What Does General Secretary Xi Jinping Dream About? Tony Saich Canon Institute October 3, 2016

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Transcription:

What Does General Secretary Xi Jinping Dream About? Tony Saich Canon Institute October 3, 2016 1

China s Rise Clearly is reshaping geopolitics Two general features are important 1) world s largest economy will not be a Western nation, and with a different set of values and institutions Gives rise to discussions about the need for challenge and containment from the US 2) For the first time, the world s largest economy will not be the one that enjoys the highest living standards and quality of life Gives some hope to those favoring engagement These two views have been refected in the Presidential campaign 2

Topics for Discussion 1) What does General Secretary Xi dream about? 2) Is it realistic or is it a nightmare? Is China s economic growth sustainable 3) Three scenarios for China s future 3

Political Priorities Xi has proved adept at accumulating power and dominating the political discourse Will he be able to use this power effectively to force through his economic priorities? New leadership exudes a confidence that has been lacking since Deng Xiaoping The overriding priority is to retain the CCP s political power BUT, this is not a sufficient explanation what does he intend to do with the power he has accumulated? In key respects, Xi has decided to break away from the existing norms and rules. Restore people s faith in the CCP by reducing pomp, circumstance and extravagant waste by officials and launching a major campaign against corruption in CCP and government ranks 4

Six Political Priorities 1)Promotion of traditional Chinese culture (especially Confucianism )to boost legitimacy 2) However, continued stress on Marxism and work in the ideological and theoretical sphere 3) More frugal approach to government work and entertainment 4) Stepped up fight against corruption that has moved beyond factional struggle 5) Stronger control over state and society 6) Vigorous defense of sovereignty 5

Reviving Confucius 6

But renewed stress on the study of Marxism 7

What to Eat 8

What to Drink Often called China's national liquor, Maotai is often served to distinguished guests 9

And Certainly not this 10

Anti Corruption to boost legitimacy and remove rivals 11

Stronger Control over State and Society 12

Promotion of Nationalism and More Assertive Territorial Claims 13

Economic Priorities for China US and Chinese analysts share the same starting point. Past model no longer viable Xi Jinping (9/22/2-15) need to address successfully the problem of unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable growth. Need to shift the growth model. Liu Shijin, former VM of the Development Research Center, the end has come to the period of purely quantitative expansion and of extensive cultivation for meagre returns. Priorities laid out at the 3 rd Plenum of the 18 th Central Committee (November 2013) A) Shift to consumption as key driver to achieve balanced and sustainable growth the new normal B) Greater use of the market. But the state will still dominate over the market C) Reduction of the role of state-owned enterprises and boost small and medium enterprises. But Xi still clearly sees SOEs as the pillar of CCP rule. D) Emphasis on financial sector reform Desired sequencing: clear up too big to fail state-owned banks; exchange rate reform; interest rate liberalization; capital account convertibility; RMB internationalization 14

Priorities for Hu Jintao-Wen Jiabao 1 Restructure drivers of growth 2 Reduce role of SOEs and boost private sector 3 More sustainable development 4 Reduce corruption 5 Make growth more equitable 6 Reduce administrative interference in the economy Issues are well understood but flexibility is reducing as power of vested interests is rising 15

Will Xi Realize his Dream? A more confident and stronger leader Created a vehicle to push through reforms Central leading group on comprehensively deepening reforms. Set up at lower levels of government. Challenges: Are there too many priorities? Sixty in the Decision, can allow local leaders to pick and choose Resistance of vested interests Reform has produced strong winners and a) the proposed economic reforms challenge their interests and b) the anti-corruption campaign paralyzes those local officials that Xi must rely on to push forward reform at the local level Is there a trade off between economic growth and environmental degradation? External barriers Depends on the general health of the global economy And how other countries respond to China s continued growth 16

A Middle Income trap? Lou Jiwei (May 2015) China has a 50-50 chance of sliding into the middle-income trap in the next 5-10 years Pritchett and Summers rejected idea of a middle income trap and state that it is growth reverting to the mean. Past performance less of a guide to future trends. Income is a poor predictor of growth slowdowns Rapid growth a more powerful predictor of slowdown than income level For China: they see a significant risk of a major growth slowdown at some point in the next decade Rapid growth cannot be taken for granted 17

The Quality of Institutions and Economic Growth South Korea and Taiwan success not longer attributed to the absence of state regulation and interventions But rather the specific nature of them: a high degree of state intervention but one which provided a framework for competition Does China have the necessary institutions for constraint? China and Vietnam have good institutions for their level of economic growth and has allowed them to attract FDI At a higher level of growth authoritarian institutions prove less viable as the need is to promote competition, innovation and productivity growth rather than acquiring increasing amounts of capital 18

19

Per Capita GDP Growth Rates (from Perkins and Rawski) 1955-1960 1961-1970 1971-1980 1981-1990 1991-2000 2001-2010 China 4.2 1 4.3 7.7 9.3 9.8 Hong Kong na 7.7 6.9 5.4 2.3 3.4 Taiwan 3.4 7 7.9 6.4 5.7 2.3 Japan 7.3 9.8 3.3 4 0.9 0.8 Republic of Korea 1.6 5.7 5.4 7.5 5.1 3.7 Mongolia na na 3.4 4.2-0.8 5.1 Indonesia na 1.8 5.4 4.4 2.7 4 Vietnam na na na na 5.9 6 Philippines 3 1.8 3.1-0.9 0.8 2.8 Thailand 2.6 5.1 4.3 5.9 3.5 3.4 Malaysia 1.3* 3.4 5.3 3.1 4.4 2.6 Cambodia na na na na na 6.5 Singapore na 4.4 7.2 4.9 4.6 2.5 Laos na na na na 3.5 5.4 Brunei na na 13.5-1.2 2.3 7.1 20

Dating the End of High Growth (from Perkins and Rawski) Table 6 Country Year start Period Growth Period Growth PPP GDP Exch Rate of slowing before Rate after Rate per cap at GDP at slowdown Before slowdown After slowdown slowdown (2005 prices) Japan 1971 1968-1970 10.72 1971-78 2.605 13800 16500 Taiwan 1990 1980-89 8.56 1990-99 6.304 13370 10880 Korea 1992 1982-91 9.05 1992-2005 5.28 13370 8810 21

Three Scenarios for Future Growth (based on Rosen) Demographic dividends propelled growth but labor will shrink Capital formation powered investment-led growth but now diminishing returns 1) Growth at 6% in 2020 half growth through continued investment and half through more efficient and productive use of human resources and capital 2) Growth driven only by investment, no better than 3% 3) Falling productivity could pull down private investment leaving GDP growth at 1%. 22

The Rejuvenation of the Chinese Nation China s IR theorists do not seem to read China s economic analysts: IR theorists remain very bullish about China s ability and need to project its international interests. China s economists are more circumspect about the prospects for economic growth. Dec. 2014, Xi important to inject more Chinese elements into international rules and promoted the China Dream that envisages the nation playing a stronger role in global affairs and especially in regional politics and economics But not necessarily change the rules of the game or confront the US Desires a multi-polar world Needs a peaceful environment to continue development But China has clearly abandoned Deng Xiaoping s hide your strength, bide your time, never take the lead, accomplish things where possible 23

China within the Region China has developed a number of new initiatives and clearly sees itself as the dominant power in East Asia Compared to America s pirouette, China has made a concerted pivot. 2013, Foreign minister Wang Yi, neighboring countries had become a priority direction for diplomacy with the desire to build a community of shared destiny in Asia centered on China Carrots and sticks Carrots trade, BRICs bank, AIIB and the One Belt, One Road All aimed to draw China into China s economic sphere and influence Not a threat to established players US decision not to join was short-sighted and misguided 24

China within the Region Stick Territorial disputes in East China and South China Seas China may reduce aggression but will not renounce claims Creates a realm of conflict for US-China relations Additional differences over Taiwan and how to deal with the Korean Peninsula Result is a potentially dangerous bifurcation Economic Asia within which China is the core Security Asia that is focused on the US 25

Scenarios for Future Development 1) Fluctuation between soft and hard authoritarian rule A form of muddling through Is Xi accruing power to push through tough reforms in his second term? Even if this is the intent, this is hard to do given the patron-client nature of the Chinese political system Maintenance of an authoritarian political structure overseeing modest economic liberalization Minimal political reform with emphasis on developing the rule of law to govern economic activities Weak national consensus, continued corruption and lack of social cohesion Reliance on economic development to provide legitimacy and support BUT Flirtation with more strident nationalism to bolster the national consensus Relations with US and Japan manageable but frictions will persist Policy will harbor the tensions of appeasing the new economic elites and trying to support those who have been left behind by reforms Fits with ideas of Leninist adaptation, authoritarian resilience etc. 26

Scenarios for Future Development 2) Xenophobic nationalism combined with a domestic inefficient authoritarianism Pacted transitions are rare and even rarer during periods of economic growth Potential emergence of an illiberal democracy as in Russia at the positive end of this scale with the dominance of the executive and a weak legislative development and a string role for the military At the other end of this scale would be the emergence of a pre-democratic Central Americanstyle political system CCP dominated by new elites who would resist any political opening Rule by new economic elites backed by the military in the name of preserving social stability and national sovereignty Strident nationalism to provide a minimal level of social glue Inequalities will continue to rise CCP as the preserve of the elites Permanent underclass in rural and urban China Relations with the US and Japan would be fragile and liable to uncertain trends 27

Scenarios for Future Development 3) Liberalization Leadership responds to increasing diversity in society and moves to accommodation Produces similar outcomes to democratic breakthrough elsewhere in East Asia Requires a significant section of the elite to break with the old system and form a new compact with progressive forces in society Beneficial for relations with the US and Japan with considerably reduced tensions over Taiwan offering a potential route for reunification 28