The vision of China’s new president should serve his people, not a nationalist state
N 1793 a British envoy, Lord Macartney, arrived at the court
of the Chinese emperor, hoping to open an embassy. He brought with him a
selection of gifts from his newly industrialising nation. The Qianlong emperor,
whose country then accounted for about a third of global GDP, swatted him away:
“Your sincere humility and obedience can clearly be seen,” he wrote to King
George III, but we do not have “the slightest need for your country’s
manufactures”. The British returned in the 1830s with gunboats to force trade
open, and China’s attempts at reform ended in collapse, humiliation and, eventually,
Maoism.
China has made an extraordinary journey along the road back
to greatness. Hundreds of millions have lifted themselves out of poverty,
hundreds of millions more have joined the new middle class. It is on the verge
of reclaiming what it sees as its rightful position in the world. China’s
global influence is expanding and within a decade its economy is expected to
overtake America’s. In his first weeks in power, the new head of the ruling
Communist Party, Xi Jinping, has evoked that rise with a new slogan which he is
using, as belief in Marxism dies, to unite an increasingly diverse nation. He
calls his new doctrine the “Chinese dream” evoking its American equivalent.
Such slogans matter enormously in China (see article). News bulletins are full of his dream.
Schools organise speaking competitions about it. A talent show on television is
looking for “The Voice of the Chinese Dream”.
Countries, like people, should dream. But what exactly is Mr
Xi’s vision? It seems to include some American-style aspiration, which is
welcome, but also a troubling whiff of nationalism and of repackaged authoritarianism.
The end of ideology
Since the humiliations of the 19th century, China’s goals
have been wealth and strength. Mao Zedong tried to attain them through Marxism.
For Deng Xiaoping and his successors, ideology was more flexible (though party
control was absolute). Jiang Zemin’s theory of the “Three Represents” said the
party must embody the changed society, allowing private businessmen to join the
party. Hu Jintao pushed the “scientific-development outlook” and “harmonious
development” to deal with the disharmony created by the yawning wealth gap.
Now, though, comes a new leader with a new style and a
popular photogenic wife. Mr Xi talks of reform; he has launched a campaign
against official extravagance. Even short of detail, his dream is different
from anything that has come before. Compared with his predecessors’ stodgy
ideologies, it unashamedly appeals to the emotions. Under Mao, the party
assaulted anything old and erased the imperial past, now Mr Xi’s emphasis on
national greatness has made party leaders heirs to the dynasts of the 18th
century, when Qing emperors demanded that Western envoys kowtow (Macartney
refused).
But there is also plainly practical politics at work. With
growth slowing, Mr Xi’s patriotic doctrine looks as if it is designed chiefly
to serve as a new source of legitimacy for the Communist Party. It is no
coincidence that Mr Xi’s first mention of his dream of “the great revival of
the Chinese nation” came in November in a speech at the national museum in
Tiananmen Square, where an exhibition called “Road to Revival” lays out China’s
suffering at the hands of colonial powers and its rescue by the Communist
Party.
Dream a little dream of Xi
Nobody doubts that Mr Xi’s priority will be to keep the
economy growing—the country’s leaders talk about it taking decades for their
poor nation to catch up with the much richer Americans—and that means opening
up China even more. But his dream has two clear dangers.
One is of nationalism. A long-standing sense of historical
victimhood means that the rhetoric of a resurgent nation could all too easily
turn nasty. As skirmishes and provocations increase in the neighbouring seas
(see Banyan), patriotic microbloggers need no
encouragement to demand that the Japanese are taught a humiliating lesson. Mr
Xi is already playing to the armed forces. In December, on an inspection tour
of the navy in southern China, he spoke of a “strong-army dream”. The armed
forces are delighted by such talk. Even if Mr Xi’s main aim in pandering to
hawks is just to keep them on side, the fear is that it presages a more
belligerent stance in East Asia. Nobody should mind a confident China at ease
with itself, but a country transformed from a colonial victim to a bully
itching to settle scores with Japan would bring great harm to the
region—including to China itself.
The other risk is that the Chinese dream ends up handing
more power to the party than to the people. In November Mr Xi echoed the
American dream, declaring that “To meet [our people’s] desire for a happy life
is our mission.” Ordinary Chinese citizens are no less ambitious than Americans
to own a home (see article), send a child to university or just have
fun (see article). But Mr Xi’s main focus seems to be on
strengthening the party’s absolute claim on power. The “spirit of a strong
army”, he told the navy, lay in resolutely obeying the party’s orders. Even if
the Chinese dream avoids Communist rhetoric, Mr Xi has made it clear that he
believes the Soviet Union collapsed because the Communist Party there strayed
from ideological orthodoxy and rigid discipline. “The Chinese dream”, he has
said, “is an ideal. Communists should have a higher ideal, and that is
Communism.”
A fundamental test of Mr Xi’s vision will be his attitude to
the rule of law. The good side of the dream needs it: the economy, the
happiness of his people and China’s real strength depend on arbitrary power
being curtailed. But corruption and official excess will be curbed only when
the constitution becomes more powerful than the party. This message was spelled
out in an editorial in a reformist newspaper on January 1st, entitled “The
Dream of Constitutionalism”. The editorial called for China to use the rule of
law to become a “free and strong country”. But the censors changed the article
at the last minute and struck out its title. If that is the true expression of
Mr Xi’s dream, then China still has a long journey ahead. The Economist
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