NPC
highlights China’s problems
S P
SETH
That there are problems with China’s rapid economic growth has been
known for some years. After double-digit growth rates over many years in the
past, China is now settling for single-digit growth. Last year it was 7.4 per
cent, said to be the slowest in more than two decades. This year, as announced
by Premier Li Keqiang, it would be “about 7 per cent”, half-a-percent down from
last year’s aspiration of “about 7.5 percent”, and a “new normal” for the
Chinese economy. Speaking at the annual session of the National People’s
Congress (NPC), Li was quite candid about the problems facing China’s economy,
even though its growth rate would still remain the envy of many countries. In
his annual report card, he said, “With downward pressure on China’s economy
building and deep-seated problems in development surfacing, the difficulties we
are to encounter in the years[s] ahead may be more formidable than those of
last year.”
After Mao Zedong’s death in 1976 and the end of the Great Cultural
Revolution, which turned China upside down during the sixties and into the
seventies, China was set on a high growth trajectory during the eighties under
Deng Xiaoping as China’s new helmsman. Despite the great convulsion of the
students-led democracy movement of 1989, put down by the army, Deng managed to
keep the ship of the state on an even keel committed to keep the economy
growing and to transform China into a strong country. In the process, he was
prepared to discard communist ideology to favour capitalist growth but under
the tight political control of the Communist Party of China (CPC). And he
didn’t mind if this made some people rich and increased the rich-poor gap. It
also greatly widened the gap between coastal regions as the favoured
development zones and the interior of the country, as well as between urban and
rural areas. Everything else was subordinated to the economic growth index.
In the process, over the years, such high-speed industrial
development led to all sorts of problems. The growth of urban industrial
centres encouraged developers and their party backers to virtually expropriate
rural lands on the outskirts of overlapping boundaries, with nominal or very
little compensation causing social tensions. Of course, such developments led
to a tremendous boom in real estate prices, making developers very rich and
contributing to a bubble/bust situation. So much so that some of these
apartments and estates have no buyers because of the their high price tags.
Another serious problem from such high-speed development has been
the plague of corruption from highest to low levels of the party and
bureaucracy. President Xi Jinping has made the eradication of corruption as his
crusade, and some high rollers in the party have become its victims. It
sometimes has the look of a political purge and is causing some fear in the
party ranks and among associated people, like relatives and cronies occupying
cozy and powerful positions in state monopolies. And it is also said to extend
to the military. But the high-pitched anti-corruption drive seems to go well
with people who have been sick of everything goes in the system. Talking of
corruption, Premier Li said in his NPC report, “Shocking cases of corruption
still exist. Some government officials are neglectful of their duties, holding
on to their jobs while failing to fulfill their responsibilities.”
As China’s pollution levels having been rising, environment has
emerged as an important public policy and health issue. Premier Li duly touched
on it in his report when he told the NPC delegates that, “Environmental
pollution is a blight on people’s quality of life and a trouble that weighs on
their hearts.” China’s cities, like Beijing, are blanketed with smog and one often
sees people wearing masks to minimize its health dangers. China’s acute
environmental problem is largely due to the overriding primacy of development
over other considerations and failure to devise a comprehensive integrated
national policy factoring in other factors. But China is not the only culprit
in this regard. It has been, like other developing countries, a late starter in
economic development when enough damage had already been done to the
environment due to industrial development in, what are now called, developed
countries.
But there are indications that China is now taking environmental
pollution seriously. A recent joint announcement with the US on addressing
climate change suggested that China’s carbon emissions should peak by 2030,
starting a downward process from then on. It will increasingly reduce the use
of fossil fuels like coal, cut energy intensity, expand trials for trading in
carbon emissions, use non-fossil fuels like solar, and further expand its
nuclear energy sector. The environmental pollution is of great public concern.
A documentary on the subject, Under the Dome, on China’s catastrophic smog went
viral on the internet viewed by many millions before it was ordered to be
removed for fear of “hyping” up people’s concerns. Indeed, before it was
ordered to be withdrawn, the documentary won praise from China’s new
environment minister, Chen Jining. He also said that China faced an
“unprecedented conflict between development and environment.” Despite internet
censoring of the documentary, President XI appears serious on the issue of
climate change. He reportedly said the other day that China would punish “with
an iron hand any violators who destroy ecology or environment, with no
exceptions.” How successful and how soon environment would become an important
determinant of China’s overall development priority would remain to be seen.
An important element of China’s modernization and building a strong
country has been, and is, an emphasis on modernizing and expanding its defence
forces. There are two reasons for this. First, China is seared by historical
memory of its humiliation at the hands of, first, the west and then Japan. The
two opium wars imposed on China by the British in the 19th century
are an illustrative example of the first. And Japan carried on its depredations
through the thirties and during WW11. And now that China is strong it is
determined to not let this happen again. But the flip side is that Beijing not
only wants to be militarily strong to defend itself but it also wants to turn
Asia-Pacific region into its regional enclave as, it believes, it was
historically when China was the centre of the world.
And this is creating a lot of tension with its neighbours over sovereignty
of some of the disputed islands in South China Sea and East China Sea. China is
determined to hold its ground and has been increasing its defence budget by
double-digit figures over several years now. Officially, China’s defence budget
last year was $132 billion, the second largest after the United States where it
is inching towards $600 billion. Justifying such rise, a spokeswoman for the
NPC said, “As a large country, China needs the military strength to be able to
protect its national security and people.”
All in all, the picture that emerged from the NPC session is of a
country, led by the Communist Party of China under its general secretary Xi
Jinping, who is also President of the
country, confident of steering the ship of the nation to revive China’s ancient
glory. The important question is: will its neighbours accept China’s version of
its history and geostrategic vision? That might be examined some other time.
Note: this article first appeared in the Daily Times.
Contact: sushilpseth@yahoo.com.au
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