, the Chinese regime may seem
secure and stable on the surface, but in reality it is very vulnerable.
It is certainly true that China wields
growing power and influence on the international stage, where it flexes
its muscles economically and projects its growing military power in the
South China Sea and other regions. But the bulletproof image it projects
is undermined when it acts in a fearful and panicky way in the face of a
resilient civil society that can use social media to tap into popular
anger over corruption, environmental degradation, forced landgrabs, and
growing income inequality.
Thus, while the regime could hang on indefinitely, it faces growing
challenges and sharpening internal contradictions. It could probably
avert the kind of crackup that Shambaugh feels is coming if it decided
to engage in even a tenuous top-down process of gradual opening and
reform. Such a process might include giving the judiciary more
independence, strengthening the National People’s Congress so that it
can address fiscal issues, and introducing competition within the party
in conjunction with debate over policies to deal with the economy,
minorities, the environment, and other critical issues.
But no one believes that such an initiative, however hygienic it
might be for the status quo, will be possible because the hard-liners
are simply too entrenched and too determined to maintain their hold. So
the crackup Shambaugh foresees might very well happen at some point. But
even if it does, as recent history has shown us, the collapse of a
dictatorship is not the same thing as a democratic opening. Democracy
doesn’t inevitably follow after the fall of a dictatorship, especially
if the old regime has done nothing to prepare for a democratic
transition. Indeed, by repressing moderate forces, the Beijing regime is
virtually ensuring that instability and disorder will follow any
crackup that might occur. It’s quite ironic, therefore, that the regime
and its apologists in the West justify perpetuating the current system
by warning of the consequences of its collapse.
While we need to be aware of the dangers that may lie ahead, we
should not go along with the Chinese regime’s use of the fear of
disorder to scare off opposition or block efforts to achieve a real
democratic opening. No one knows what might happen in the event of a
crackup, and we should not underestimate the capacity of grassroots
social forces, in periods of instability and transition, to defend
democratic values.
What happened recently in Nigeria, Africa’s largest country, is
instructive. Many experts predicted that the presidential elections that
were held at the end of March would be stolen by the ruling party, and
that the ensuing crisis would lead to violence and possibly even civil
war. But civil society mobilized massively to support a fair and
peaceful democratic process, and tens of thousands of citizen
journalists used social media to broadcast the voting results
instantaneously to the people, making it exceedingly difficult for
political leaders to commit fraud. And so to everyone’s surprise, the
elections were not stolen. The opposition party won, the election result
was respected, and conflict was avoided. Because citizens acted, a
possible catastrophe turned into a step forward for democracy. People
didn’t fear change. They acted to defend democracy.
And that is what civil society in China must continue to do, despite
the harsh repression it faces. It has the dual task of pressing for a
democratic opening and preparing for a period of uncertain change that
may lie ahead. Democracy activists can prepare for the future by staying
engaged in the present, learning by doing, and using their current
struggles to build networks of cooperation that can give citizen
movements the political and organizational capacity to influence events
as they unfold. The key task for activists in exile is to help build
international coalitions of solidarity for the democratic movement on
the mainland.
Groups working to defend the rights of China’s Tibetan, Uighur, and
Mongolian minorities have a common interest with Chinese democracy
activists in building a broad, pluralist, and unified pro-democracy
movement. Democratic unity will help the minorities overcome their
isolation, and it will also be a way for them to demonstrate that their
goal is not “splittism,” as the regime claims, but a defense of their
ethnic, linguistic, and religious rights. For Chinese activists and
intellectuals who are challenging the legitimacy of one-party rule and
the centralization of power in the Communist Party, supporting autonomy
for the ethnic minorities is a way to affirm the importance of political
pluralism and the decentralization of power. It will also be a way to
challenge the hard-line nationalism that the regime has sought to gin up
to compensate for its ideological bankruptcy. Not least, it will
challenge the double standard that allows China to escape international
criticism even as it commits cultural genocide against its non-Han
minorities. If China is given a free hand by the international community
to repress its minorities, it will not be possible to mount a
meaningful international campaign against its crackdown on dissidents,
workers, lawyers, and others who are fighting for basic human rights for
all the people in China.
President Xi will visit the United States in September. Groups
working for human and minority rights in China ought to consider using
the occasion to press for change. Why shouldn’t these groups develop
their own Magnitsky List (by which the US has sanctioned Russian
officials responsible for the death of lawyer Sergei Magnitsky and other
crimes) that would name Chinese officials who are involved in gross
human rights abuses. Such a list could be shared with the Obama
administration and members of Congress prior to Xi’s visit, with the
recommendation that anyone whose name appears on it should, at bare
minimum, not be part of the official delegation that will be
accompanying Xi to Washington.
The struggle for democracy in China will be fought and won from
within. But in our wired and connected world, there is much that can be
done from the outside to help those who are on the front lines of that
movement. They’ve earned international support by withstanding a harsh
campaign of political repression. Their struggle gives heart and hope to
others in Asia and around the world who are fighting for basic rights
and freedoms. We give them heart and hope by letting them know that they
are not alone.
Carl Gershman is the president of the National Endowment for
Democracy. This article is based on an address he delivered on April 28,
2015, to the 10th InterEthnic/InterFaith Leadership
Conference on China. It was completed for the Summer issue of the
journal and published early online on June 4, 2015.
China’s Communist Party: We Will Rule Forever
Last
Thursday, a senior authority antiquarian said China's decision
association can stay in force inconclusively. "The Communist Party has
assembled China to what it is today," said Li Zhongjie to a crowd of
people of Chinese scholastics and columnists. "Numerous nations on the
planet are amazingly desirous. So why wouldn't we be able to bear on?"
Toward
the start of this current year, all investigators concurred with Li. We
were guaranteed that the gathering was versatile, foresighted, and
solid.
Presently, there is uncertainty as the
worldwide story is starting to change. There are numerous purposes
behind the reappraisal, and a significant number of them begin with the
economy, now the world's second biggest. China's economy, to put it
plainly, is falling apart. Monetary development is abating quick in the
meantime expansion is quickening. Also, pretty much every onlooker is
concerned that high as can be property estimations, not bolstered by
monetary essentials, will crumple. Monetary disappointment or maybe even
simply moderate development will uncover the profound deficiency lines
in Chinese society.
Why? Everybody says the party's
authenticity is basically in light of the ceaseless conveyance of
flourishing. There is little else to support the decision association,
which will check its 90th commemoration on July 1st. The Communists no
more have the capacity to rouse and instruct. They have lost the vast
majority of their ethical authenticity and stay in force just through
progressively coercive measures. We ought not be astounded, along these
lines, that the nation is, right now, being disturbed by shows, uproars,
and bombings.
As society is turning out to be
considerably more unpredictable, the Communist Party is losing its
lucidness. Veteran China watcher Willy Lam has as of late noticed that
the association is coming back to Mao-like subjects, advanced by the
party's "hot battle to revive Maoist values."
While
senior gathering pioneers think back, they neglect to manage the
difficulties of the present or satisfactorily appreciate the issues
without bounds. They are no more thinking deliberately or even long
haul. The South China Morning Post's Wang Xiangwei as of late let us
know that the gathering is presently responsive, lurching starting with
one debacle then onto the next, its activities driven by an "exceptional
emergency driven policymaking procedure."
The
nation's rulers stay in force on the grounds that they blue pencil,
detain, and curb. Yet a degenerate, discretionary, and unreliable
administration knows it could lose control soon. That is the reason Li
and kindred authorities demand letting us know they will lead until the
end of time.
Li needs to take in a little Chinese
history. "I am sovereign, my relatives will be various," said Qin
Shihuang, China's first magnificent ruler. "From the second era to the
ten thousandth, my line won't end." Qin's line finished somewhat more
than two years after he passed on.
Is China’s One-Party State on the Brink?
“We
can't anticipate when Chinese socialism will crumple," composes David
Shambaugh in an article in Saturday's Wall Street Journal, "however it
is hard not to infer that we are seeing its last stage."
The
George Washington University educator is known in the worldwide
China-watching group as having close binds to the Communist Party of
China. In his article, titled "The Coming Chinese Crackup," he specifies
going to a meeting at the Central Party School in Beijing last December
and having different contacts with units and authorities. He was as of
late named one of America's main 20 China watchers by China Foreign
Affairs University, which is partnered with China's Ministry of Foreign
Affairs.
Shambaugh's turnaround—he is surely
understood for works recommending China's one-gathering state is
stable—has gotten the consideration of the world's China watchers.
Listserves dedicated to that nation are examining little else, and he
has obviously maddened Beijing. Worldwide Times, the patriot paper
controlled by People's Daily, issued a strident piece invalidating
Shambaugh on Monday.
Why does Shambaugh accept we are
seeing the "endgame of Chinese comrade guideline"? He alludes to five
"telling evidences of the administration's defenselessness and the
party's systemic shortcomings." Included in the rundown are escaping
elites, strengthened political constraint, absence of unit excitement,
and a rapidly disintegrating economy.
And afterward
there is dishonesty. Quite recently, political researchers and others
believed China's Communist Party was durable and even trusted its
undeniable illnesses really constituted qualities. Case in point,
numerous, particularly in the scholastic group, contended its endemic
defilement helped keep the political framework together, giving
authorities a direct budgetary stake in supporting the continuation of
the administration. Shambaugh's paper, then again, incorporates
debasement as one of the lethal five imperfections and highlights
another pattern in considering: It is an association so screwy it can't
make due for long.
Lately there has been a whirlwind
of expounding on the long haul prospects of the Chinese one-gathering
state. Early a month ago, Pentagon counselor Michael Pillsbury
discharged his book, The Hundred-Year Marathon, painting a photo of a
sturdy autocracy, yet a considerable lot of the other late commitments
depict the Chinese administration at the end of its life. One showed up
in the Journal, Michael Auslin's "The Twilight of China's Communist
Party," and another on the National Interest's site, "Doomsday:
Preparing for China's Collapse," by Peter Mattis of the Jamestown
Foundation.
Some of Shambaugh's kindred scholastics
are getting in on the go about also. For example, Chen Dingding of the
University of Macau penned "Sad, America: China Is NOT Going to
Collapse," an expansive assault on the George Washington teacher's
paper, additionally for the National Interest's site.
China
has constantly posed a potential threat in the creative ability,
however now the nation is starting to look frail, not the "relentless
juggernaut" that should overwhelm the world and own the century.
China's
comrade framework, even in the alleged change period, appeared to
resist standards of administration and financial matters saw far and
wide. As of not long ago, then again, the Chinese state has been powered
in vast measure by certainty, both inside and outside its fringes.
Shambaugh's paper lets us know that numerous who have been watching—and
cheering—the nation's climb now see it at
How Anti-Japan Protests in China Spell Trouble for Communist Party
21 August 2012
Throughout
the weekend, against Japanese dissents ejected in real urban
communities crosswise over China. The boisterous shows took after the
arrival of 14 activists who had cruised to Uotsurishima, one of the
islands of the Senkaku chain in the East China Sea. Seven of them landed
and planted a Chinese hail on August 15th, the 67thanniversary of
Japan's surrender in the Second World War. Tokyo ousted the gatecrashers
two days after the fact, subsequent to Beijing requested their
discharge.
The Senkakus, called the Diaoyus by China,
have been at the focal point of a progression of episodes between the
two countries in the most recent quite a long while. The US gave back
the islands to Japan in 1972, a year after China laid a case to them.
Already, Beijing had, basically, recognized Japanese sway.
Japan's
arrival of the Chinese activists had appeared to end the most recent
discussion, which debilitated to turn terrible after state media had
stirred pressures. At the point when the activists were en route to the
islands a week ago, the Global Times, controlled by the Communist
Party's People's Daily, ran a publication expressing China would need to
send warships if Japan halted the Chinese. Before long, People's Daily
itself entered the quarrel with a provocative discourse pushing China's
utilization of power.
Numerous Chinese, wherever they
may live, clearly review Japanese unlawful acts against China in the
first a large portion of the most recent century, and these disposition
have been gone down from folks to youngsters. In the People's Republic
of China, then again, the Communist Party has regulated this procedure.
Particularly since the mid 1990s, powers have supported contempt of
Japan with tenacious influence in the schools and unremitting publicity
in the public arena.
It is not astonishing, in this
way, that the shows this weekend mirrored a terrible patriotism. Images
of Japan, as Japanese autos, were harmed alongside Japanese-themed
stores. One dissent standard shouted, "Regardless of the fact that China
is secured with graves, we must execute all Japanese."
The
Japanese, in any case, are not by any means the only ones who must be
stressed over the instability in Chinese society. In China's past,
against Japan showings have turned hostile to government. The reason is
basic: the legislature does not permit challenges against its manage, so
the Chinese take to the avenues against the main allowed target:
nonnatives. Annoyance, on the other hand, is difficult to direct
uncertainly.
The Chinese government is an expert of
containing well known discontent. The powers this weekend generally let
the road challenges run their course, and numerous China watchers accept
annoyance will rapidly cool as individuals get done with venting
feelings. The weekend articulation of hostile to Japan estimation, most
foresee, will soon be overlooked.
The gathering, on
the other hand, is making the conditions for further aggravations. First
off, it is doing little to assuage weight in the public eye, avoiding
both major rebuilding and even restorative change. Chinese pioneers,
specifically, are permitting defilement to come up short on control.
In
the meantime, Beijing keeps on inciting Japan. It's not clear whether
China's authorities were behind the cruising of the activists, who had
left from Hong Kong, however Beijing is guaranteeing proceeding with
precariousness by expanding its own particular examining of the
Senkakus. As Major General Luo Yuan said a week ago, as he communicated
opinions common in government hovers, "Next time we ought to send 100
watercrafts to the Diaoyu Islands."
We are bound,
thusly, to see more Chinese incitements against Japan and more hostile
to Japan road dissents in China. Also, later on, amid one of those
unsettling influences, that anger in the public arena could be
coordinated against the Communist Party itself.