Internal divisions
and the Chinese stimulus plan
|

Chinese
Presidetn Hu Jintao
and Premier Wen jiabao |
By Rodger Baker and Jennifer Richmond
Due in
large part to fears of dire consequences if nothing were
done to tackle the economic crisis,
China
rushed through a 4 trillion yuan (US$586 billion)
economic stimulus package in November 2008. The plan
cobbled together existing and new initiatives focused on
massive infrastructure development projects (designed,
among other things, to soak up surplus steel, cement and
labour capacity), tax cuts, green energy programmes, and
rural development.
Ever
since the package was passed in November, Beijing has
recited the mantra of the need to shift
China's
economy from its heavy dependence on exports to one more
driven by domestic consumption. But now that the sense
of immediate crisis has passed, the stimulus policies
are being rethought - and in an unusual development for
China, they are being vigorously debated in the Chinese
media.
Debating the Stimulus Package
In a
country where media restrictions are tightening and
private commentary on government officials and actions
in blogs and on-line forums is being curtailed, it is
quite remarkable that major Chinese newspaper editorials
are taking the lead in questioning aspects of the
stimulus package.
The
question of stimulating rural consumption versus
focusing the stimulus on the more economically active
coastal regions has been the subject of particularly
fierce debate. Some editorials have argued that
encouraging rural consumption at a time of higher
unemployment is building a bigger problem for the
future. This argument maintains that rural labourers,
particularly migrant workers, earn only a small amount
of money, and that while having them spend their meager
savings now might keep gross domestic product up in the
short term, it will drain the laborers' reserves and
create a bigger social problem down the road. Others
argue that the migrant and rural populations are
underdeveloped and incapable of sustained spending, and
that pumping stimulus yuan into the countryside is a
misallocation of money that could be better spent
supporting the urban middle class, in theory creating
jobs through increased middle-class consumption of
services.
The
lack of restrictions on these types of discussions
suggests that the debate is occurring with government
approval, in a reflection of debates within the
Communist Party of China (CPC) and the government
itself. Despite debate in the Chinese press,
Beijing
continues to present a unified public face on the
handling of the economic crisis, regardless of internal
factional debates. Maintaining party control remains the
primary goal of Party officials; even if they disagree
over policies, they recognise the importance of showing
that the Party remains in charge.
But,
as the dueling editorial pages reveal, the Party is not
unified in its assessment of the economic crisis or the
recovery programme. The show of unity masks a power
struggle raging between competing interests within the
Party. In many ways, this is not a new struggle; there
are always officials jockeying for power for themselves
and for their -proteges. But the depth of the economic
crisis in China and the rising fears of social unrest,
not only from the migrant labourers, but also from
militants or separatists in Tibet and Xinjiang and from
"hostile forces" like the Falun Gong, pro-Democracy
advocates and foreign intelligence services, have added
urgency to long-standing debates over economic and
social policies.
In
China, decision-making falls to the president and the
premier, currently Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao
respectively. They do not wield the power of past
leaders like Mao Zedong or Deng Xiaoping, however, and
instead are much more reliant on balancing competing
interests than on dictating policy.
Party and government factions
Hu and
Wen face numerous factions among the Chinese elite. Many
officials are considered parts of several different
factional affiliations based on age, background,
education or family heritage. Boiled down, the struggle
over the stimulus plan pits two competing views of the
core of the Chinese economy. One sees economic strength
and social stability centered on China's massive rural
population, while another sees
China's
strength and future in the coastal urban areas, in
manufacturing and global trade.
Two
key figures in the Standing Committee of the Politburo
(the center of political power in
China),
Vice President Xi Jinping and Vice Premier Li Keqiang,
highlight this struggle. These two are considered the
core of the fifth-generation leadership, and have been
tapped to succeed Hu and Wen as
China's
next leaders. They also represent radically different
backgrounds.
Li is
a protege of Hu and rose from the China Youth League,
where Hu has built a strong support base. Li represents
a newer generation of Chinese leaders, educated in
economics and trained in less-developed provinces. (Li
held key positions in Henan and Liaoning provinces.) Xi,
on the other hand, is a "princeling." The son of a
former vice premier, he trained as an engineer and
served primarily in the coastal export-oriented areas,
including Hebei, Fujian and Zhejiang provinces and
Shanghai.
In a
way, Li and Xi represent different proposals for China's
economic recovery and future. Li is a stronger supporter
of the recentralisation of economic control sought by Hu,
a weakening of the regional economic power bases, and a
focus on consolidating Chinese industry in a centrally
planned manner while spending government money on rural
development and urbanisation of China's interior. Xi
represents the view followed by former President Jiang
Zemin and descended from the policies of Deng. Under
that view, economic activity and growth should be
encouraged and largely freed from central direction, and
if the coastal provinces grow first and faster, that is
just fine; eventually the money, technology and
employment will move inland.
Inland vs. the Coast
In
many ways, these two views reflect long-standing
economic arguments in China namely, the constant
struggle to balance the coastal trade-based economy and
the interior agriculture-dominated economy.
The
former is smaller but wealthier, with stronger ties
abroad and therefore more political power to lobby for
preferential treatment. The latter is much larger, but
more isolated from the international community - and in
Chinese history, frequently the source of instability
and revolt in times of stress. These tensions have
contributed to the decline of dynasties in centuries
past, opening the space for foreign interference in
Chinese internal politics. China's leaders are well
aware of the constant stresses between rural and coastal
China, but maintaining a balance has been an ongoing
struggle.
Throughout Chinese history, there is a repeating pattern
of dynastic rise and decline. Dynasties start strong and
powerful, usually through conquest. They then
consolidate power and exert strong control from the
center. But due to the sheer size of
China's
territory and population, maintaining central control
requires the steady expansion of a bureaucracy that
spreads from the center through the various
administrative divisions down to the local villages.
Over time, the bureaucracy itself begins to usurp power,
as its serves as the collector of taxes, distributor of
government funds and local arbiter of policy and rights.
And as the bureaucracy grows stronger, the center
weakens.
Regional differences in population, tax base and
economic models start to fragment the bureaucracy,
leading to economic (and at times military) fiefdoms.
This triggers a strong response from the center as it
tries to regain control. Following a period of
instability, which often involves foreign interference
and/or intervention, a new center is formed, once again
exerting strong centralised authority.
Cycle
This
cycle played out in the mid-1600s, as the Ming Dynasty
fell into decline and the Manchus (who took on the
moniker Qing) swept in to create a new centralized
authority. It played out again as the Qing Dynasty
declined in the latter half of the 1800s and ultimately
was replaced - after an extended period of instability -
by the CPC in 1949, ushering in another period of strong
centralised control. Once again, a more powerful
regional bureaucracy is testing that centralized
control.
The
economic reforms initiated by Deng Xiaoping at the end
of the 1970s led to a three-decade decline of central
authority, as economic decision-making and power
devolved to the regional and local leadership and the
export-oriented coastal provinces became the center of
economic activity and power in China. Attempts by the
central government to regain some authority over the
direction of coastal authorities were repeatedly
ignored, but so long as there was growth in
China
and relative social stability, this was tolerated.
With
Hu's rise to power, however, there was a new push from
the center to rein in the worst of excesses by the
coastal leaders and business interests and refocus
attention on
China's
rural population, which was growing increasingly
disenfranchised due to the widening urban-rural economic
gap.
In
2007 and early 2008, Hu finally gained traction with his
economic policies. The Chinese government subsequently
sought to slow an overheating economy while focusing on
the consolidation of industry and the establishment of
"super ministries" at the center to coordinate economic
activity. It also intended to put inland rural interests
on par with, if not above, coastal urban interests. When
the super ministries were formed in 2008, however, it
became apparent that Hu was not omnipotent. Resistance
to his plans was abundantly evident, illustrating the
power of the entrenched bureaucratic interests.
Economic Crisis and the Stimulus Plan
The
economic programme of recentralisation and the attempt
to slow the overheating economy came to a screeching
halt in July 2008, as skyrocketing commodity prices
fueled inflation and strained government budgets. The
first victim was China's yuan policy. The steady,
relatively predictable appreciation of the yuan came to
a stop. Its value stagnated, and there is now pressure
for a slight depreciation to encourage exports. But as
Beijing
began shaping its economic stimulus package, it became
clear that the programme would be a mix of policies,
representing differing factions seeking to secure their
own interests in the recovery plan.
The
emerging programme, then, revealed conflicting interests
and policies. Money and incentives were offered to feed
the low-skill export industry (located primarily in the
southeastern coastal provinces) as well as to encourage
a shift in production from the coast to the interior. A
drive was initiated to reduce redundancies, particularly
in heavy industries, and at the same time funding was
increased to keep those often-bloated industrial sectors
afloat.
Overall, the stimulus represents a collection of
competing initiatives, reflecting the differences among
the factions. Entrenched princelings simply want to keep
money moving and employment levels up in anticipation of
a resurgence in global consumption and the
revitalisation of the export-based economic growth path.
Meanwhile, the rural faction seeks to accelerate
economic restructuring, reduce dependence on the
export-oriented coastal provinces, and move economic
activity and attention to the vastly underdeveloped
interior.
Higher
unemployment among the rural labour force is "proving"
each faction's case. To the princelings, it shows the
importance of the export sector in maintaining social
stability and economic growth. To the rural faction, it
emphasizes the dangers of over reliance on a thin
coastal strip of cheap, low-skill labour and a widening
wealth gap.
Fighting it out in the media
With
conflicting paths now running in tandem, competing Party
officials are seeking traction and support for their
programmes without showing division within the core
party apparatus by turning to a traditional method: the
media and editorials. During the Cultural Revolution,
which itself was a violent debate about the fundamental
economic policies of the People's Republic of China, the
Party core appeared united, despite major divisions. The
debate played out not in the halls of the National
People's Congress or in press statements, but instead in
big-character posters plastered around Beijing and other
cities, promoting competing policies and criticising
others.
In
modern China, big posters are a thing of the past,
replaced by newspaper editorials. While the Party center
appears united in this time of economic crisis, the
divisions are seen more acutely in the competing
editorials published in state and local newspapers and
on influential blogs and web discussion forums. It is
here that the depth of competition and debate so well
hidden among the members of the politburo can be seen,
and it is here that it becomes clear the Chinese are no
more united in their policy approach than the leaders of
more democratic countries, where policy debates are more
public.
The
current political crisis has certainly not reached the
levels of the Cultural Revolution, and China no longer
has a Mao, or even a Deng to serve as a single pole
around which to wage factional struggles. The current
leadership is much more attuned to the need to cooperate
and compromise and even Mao's methods would often
include opportunities for "wayward" officials to come
around and cooperate with Mao's plans.
But a
recognition of the need to cooperate, and an agreement
that the first priority is maintenance of the Party as
the sole core of Chinese power (followed closely by the
need to maintain social stability to ensure the primary
goal), doesn't guarantee that things can't get out of
control.
Critical
The
sudden halt to various economic initiatives in July 2008
showed just how critical the emerging crisis was. If
commodity prices had not started slacking off a month
later, the political crisis in Beijing might have gotten
much more intense. Despite competition, the various
factions want the Party to remain in power as the sole
authority, but their disagreements on how to do this
become much clearer during a crisis. Currently, it is
the question of China's migrant labour force and the
potential for social unrest that is both keeping the
Party center united and causing the most confrontation
over the best-path policies to be pursued. If the
economic stimulus package fails to do its job, or if
external factors leave China lagging and social problems
rising, the internal party fighting could once again
grow intense.
At
present, there is a sense among China's leaders that
this crisis is manageable. If their attitude once again
shifts to abject fear, the question may be less about
how to compromise on economic strategy than how to stop
a competing faction from bringing ruin to Party and
country through ill-thought-out policies. Compromise is
acceptable when it means the survival of the Party, but
if one faction views the actions of another as
fundamentally detrimental to the authority and strength
of the Party, then a more active and decisive struggle
becomes the ideal choice. After all, it is better to
remove a gangrenous limb than to allow the infection to
spread and kill the whole organism.
That
crisis is not now upon China's leaders, but things
nearly reached that level last summer. There were
numerous rumours from Beijing that Wen, who is
responsible for China's economic policies, was going to
be sacked - an extreme move given his popularity with
the common Chinese. This was staved off or delayed by
the fortuitous timing of the rest of the global economic
contraction, which brought commodity prices down. For
now, China's leaders will continue issuing competing and
occasionally contradictory policies, and just as
vigorously debating them through the nation's
editorials. The government is struggling with resolving
the current economic crisis, as well as with the
fundamental question of just what a new Chinese economy
will look like. And that question goes deeper than
money: It goes to the very role of the CPC in China's
system.
