Year of the Sheep, Century of the Dragon?
New Silk Roads and the Chinese Vision of a Brave New (Trade) World
New Silk Roads and the Chinese Vision of a Brave New (Trade) World
BEIJING -- Seen from the Chinese capital as the Year
of the Sheep starts, the malaise affecting the West seems like a mirage in a
galaxy far, far away. On the other hand, the China that surrounds you looks all
too solid and nothing like the embattled nation you hear about in the Western
media, with its falling industrial figures, its real estate bubble, and its
looming environmental disasters. Prophecies of doom notwithstanding, as the
dogs of austerity and war bark madly in the distance, the Chinese caravan
passes by in what President Xi Jinping calls “new normal” mode.
“Slower” economic activity still means a staggeringly impressive annual
growth rate of 7% in what is now the globe’s leading economy.
Internally, an immensely complex economic restructuring is underway as
consumption overtakes investment as the main driver of economic development. At
46.7% of the gross domestic product (GDP), the service economy has pulled ahead
of manufacturing, which stands at 44%.
Geopolitically, Russia, India, and China have just sent a powerful
message westward: they are busy fine-tuning a complex trilateral strategy for
setting up a network of economic corridors the Chinese call “new silk roads” across Eurasia.
Beijing is also organizing a maritime version of
the same, modeled on the feats of Admiral Zheng He who, in the Ming dynasty,
sailed the “western seas” seven times, commanding fleets of more than 200
vessels.
Meanwhile, Moscow and Beijing are at work planning a new
high-speed rail remix of the fabled
Trans-Siberian Railroad. And Beijing is committed to translating its growing strategic
partnership with Russia into crucial financial and economic help, if a
sanctions-besieged Moscow, facing a disastrous oil price war, asks for it.
To China’s south, Afghanistan, despite the 13-year
American war still being fought there, is fast moving into its economic orbit,
while a planned China-Myanmar oil pipeline is seen
as a game-changing reconfiguration of the flow of Eurasian energy across what
I’ve long called Pipelineistan.
And this is just part of the frenetic action shaping what the Beijing
leadership defines as the New Silk Road Economic Belt and the Maritime Silk
Road of the twenty-first century. We’re talking about a vision of creating a
potentially mind-boggling infrastructure, much of it from scratch, that will
connect China to Central Asia, the Middle East, and Western Europe. Such a
development will include projects that range from upgrading the ancient silk
road via Central Asia to developing a Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar economic
corridor; a China-Pakistan corridor through Kashmir; and a new maritime
silk road that will extend from southern China all the way, in reverse Marco
Polo fashion, to Venice.
Don’t think of this as the twenty-first-century Chinese equivalent of
America’s post-World War II Marshall Plan for Europe, but as something far more
ambitious and potentially with a far vaster reach.
China as a Mega-City
If you are following this frenzy of economic planning from Beijing, you end
up with a perspective not available in Europe or the U.S. Here, red-and-gold
billboards promote President Xi Jinping’s much ballyhooed new tagline for the
country and the century, “the Chinese Dream” (which brings to mind “the
American Dream” of another era). No subway station is without them. They are a
reminder of why 40,000 miles of brand
new high-speed rail is considered so essential to the country’s future. After
all, no less than 300 million Chinese have, in the last three decades, made a
paradigm-breaking migration from the countryside to exploding urban areas in
search of that dream.
Another 350 million are expected to be on the way, according to a McKinsey Global Institute study.
From 1980 to 2010, China’s urban population grew by 400 million, leaving the
country with at least 700 million urban dwellers. This figure is expected to
hit one billion by 2030, which means tremendous stress on cities,
infrastructure, resources, and the economy as a whole, as well as near-apocalyptic air pollution
levels in some major cities.
Already 160 Chinese cities boast populations of more than one million.
(Europe has only 35.) No less than 250 Chinese cities have tripled their GDP
per capita since 1990, while disposable income per capita is up by 300%.
These days, China should be thought of not in terms of individual cities
but urban clusters -- groupings of cities with more than 60 million people. The
Beijing-Tianjin area, for example, is actually a cluster of 28 cities.
Shenzhen, the ultimate migrant megacity in the southern province of Guangdong,
is now a key hub in a cluster as well. China, in fact, has more than 20 such
clusters, each the size of a European country. Pretty soon, the main clusters
will account for 80% of China’s GDP and 60% of its population. So the country’s
high-speed rail frenzy and its head-spinning infrastructure projects
-- part of a $1.1 trillion investment in 300 public works -- are all about
managing those clusters.
Not surprisingly, this process is intimately linked to what in the West is
considered a notorious “housing bubble,” which in 1998 couldn’t have even
existed. Until then all housing was still owned by the state. Once liberalized,
that housing market sent a surging Chinese middle class into paroxysms of
investment. Yet with rare exceptions, middle-class Chinese can still afford
their mortgages because both rural and urban incomes have also surged.
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is, in fact, paying careful attention to
this process, allowing farmers to lease or mortgage their land, among other
things, and so finance their urban migration and new housing. Since we’re
talking about hundreds of millions of people, however, there are bound to be
distortions in the housing market, even the creation of whole disastrous ghost towns with
associated eerie, empty malls.
The Chinese infrastructure frenzy is being financed by a pool of
investments from central and local government sources, state-owned enterprises,
and the private sector. The construction business, one of the country’s biggest
employers, involves more than 100 million people, directly or indirectly. Real
estate accounts for as much as 22% of total national investment in fixed assets
and all of this is tied to the sale of consumer appliances, furnishings, and an
annual turnover of 25% of China’s steel production, 70% of its cement, 70% of
its plate glass, and 25% of its plastics.
So no wonder, on my recent stay in Beijing, businessmen kept assuring me
that the ever-impending “popping” of the “housing bubble” is, in fact, a myth
in a country where, for the average citizen, the ultimate investment is
property. In addition, the vast urbanization drive ensures, as Premier Li
Keqiang stressed at the recent World Economic Forum in Davos, a “long-term
demand for housing.”
Markets, Markets,
Markets
China is also modifying its manufacturing base, which increased by a
multiple of 18 in the last three decades. The country still produces 80% of the
world’s air conditioners, 90% of its personal computers, 75% of its solar
panels, 70% of its cell phones, and 63% of its shoes. Manufacturing accounts
for 44% of Chinese GDP, directly employing more than 130 million people. In
addition, the country already accounts for 12.8% of global research and
development, well ahead of England and most of Western Europe.
Yet the emphasis is now switching to a fast-growing domestic market, which
will mean yet more major infrastructural investment, the need for an influx of
further engineering talent, and a fast-developing supplier base. Globally, as
China starts to face new challenges -- rising labor costs, an increasingly
complicated global supply chain, and market volatility -- it is also making an
aggressive push to move low-tech assembly to high-tech manufacturing. Already,
the majority of Chinese exports are smartphones, engine systems, and cars (with
planes on their way). In the process, a geographic shift in manufacturing is
underway from the southern seaboard to Central and Western China. The city of
Chengdu in the southwestern province of Sichuan, for instance, is now becoming
a high-tech urban cluster as it expands around firms like Intel and HP.
So China is boldly attempting to upgrade in manufacturing terms, both
internally and globally at the same time. In the past, Chinese companies have
excelled in delivering the basics of life at cheap prices and acceptable
quality levels. Now, many companies are fast upgrading their technology and
moving up into second- and first-tier cities, while foreign firms, trying to
lessen costs, are moving down to second- and third-tier cities. Meanwhile,
globally, Chinese CEOs want their companies to become true multinationals in
the next decade. The country already has 73 companies in the Fortune Global
500, leaving it in the number two spot behind the U.S.
In terms of Chinese advantages, keep in mind that the
future of the global economy clearly lies in Asia with its record rise in
middle-class incomes. In 2009, the Asia-Pacific region had just 18% of the
world’s middle class; by 2030, according to the Development Center of the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, that figure will rise to
an astounding 66%. North America and Europe had 54% of the global middle class
in 2009; in 2030, it will only be 21%.
Follow the money, and the value you get for that money, too. For instance,
no less than 200,000 Chinese workers were involved in the production of the
first iPhone, overseen by 8,700 Chinese industrial engineers. They were
recruited in only two weeks. In the U.S., that process might have taken more
than nine months. The Chinese manufacturing ecosystem is indeed fast, flexible,
and smart -- and it’s backed by an ever more impressive education system. Since
1998, the percentage of GDP dedicated to education has almost tripled; the
number of colleges has doubled; and in only a decade, China has built the
largest higher education system in the world.
Strengths and
Weaknesses
China holds more than $15 trillion in bank deposits, which are growing by a
whopping $2 trillion a year. Foreign exchange reserves are nearing $4 trillion.
A definitive study of how this torrent of funds circulates within China among
projects, companies, financial institutions, and the state still does not
exist. No one really knows, for instance, how many loans the Agricultural Bank
of China actually makes. High finance, state capitalism, and one-party rule all
mix and meld in the realm of Chinese financial services where realpolitik meets
real big money.
The big four state-owned banks -- the Bank of China, the Industrial and
Commercial Bank of China, the China Construction Bank, and the Agricultural
Bank of China -- have all evolved from government organizations into
semi-corporate state-owned entities. They benefit handsomely both from legacy
assets and government connections, or guanxi, and operate with a mix
of commercial and government objectives in mind. They are the drivers to watch
when it comes to the formidable process of reshaping the Chinese economic
model.
As for China’s debt-to-GDP ratio, it’s not yet a big deal. In a list of 17
countries, it lies well below those of Japan and the U.S., according to Standard
Chartered Bank, and unlike in the West, consumer credit is only a small
fraction of total debt. True, the West exhibits a particular fascination with
China’s shadow banking industry: wealth management products, underground
finance, off-the-balance-sheet lending. But such operations only add up to
around 28% of GDP, whereas, according to the
International Monetary Fund, it's a much higher percentage in the U.S.
China’s problems may turn out to come from non-economic areas where the
Beijing leadership has proven far more prone to false moves. It is, for
instance, on the offensive on three fronts, each of which may prove to have its
own form of blowback: tightening ideological control
over the country under the rubric of sidelining “Western values”; tightening
control over online information
and social media networks, including reinforcing “the Great Firewall of China”
to police the Internet; and tightening further its control over restive ethnic minorities,
especially over the Uighurs in the key western province of Xinjiang.
On two of these fronts -- the “Western values” controversy and Internet
control -- the leadership in Beijing might reap far more benefits, especially
among the vast numbers of younger, well educated, globally connected citizens,
by promoting debate, but that’s not how the hyper-centralized Chinese Communist
Party machinery works.
When it comes to those minorities in Xinjiang, the essential problem may
not be with the new guiding principles of President Xi’s ethnic policy.
According to Beijing-based analyst Gabriele Battaglia, Xi wants to manage
ethnic conflict there by applying the “three Js”: jiaowang, jiaoliu,
jiaorong (“inter-ethnic contact,” “exchange,” and “mixage”). Yet what adds
up to a push from Beijing for Han/Uighur assimilation may mean little in
practice when day-to-day policy in Xinjiang is conducted by unprepared Han
cadres who tend to view most Uighurs as “terrorists.”
If Beijing botches the handling of its Far West, Xinjiang won’t, as
expected, become the peaceful, stable, new hub of a crucial part of the
silk-road strategy. Yet it is already considered an essential communication
link in Xi’s vision of Eurasian integration, as well as a crucial conduit for
the massive flow of energy supplies from Central Asia and Russia. The Central Asia-China
pipeline, for instance, which brings natural gas from the Turkmen-Uzbek border
through Uzbekistan and southern Kazakhstan, is already adding a fourth line to
Xinjiang. And one of the two newly agreed upon Russia-China pipelines will also
arrive in Xinjiang.
The Book of Xi
The extent and complexity of China’s myriad transformations barely filter
into the American media. Stories in the U.S. tend to emphasize the country’s “shrinking” economy
and nervousness about its future global role, the way it has “duped” the U.S. about
its designs, and its nature as a military “threat” to Washington
and the world.
The U.S. media has a China fever, which results in typically feverish
reports that don’t take the pulse of the country or its leader. In the process,
so much is missed. One prescription might be for them to read The
Governance of China, a compilation of President Xi’s major speeches,
talks, interviews, and correspondence. It’s already a three-million-copy
bestseller in its Mandarin edition and offers a remarkably digestible vision of
what Xi’s highly proclaimed “China Dream” will mean in the new Chinese century.
Xi Dada (“Xi Big Bang” as he’s
nicknamed here) is no post-Mao deity. He’s more like a pop phenomenon and
that’s hardly surprising. In this “to get rich is glorious” remix, you couldn’t
launch the superhuman task of reshaping the Chinese model by being a cold-as-a-cucumber
bureaucrat. Xi has instead struck a collective nerve by stressing that the
country’s governance must be based on competence, not insider trading and Party
corruption, and he’s cleverly packaged the transformation he has in mind as an
American-style “dream.”
Behind the pop star clearly lies a man of substance that the Western media
should come to grips with. You don’t, after all, manage such an economic
success story by accident. It may be particularly important to take his measure
since he’s taken the measure of Washington and the West and decided that
China’s fate and fortune lie elsewhere.
As a result, last November he made official an earthshaking geopolitical
shift. From now on, Beijing would stop treating the U.S. or the European Union
as its main strategic priority and refocus instead on China’s Asian neighbors
and fellow BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and South Africa, with a
special focus on Russia), also known here as the “major developing powers” (kuoda
fazhanzhong de guojia). And just for the record, China does not consider
itself a “developing country” anymore.
No wonder there’s been such a blitz of Chinese mega-deals and mega-dealings
across Pipelineistan
recently. Under Xi, Beijing is fast closing the gap on Washington in terms of
intellectual and economic firepower and yet its global investment offensive
has barely begun, new silk roads
included.
Singapore’s former foreign minister George Yeo sees the newly emerging
world order as a solar system with two suns, the United States and China. The
Obama administration’s new National Security Strategy affirms that “the United
States has been and will remain a Pacific power” and states that “while there
will be competition, we reject the inevitability of confrontation” with
Beijing. The “major developing powers,” intrigued as they are by China’s
extraordinary infrastructural push, both internally and across those New Silk
Roads, wonder whether a solar system with two suns might not be a non-starter.
The question then is: Which “sun” will shine on Planet Earth? Might this,
in fact, be the century of the dragon?
Pepe Escobar is the roving correspondent for Asia Times, an analyst for RT and Sputnik, and a TomDispatch regular.
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