China
under Xi Jinping
Xi Jinping is widely viewed as
the strongest leader China has had since Deng Xiaoping or Mao Zedong. But six
years into his perhaps indefinite tenure, what has Xi actually accomplished?
And where might China be
headed under his rule?
Like all
Chinese leaders since the 1870s, when Qing dynasty rulers launched the
Self-Strengthening Movement, Xi also seeks ‘the great rejuvenation of the
Chinese nation’. The quest has been consistent for 150 years: for China to
acquire the material attributes of a major international power and the
commensurate respect from others. The legacy of the country’s former weakness
and humiliation continues to haunt Xi and his generation.
So too does
the collapse of Communist Party rule in the former Soviet Union. Now having
ruled almost as long as their Soviet counterparts, Xi and his peers in the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) live in regular trepidation of a similar
meltdown. These two issues — augmenting China’s strengths while rectifying the
Communist Party’s weaknesses — are intertwined in Xi’s thinking and dominate
his agenda.
Xi believes
in the absolute power of the Communist Party. As Xi told the 19th Congress of
the CCP in October 2017: ‘The party controls all’. Unlike Deng Xiaoping, who
launched China’s reforms four decades ago and sought to relatively reduce party
power, Xi wants to bring the party-state back into all aspects of national
life.
The CCP
under Xi is also reaching back to the Maoist era by constructing a massive
personality cult around Xi’s own persona. Maoist rhetorical throwbacks such as zhuxi
(chairman), lingxiu (leader), hexin (core), even da duoshou
(great helmsman) are again commonly used to refer to Xi. The official
ideological canon of ‘Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics
for a New Era’ has now been enshrined in the party constitution too. Xi
personally chairs all central Leading Groups and party and military organs. He
has also emasculated the authority of Premier Li Keqiang.
Xi is
systematically rolling back many of the core elements of Deng’s reforms that
guided China’s leaders for the past four decades: no personality cult around
the leader, collective leadership and consensual decision-making, bottom-up
‘inner-party democracy’ rather than top-down diktat, active feedback
mechanisms from society to the party-state, relative tolerance of intellectual
and other freedoms, limited dissent, some de facto checks and balances on
unconstrained party power, fixed term limits and enforced retirement rules for
leaders and cadres, a society and economy open to the world, and a cautious
foreign policy. These and other norms were all central elements of Deng’s
post-1978 reform program and they were all accepted and continued under Jiang
Zemin and Hu Jintao — but all are being systematically dismantled and
rolled back by Xi Jinping.
So dominant
is Xi that Chinese politics have become a sycophantic echo chamber. Xi is
trying to run the party like a military, with orders given and to be followed —
rather than as an organisation with feedback mechanisms and procedures to
curtail dictatorial practices. Xi is very much a mid-20th century Leninist
leader ruling a huge country in the globalised, early-21st century era. There
is thus a contradiction between Xi’s modality of rule and the realities of the
modern world and China’s developmental needs.
Since coming
to power in 2012, Xi has sought to relatively close China’s doors rather than
further open them. There has been a significant tightening of the foreign
investment and corporate operating environment, a sweeping suppression of civil
society and foreign NGOs, stepped-up study of Marxism and an assertion of
ideological controls over the entire educational sphere, and xenophobic
campaigns against ‘hostile foreign forces’.
Meanwhile,
the party continues to enforce strict media controls, carry out pervasive
public security surveillance, tighten control over Xinjiang and
Tibet, and persecute Christians and other organised religions. Xi has also
cracked down on corruption in
the party (and government and military), and presided over the most draconian
purges and political repression in China since the 1989–92 post-Tiananmen
period.
These
actions have more in common with Maoism than Dengism. To be certain, Xi has
definitely succeeded in strengthening the party institutionally over the past
five years — but it is fair to wonder whether he has not actually weakened it
in the longer term? How long can such retrograde and repressive actions endure
in an increasingly globalised, wealthy and sophisticated society?
Xi’s economic impact is
mixed. GDP growth remains very respectable at 6.9 per cent. Xi has also
launched programs to eliminate poverty by 2020, spur innovation and high-tech
manufacturing under the Made in China 2025 program, increase urbanisation and
build eco-cities, expand coverage of social services, attack pollution and
transition to a green economy, decrease desertification and increase forestation,
deleverage China’s ballooned debt while expanding domestic consumption and
services as drivers of growth. These are all commendable goals and initiatives
— but they are all just that. Time will tell whether they are achieved.
On the other
hand, Xi’s administration has significantly failed to meet the benchmarks or
implement the policies of the Third Plenum economic reform plan of November
2013. The significance of this shortfall is that the Chinese economy is not
making the structural adjustments needed to navigate through the middle-income
trap and up the value-added chain to become a developed economy over time.
Structural maladies and overcapacity continue to plague economic efficiency,
the stock market has plummeted, while dangerously high debt levels loom
overhead.
If there is
one policy area where Xi does deserve better marks, it is in foreign relations.
China is now widely seen as a global power. Xi has taken a personal interest in
global governance. As a result, China under Xi is contributing much more to the
United Nations operating budget, global peacekeeping, overseas development
assistance and the Millennium Development Goals. And it is more active in a
range of areas from combatting public health pandemics to disaster relief,
energy and sea lane security, counter-terrorism and anti-piracy operations.
Xi’s
signature Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is also noteworthy. An infrastructure
development initiative unparalleled in history, the BRI will build rail lines,
pipelines, telecommunications networks, electric grids, deep-water ports,
highways, cities and other needed infrastructure from Asia to Europe. While the
BRI is encountering criticism of late, it is nonetheless illustrative of
China’s new foreign policy activism under Xi.
To be
certain, China’s international relationships are not all rosy — but they are,
on balance, positive. Only with the United States — and perhaps Australia,
Japan and India — are China’s bilateral ties strained. Everywhere else they are
sound.
The same
must also be said about China’s military and defence — probably Xi’s No. 2
priority (after strengthening the party) over the past five years. Under the
new title of Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, in January 2016 Xi
launched a sweeping reorganisation — the most comprehensive ever — of China’s
military and paramilitary forces. The restructuring is but one part of
systematic efforts to build a world-class military and, in Xi’s repeated
exhortations, to ‘prepare to fight and win wars’.
Like all
leaders, Xi’s tenure has so far achieved mixed results. But this variegated
verdict is at variance with the overwhelmingly positive portrayals proclaimed
in China’s official media. In Beijing’s rendering, Xi can do no wrong. This in
itself may prove to be his Achilles’ heel. No leader is infallible. The
subterranean grousing about Xi’s ‘imperial’ leadership style now increasingly
heard in China (and from Chinese when they go abroad and speak with
foreigners), may be a harbinger of difficulties to come.
Having
constructed a caricature of an infallible Xi Jinping, the regime will find it
very difficult — if not impossible — to deconstruct this image of China’s new
‘great helmsman’. And there are many constituencies in China that are suffering
from Xi’s policies — including the party and state cadres and military officers
who have lost their positions and privileges as a result of Xi’s
anti-corruption purges — all of whom lie in wait for him to trip up.
David
Shambaugh is the Gaston Sigur Professor of Asian Studies, Political Science and
International Affairs at the George Washington University, Washington, DC.
This is an
adapted version of an article originally published in Global Asia.
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