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The Waking Dragon. China’s Role in the Global Economy. Old Ways New Methods. The development of a centralised government after the Revolution of 1949 allowed the Chinese government to create a coherent focus of effort in modernisation.
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The Waking Dragon China’s Role in the Global Economy
Old Ways New Methods • The development of a centralised government after the Revolution of 1949 allowed the Chinese government to create a coherent focus of effort in modernisation. • In ancient China this occurred under the Qin who standardised trade and created a state bureaucracy. • This bureaucracy subsequently ossified and was not able to adapt to the encroachment of American and Europeans in the 1800s.
Initially, the Communists wanted to “modernise” China through agrarian reform • Wealthy landlords etc. lost their lands which were re-divided to individual farmers who often worked them for generations. • Open Marxist political ideologies were rare. • The shift to open communism occurs in late 1953
The Great Leap Forward • The GLF was a term used by anthropologists and historians to describe the rapid development of agriculture technology and domestication of animals that allowed humans to thrive. • In Communist China, the GLF was the push for the Chinese Communist Party to create a similar effect in modernisation of China’s agricultural economy. • In 1953 Mao instituted a Stalinist 4 Year Plan • This was the first of 5 Plans. • In manufacturing and industrialisation they were successful • Industrial output increased by 15 – 18% of the first decade. • In 1957 Mao announced the GLF • Agriculturally, they were a disaster overall leading to the death of millions through starvation c. 30 million or 5% of the total population. • During this period (1957 - 1961) China experienced negative growth in its economy
A New Era • In 1976 the founder of Communist China Mao Zedong died • Leadership shifted to less orthodox Communists led by Deng Xiaoping • Deng had been a life long communist but was more pragmatic than the intellectual Mao. • He saw the need to adhere to all elements of Marxism • More willing to develop economic ties to the West • Helped create “Special Economic Zones” in some southern cities • The SEZs were enclaves of capitalism that were open to western investment and development. • Reminiscent to the Compound System imposed on the Europeans in the 1700s.
A New Industrialism • Under the leadership of Deng the traditional centralising practices were scaled back. • Individual farmers, producers were allowed to sell privately any surpluses beyond established state quotas • This lead to opening up manufacturing to the same principles that eventually led to actual ownership by the managers. • Despite all this by the late 1990s there were still 75,000 state run business’ in China • ½ were not turning a profit
Emerging Power • Since the 1990s China’s economy has grown by approximately 10% every year. • The government wanted to quadruple the nations economy within 25 years. • It was accomplished within 20 years. • It is currently the second largest industrial producer in the world. • Life expectancy has risen from 35 years (b4 1949) to 65 years (1970s)
Real Numbers and the Cost • While China is rapidly modernising, the statistics can be misleading or misinterpreted. • While the GDP per capita has risen from $200 to $1700 today it means that as an average income China ranks 130 in the world (out of 280+ nations). • Rural China is depopulating and is left out of the development. • Low wages and work conditions for most workers. • Rapid growth makes it hard for the government to regulate it, which it sometimes does. • Piracy • Rapid growth is maintained at the expense of environmental assessments or considerations. • Economic gain occurs with little / not political gain. • One party state voted on by small minority. • Internet access is restricted. • Political dissent is suppressed. • Freedom of speech is not accepted.
Bibliography • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Leap_Forward • “A Primer on the Chinese Economy”, http://worldsavvy.org/monitor/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=157:a-primer-on-the-chinese-economy&catid=72:special-section&Itemid=174 • Maurice Meisner, “The 1949 Revolution Reconsidered”, Current History, September 1999. p. 243 – 248. • Edward S. Stenfeld, “Beyond the Transition: China’s Economy at Century’s End”, Current History, September 1999. p. 271 – 275.