
Economic growth is slowing in China, and people are worried. The regimeโs backward rush to Maoism has intensified the pessimistic mood. While frenetic business activity has returned to post-COVID Beijing, problems are evident. For instance, from my hotel window I spied a half-finished skyscraper on which construction had halted, evidence of the countryโs deep real estate slump.
To help spur the economy, President Xi Jinping addressed investors at Novemberโs APEC summit in San Francisco, promising to create a โworld-class business environment.โ Government policy, he explained, was โdesigned to make it easier for foreign companies to invest and operate in China.โ Xiโs pitch was tacit acknowledgement of his own failure.
Mao Zedong, the mad โRed Emperor,โ proclaimed the Peopleโs Republic of China on October 1, 1949. Millions of Chinese died during the Chinese Communist Partyโs brutal consolidation of power, vicious Anti-Rightest Movement, disastrous Great Leap Forward, and deranged Cultural Revolution. Amid the violence and chaos Mao constructed a strict socialist society, ensuring widespread immiseration.
Only Maoโs death in 1976 brought relief. Chinaโs subsequent liberalization demonstrated the power of private enterprise and free markets. โParamount leaderโ Deng Xiaopingโs modest deregulation yielded tremendous growth by loosing the entrepreneurship of hundreds of millions of people. For years the PRCโs economy expanded explosively. The poverty rate dropped dramatically. Although CCP officials took credit for Chinaโs growth, the critical factor was reversing their earlier collectivist nostrums, which treated the Chinese people as veritable human automatons.
A dozen years ago, the colorless apparatchik Xi Jinping, who had carefully ascended the PRCโs political hierarchy, took control, becoming both CCP general secretary and Chinese president. There was much hope that he would be a reformer, clearing away state economic controls and encouraging international trade.
He proved, however, to be Mikhail Gorbachev in reverse, disguising his true intentions to recommunize the economy and rest of society. In fact, the nature of his rule was presaged during the final days of his vice presidency, when he disappeared from public view, apparently busy combating an insurgent reach for power by the charismatic Bo Xilai, a provincial governor. Having elevated Xi with the responsibility to strengthen party unity in a crisis, CCP paladins should not have been surprised when he accelerated his campaign after being installed.
He has entered his third term, by all likelihood chairman and president for life. He is oft said to be the most powerful Chinese leader since Mao. In fact, he has become another Mao, acquiring virtually untrammeled power, filling the Politburo with his hirelings, and making the CCP the center of not just Chinese politics, but communal life.
Although the PRC before him was not free, it was notably freer. It was a loose authoritarian system in which both public disagreement and private dissent were tolerated. Even dilute criticism was possible, involving independent journalists, human rights lawyers, non-governmental organizations, and more. Contact and cooperation with Western academics, thinkers, and activists was easy, common, and accepted.
Xi seems to have made his primary objective returning to the Bad Oleโ Maoist Days. His principal objectives have been strengthening both party and personal control. He has exhibited Joseph Stalinโs skill in eliminating all visible party opposition and establishing a burgeoning personality cult, with โXi Jinping Thoughtโ now part of the constitution. To convince the Chinese people to behave as he demands, the CCP has rewritten history, punishing those who embrace reality.
The government explicitly warns against โWestern valuesโ and more closely scrutinizes invitations to foreigners. Overall, โ[u]niversities and research centers, including many with global ambitions, are increasingly cut off from their international counterparts.โ Online criticism is not just quickly removed but its authors are threatened and punished. Discordant public voices have essentially disappeared. Loose provincial regulation of religion has given way to brutal national controls. Overall, detailed Ian Johnson of the Council on Foreign Relations: โChinaโs small but once flourishing communities of independent writers, thinkers, artists, and critics have been driven completely underground, much like their twentieth-century Soviet counterparts.โ
The PRCโs return to political totalitarianism has weakened the economy. Beijing already faced strong headwinds. Although companies are not pulling out in great numbers, surveys reveal that firms around the world are less willing to invest in China. Last year foreign investment turned negative. Bloomberg reported โless willingness by foreign companies to re-invest profits made in China in the country.โ Moreover, Chinese outflows exceeded foreign inflows in 2023 for the first time in five years.
Why the negative results? Western firms complained of โtepid economic activity, unpredictable regulation, worries over employee safety and curbs on transferring data overseas.โ But, Johnson observed, โthese economic problems are part of a broader process of political ossification and ideological hardening.โ Business executives recently complained that Xiโs government โhas restricted access to data and sparked raids and investigations involving foreign firms assessing investment risks in the country.โ
Alas, this was inevitable. Xi expects business as well as people to serve the CCP. As authoritarian controls metastasize throughout the economy, everyone suffers. For instance, even foreign enterprises now must accommodate party cells. The Wall Street Journalโs Lingling Wei reported on a Chinese โofficial, one of several who had helped introduce Western-style stock trading to China,โ who cited โa worrisome trend of the party inserting itself more into companiesโ affairs by pressuring them to accept Communist Party committees in their offices. โThe whole thing about getting listed companies to set up party committees,โ he said, โis a reversal of what we had tried to doโ.โ
A couple years ago, Beijing silenced critical market analysts. Now the regime jails them. In early January the Ministry of State Security arrested the head of a foreign consultancy for allegedly spying for the United Kingdom. Reported the South China Morning Post: โthe Chinese leadership is intensifying a crackdown on stealing secrets, with a major amendment to its anti-espionage law that took effect in July. Consultancy firms are in the cross hairs over the information they obtain.โ Deploying the secrecy enactment, MSS declared war on private business. Among the ministryโs recent activities were โraids on Chinese offices of US due-diligence firms and questioning of staff at the Bain consulting firm.โ
The PRCโs media has explicitly targeted Western firms: โChinaโs state broadcaster accused Western countries of trying to steal sensitive information in key industries with the help of consulting firms that help investors navigate the murky Chinese economy.โ Geopolitical tensions have made โwestern business people worry that police may be looking for excuses, whether security-related otherwise, to flex muscle.โ
Xiโs focus has become increasingly paranoid and insular. What for the West are good investment practices are, for the PRC, increasingly serious crimes. The CCP believes that economic research, โoften involving interactions with Chinese nationals, has exposed state secrets, threatened the partyโs control over how the rest of the world views China and helped the US and its allies develop a hardline policy toward Beijing.โ Indeed, the MSS now targets this area. Reported Nikkei Asia: โA [ministry blog] post in November focused on finance, claiming that people seeking to โprofit from turmoilโ are trying to โshake investment confidence and cause financial instability in the country.โ The ministry appeared to indicate that it considers stoking financial anxiety, then short-selling stocks to profit from it, to fall under its remit.โ
Nor is this all. Forming an opinion, at least a negative one, about Chinaโs economy is another crime. So is releasing critical economic assessments. Even if you arenโt arrested for discovering the truth, you canโt repeat it. Explained the ministry: โFalse theories about โChina’s deteriorationโ are being circulated to attack China’s unique socialist system.โ
Political activists often accept the risk of arrest for their cause. Businessmen, not so much. At the very time economic conditions are deteriorating in the PRC, foreign investors are less able to accurately assess markets. Some expatriates express the desire to return home. The Wall Street Journal found: โSome Western firms have paused research work in China, especially when related to technology and other sensitive areas, according to business executives. Analysts at Wall Street firms, including those specializing in recommendations of Chinese stocks, said they are worried about getting their contacts in China in trouble because of the heightened government scrutiny over foreign connections.โ
No wonder foreign investors have soured on the PRC and are pulling their funds.
Xi wants to keep foreign funds flowing into China. For investors, however, expanding CCP controls belies Xiโs reassuring rhetoric. A society with totalitarian political and social controls canโt allow a market to be truly free. Liberty ultimately is indivisible. And tyranny doesn’t pay.
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