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               China: The Continuing Revolution 
              I.   
History
                  and Environment
              A. 
                   Resources -- About 1.4 billion people, more
                  than one-fifth of the world's population, but only 10 percent
                  of land suitable for cultivation. Average farmer works less
                  than one acre, compared with 2 in India and 100 in U.S. 
                  Maps: 
                  Neighbors 
                  Geomorphological 
                  Cities 
                  Provinces 
                     
                  Shanghai Photos 
                    1930s
                    Colonial 
                  Bund 
                  Pudong 
                
               
                
              B. 
                  Dynasties and Republics -- Chinese civilization
                  arose between 3,000 and 2,000 B.C. in Yellow River basin, and
                  adherents to the "hydraulic
                    theory of civilization" (following Karl Wittfogel)
                  suggest that the need for large-scale irrigation required
                  strong central institutions, leading to "oriental despotism." 
                   
                  For an entertaining overview, see "CrashCourse:
                    2,000 Years of Chinese History!" and "CrashCourse:
                    Communists, Nationalists, and China's Revolutions." 
                   
                  Shanghai
                    Museum Seal Gallery 
                  (Western Zhou through Qing would be more than 2,000 years) 
                
              
                 
                1570
                    - 1045 BC: Shang Dynasty 
                
                  There
                      may have been earlier dynasties in China, such as the Xia,
                      which, according to legend, arose around 2500 BCE, but the
                      earliest authenticated dynasty was the Shang, which
                      evidently was a loose network of feudal states. It
                      developed an early writing system that was a direct
                      ancestor of modern Chinese characters. 
                        
                     
                  1045
                      - 256 BC: Zhou Dynasty 
                        
                  
                    Capital
                        was established in Haojing, today's Xi'an, until 907AD  
                        551 BC: Confucius is born.  
                        500 BC: Cast iron invented around this time.  
                        403 - 221 BC: The Warring States period.  
                        342 BC: Crossbow first used  
                          
                          
                       
                   
                  221
                      - 206 BC: Qin Dynasty  
                  
                    221
                        BC: Qin Shi Huangdi, the first Emperor of China, had the
                        Great Wall built to protect his people from the Mongols.
                       
                        
                        
                     
                   
                  206
                      BC - 220 AD: Han Dynasty  
                  
                    The
                        most culturally defining dynasty. Large territorial
                        expansion. Confucianism gained official status as a
                        philosophical system and eventually played an important
                        role in the civil service selection system. Major
                        advanced in art science, including the invention of
                        paper in 105 AD.  Military success allowed
                        establishment of the "Silk Road," expending trade and
                        diplomacy. 
                          
                       
                   
                  222
                      - 581: Six Dynasties  
                  
                    250:
                        Buddhism introduced to China.  
                          
                       
                   
                  589
                      - 618: Sui Dynasty  
                  
                    609:
                        The Grand Canal is completed, connecting Beijing in the
                        north with Hangzhou in the south, and connecting the
                        Yellow and Yangtze Rivers. At 1,104 miles, it is the
                        longest and oldest artificial waterway in the world
                        (mostly dug by hand), and is now a UNESCO World Heritage
                        Site.  
                        
                       
                        
                   
                  618
                      - 907: Tang Dynasty 
                  
                    First
                        for which we have useful economic data, and China seemed
                        to be more prosperous at this time than any part of
                        Europe.  
                        Buddhism became a predominant religion for the common
                        people. 
                        868: Wood block printing first used in China.  
                          
                       
                   
                  907
                      - 960: Five Dynasties 
                                   
                      
                  960
                      - 1279: Song Dynasty  
                  
                    During
                        the Northern Song (960–1127), the capital was in
                        Bianjing (now Kaifeng in Henan province) and it
                        controlled most of what is now Eastern China.  
                        During the Northern Song era, current
                          research shows that China had the highest
                          GDP/capita in the world, and that was
                        probably true for some time. 
                        After the Song lost control of their northern lands to
                        the Jin Dynasty and then too the Mongols, the Southern
                        Song (1127–1279) gathered south of the Yangtze and
                        established their capital at Lin'an (now Hangzhou).  
                        The Song government was the first in world history to
                        issue banknotes as a national currency  
                        1041: Moveable type for printing invented (400 years
                        before Gutenberg).  
                        1044: First mention of gunpowder - part of broader
                        effort to improve defenses.  
                        1200: Genghis Khan unites the Mongol tribes under his
                        leadership.  
                        1271: Marco Polo begins his (supposed) travels to China.
                         
                            
                          
                       
                   
                  1279
                      - 1368: Yuan Dynasty  
                  
                    Led
                        by the Mongols under Kublai Khan, this was the first
                        non-Han Chinese dynasty to rule all of China - an
                        embarrassment. While the Mongols destroyed much of
                        Russia during this period, it was a time of continued
                        development and cultural diversity in China. 
                          
                       
                   
                  1368
                      - 1644: Ming Dynasty  
                  
                    China
                        continued to have a high standard of living during this
                        time, but Italy pulled ahead by 1300 and England by
                        1500. 
                        1406-1420: Forbidden City was built, and Beijing became
                        the new capital, replacing Nanjing. All of this happened
                        before Columbus's first voyage to the Americas (1492),
                        but Beijing is still a relatively new capital in the
                        overall sweep of Chinese history.  
                      High
                          Culture (see the large Ming vases in Armstrong
                          Browning Library)  
                         
                          
                       
                   
                  1644
                      - 1912: Qing Dynasty  
                  
                    GDP/capita FELL
                        by about 40% between 1700 and 1850, moving it behind all
                        of Europe. 
                    1839-1842:
                        Western colonialism begins after British victory in the
                        first opium war  
                          
                        
                   
                  1912-1949:
                      The "Nationalist Period" or the Republic
                      of China. 
                       
                                  
                  
                    Initially
                        led by Sun Yat-sen, revered today in
                        both the Mainland and Taiwan as the Father of Modern
                        China. Eventually divided by feuding military
                          officers, and then reunited by General Chiang
                          Kai-shek, but then driven to Taiwan by Communists
                        under Chairman Mao. Also, from 1937-1945, large
                        areas of China were occupied by the Japanese
                        - another embarrassment. 
                   
                  1949-today:
                      People's Republic of China 
                  
                    Led
                        by Mao, Deng Xiaoping, and other leaders, including Xi
                        Jinping today  
                   
                 
               
               
              C. 
                  Technological 
                    Achievements - Imperial China was most
                  technologically advanced and literate culture in the world.
                  Had bronze weapons and tools, gunpowder, movable type,
                  hemp-spinning machines, agricultural and medical techniques,
                  algebra, and trigonometry long (often hundreds of years)
                  before the West.
              "The Great Divergence"
                  - When did Europe pull ahead of China and the rest of Asia in
                  economic development?  The "traditional" European view
                  was that this happened quite early - maybe in the 1200s. A
                  more recent "revisionist" view, promoted by scholars such as
                  Kenneth Pomeranz, suggests that living standards were still
                  similar in parts of China and the West until the 19th century.
                  The most
                    recent evidence suggests that the truth was somewhere
                  in-between - China started falling behind in the 1300s-1400s,
                  later than "traditionalists" and earlier than "revisionists."
              D. 
                  Causes of Stagnation
              1.  
                  Excessive Population Growth
                      --Mark
                    Elvin argued that early development of agricultural
                  and medical technology, limited urbanization, and preference
                  for early marriages and large families caused excessive
                  population growth, strained raw material base, reduced value
                  of labor, and reduced demand for labor-saving technology.
                  Doesn’t explain why stagnation started before 16th
                  century.
              2.  
                  Nature of Discovery and Dissemination of Knowledge -
                  China didn’t develop scientific method (Justin
                    Lin Yifu). European openness, proximity, and guild
                  system contributed spread of knowledge and connection of one
                  idea to another (David
                    de la Croix, Matthias Doepke, Joel Mokyr). 
                
              3.  
                  Mongol Domination - Harsh
                  taxation and servitude during 1234-1368, but the economy was
                  temporarily opened to foreign trade and technology.
              4.  
                  Opium and Colonialism - Opium
                  addiction reached crisis proportions by 1700s. Efforts to
                  prevent imports from India led to Opium Wars with Britain
                  during 1839-1842.
              
                5.    Bureaucracy - David
                      Landes explained the absence of a Chinese Industrial
                    Revolution in terms of excessive government and market
                    inefficiency: "The Chinese state was always stepping in to
                    interfere with private enterprise..."  
                    On the other hand, Dwight
                      Perkins (Harvard) found that around 1800, there was
                    only one government worker for every 32,000 people in China,
                    compared to one for every 700 people in Europe.  
              5.   Isolation
                    - Dobado-Gonzales
                    and others suggest, based on  price  movements and
                    other market data, that long-distance agricultural markets
                    failed to integrate in East Asia, as compared to Europe, and
                    this contributed to the Divergence, from "at least" the 18th
                    century: "Despite the geographical proximity and ease of
                    transportation between China and Japan, no statistical
                    evidence of grain market integration between the two
                    countries is found during the eighteenth and nineteenth
                    centuries."  
                     
                    Likewise, in my own (Gardner) conversations with Chinese
                    scholars, some have suggested that European societies were
                    open to technologies that flowed from China, but the closed
                    nature of Chinese society made it difficult to benefit from
                    technologies developed in Europe during the Renaissance and
                    Industrial Revolution. 
              
               
               II.
                  Importing the Soviet Model, 1949-1957
              A. 
                  Mao: "The Communist Party of the Soviet Union is our best
                  teacher and we must learn from it." Thousands of Soviets came
                  as advisors and thousands of Chinese traveled to USSR for
                  training. 
                
              B. 
                  Agriculture -- Initial land reform, distributing from
                  former landlords to peasants, quickly followed by creation of
                  about 800,000 Soviet-style collective farms, each with an
                  average of about 160 families.  
                
              C. 
                  Industry -- Nationalization of industry began gradually
                  with the "commanding heights" - metallurgy, energy, railroads,
                  etc.  
                
              D. 
                  Educational and Health Reforms -- Outlawed opium,
                  "barefoot doctors," improved status of women.  
                
               
              
              
              III.
                  The Great Leap Forward, 1958-1960
              A. 
                  Communes -- Large Soviet-style collective farms were
                  merged into even larger People's Communes, each with
                  3,000-5,000 families, organized in production brigades and
                  production teams. The commune served as the basic unit of
                  local government, running schools, clinics, etc. Private
                  plots, considered a remnant of capitalism, were taken from
                  families.
              B. 
                  Ambitious steel production targets -- Exported grain,
                  needed for food, to buy equipment for small inefficient steel
                  mills.
              C. 
                  Disastrous results -- Estimates of the number of
                  "excess deaths" during this period range from 18 million to 56
                  million.
              IV.
                  Readjustment and Recovery, 1961-1965
                    
                  Mao temporarily lost some of his authority to President Liu
                  Shaoqi (pictured here) and his deputy, Deng Xiaoping, who
                  introduced moderate reforms in planning, agriculture,
                  education, and other areas that foreshadowed the period after
                  1978.  A
                    recent podcast suggested that Liu's leadership style
                  also foreshadowed the current leadership of Xi Jinping,
                  because Liu emphasized order and Party loyalty - unlike Mao
                  who unleashed populist uprisings against the Party and state
                  bureaucracies.  
                  Liu and Deng restored priorities with an "Agriculture
                  First"policy:
               
               
                   
                  V. The Cultural Revolution 1966-1976
                   
                  A chaotic attempt to replace traditional Chinese culture,
                  rooted in Confucianism and Buddhism, and Western influences
                  with a new "proletarian culture." Changed everything from
                  clothing and music to rejection of Western technology, and
                  involved a campaign against people who were accused of having
                  capitalist tendencies. Millions were persecuted, sometimes by
                  being sent to the countryside for "re-education," and tens of
                  thousands were executed. The universities were closed for many
                  years, causing many to lose their chance for higher education.
                  Industrial production fell for the first time since the
                  so-called Great Leap Forward.
              VI.  Transition
of
                    Power: 1976-1978
              Death
                  of Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai in 1976 led to power struggle,
                  eventually won by the reformer, Deng
                  Xiaoping
               
              VII.
                  Socialism with Chinese Characteristics (1979-Present)
               A. 
Ideology
                    of Pragmatism
              1962
                     Deng Xiaoping proverb: "Yellow cat, black
                    cat, as long as it catches mice, it is a good cat." Deng
                  was known as a pragmatic leader.
              1978   
Deng
                  restated his philosophy in two compact slogans: "Practice
                    is the sole criterion of truth" and "Seek truth
                    from facts." He
                  visited the U.S. and opened the country to trade, travel, and
                  investment. In 1980, Baylor received its first mainland
                  Chinese student since 1949 - Mao Zhiren, who wrote his masters
                  thesis under my direction about the financial policies of
                  Alexander Hamilton. 
                
               
              1981
                  Huge agricultural reform - land redistributed through
                  the "household responsibility system" (more below under
                  Agriculture).
               
                
              1982
                  Adoption of the new
                      Constitution that still operates today (with
                  amendments mentioned below), replacing earlier documents from
                  1955 and 1978. A
                  few excerpts:
                   
                  The People’s Republic of China is a socialist state under
                    the people’s democratic
                      dictatorship led by the working class and based on
                    the alliance of workers and peasants... The leadership of
                    the Communist Party of China
                    is the defining feature of socialism with Chinese
                    characteristics. 
                   
                
                   
                  The basis of the socialist economic system of the People’s
                    Republic of China is socialist public ownership of the means
                    of production... The system of socialist public ownership
                    ... applies the principle of “from each according to his
                    ability, to each according to his work.” 
                     
                    All mineral resources, waters, forests, mountains,
                    grasslands, unreclaimed land, beaches and other natural
                    resources are owned by the State, that is, by the whole
                    people, with the exception of the forests, mountains,
                    grasslands, unreclaimed land and beaches that are owned by
                    collectives as prescribed by law... Land in the cities is
                    owned by the State. Land in the rural and suburban areas is
                    owned by collectives except for those portions which belong
                    to the State as prescribed by law; house sites and privately
                    farmed plots of cropland and hilly land are also owned by
                    collectives. The State may, in the public interest and in
                    accordance with law, expropriate or requisition land for its
                    use and make compensation for the land expropriated or
                    requisitioned. 
                   
                
              
              1983
                  Deng declared that Taiwan (later added Hong Kong) could remain
                  autonomous and capitalist when reunited with China—one
                    country, two systems.
              1984 
Professor
                  Li Yining of Peking University developed a Marxian rationale
                  for market reforms—China is still operating at the  primary
stage
                    of socialism.
                
              1986 
                  Negotiations started for China to enter the World Trade
                  Organization.  
              1989 
                  Reformist Party leader Hu Yaobang died; students held memorial
                  service in Tienanmen Square. Demonstrators remained 6
                  weeks, until troops entered the square on June 4.
                  Recentralization of authority. 
              1992 
Deng
                  Xiaoping visited special economic zones in southern
                  China, promoting reform. 
              1997               
                    Deng Xiaoping died; successors declared allegiance to
                  his pragmatic line.
              
                2000 
President
                  Jiang Zemin introduced the 'Three Represents'. “The
                  CPC will remain successful…so long as the Party represents the
                  requirements of developing China's advanced social productive
                  forces, the progressive course of China's advanced culture,
                  and the fundamental interests of the Chinese people.” Party
                  membership open to entrepreneurs, effectively reducing the
                  chance that business leaders would oppose the Party. 
              Also in 2000
                  - U.S. Congress granted permanent normal trading relations
                  (PNTR) to China, clearing the way for accession to the WTO
                  at the end of 2001. According to Yeling Tan in Foreign
                    Affairs (March/April 2021), accession initially
                  strengthened the market reformers, and most of the
                  requirements for accession were quickly fulfilled: 
                  Tariff rates on foreign imports were slashed, and a
                    multitude of nontariff barriers were eliminated. The
                    authority to engage in foreign trade, previously restricted
                    to SOEs and foreign firms located in special economic zones,
                    was broadened to all firms, including private Chinese
                    enterprises. Beijing substantially improved legal
                    protections for and reduced administrative burdens on
                    businesses.. 
              2002-2003 - Hu Jintao became
                  President and Communist Party chief and Wen Jiabao became
                  Prime Minister. Relatively little change from the policies of
                  Deng Xiaoping,
                    but they
                      were seen by some as weaker leaders, unable to control
                      bureaucratic opposition to reform.  
                     
              2004 - Amendments to the Constitution
                  included new (but limited) protections for private property
                  ("legally obtained private property of the citizens shall not
                  be violated") and human rights ("the State respects and
                  protects human rights"). 
                
               November 2012, while the U.S. was
                  focused on the 2nd Obama election, Xi Jinping
                  elected General Secretary of Communist Party and Chairman of
                  Military Commission; March 2013, also elected President of the
                  People's Republic. Started a consolidation of power and a
                  renewed "cult of personality." 
              2013, China started building new
                  islands in the South China Sea in an area where territorial
                  rights were already causing friction between China and several
                  Southeast Asian countries, and China started building military
                  facilities on those islands, threatening shipping in that
                  area, and damaging China's reputation as a friendly nation.
                  Since 2015 the United States, France, the UK, and other
                  nations have conducted freedom of navigation operations in the
                  region, challenging Chinese claims of sovereignty. 
                
              September 2013, During a visit to
                  Kazakhstan, Xi announced the "Belt and Road" initiative,
                  whereby China would engage in infrastructure development and
                  investments in nearly 70 countries and international
                  organizations in Asia, Europe, and Africa. This has expanded
                  China's economic, diplomatic, and military power of over a
                  large area, but at high cost to China and to some of the "aid"
                  recipients. 
              
                
                  
                    
                      
                        -  about $1
                            trillion of construction in other countries, largely
                            financed by Chinese banks that were required to make
                            the loans by the government.
 
                        - nearly 60% of China's
                            loans have reportedly been made to countries that
                            are now in financial distress, compared to 10% in
                            2010, forcing China to join the Paris Club, an
                            international organization that negotiates debt
                            relief for struggling countries.
 
                       
                      
                        - From the perspective
                            of recipient countries:
 
                       
                      
                        - Chinese "aid" is
                            mainly extended in loans rather than grants, and
                            Chinese labor (rather than local labor) is used for
                            much of the construction. Allegations of "debt
                            traps," whereby China takes control of port
                            infrastructure in non-repaying countries -
                            allegations of a "new colonialism.".
 
                        - In some cases, the
                            construction quality has been substandard. For
                            example, in Ecuador, a $2.7 billion hydroelectric
                            project (the largest source of power in the country)
                            has developed
                              thousands of cracks and may have to be shut down.
                            
 
                             
                       
                     
                   
                 
               
              November 2013, Xi claimed that
                  "deepening reforms" would allow "market forces" to play a
                  "decisive" role in allocating resources. However, Chinese
                  subsidies to target industries have continued to increase.
                  There are no official and comparable reports for these
                  expenditures, but recent
                    estimates by authors at the Center for Strategic and
                    International Studies (CSIS) suggest that China's
                  industrial policy subsidies have been - by far - the largest
                  in the world (see charts below). However, it will be
                  interesting to see how all of this is affected by the Biden
                    Administration's enormous forays into industrial policy
                  under the Inflation Reduction Act, the CHIPS and Science Act,
                  and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.  
                 
                
               
               
               
               
                
              2014 -  The government announced
                  that it would start building a social credit system.
                  The announcement explained that the system would encourage
                  honesty, payment of debts, and social trust. It would begin
                  with experimentation in major cities, and the goal was to have
                  a unified national system by 2020, but that goal was not been
                  met. The city systems collect information on individuals and
                  businesses, including their financial health and payment of
                  debts, but also obedience to traffic laws, volunteer work,
                  health, blood donation, etc. People with low scores can be
                  placed on various "black lists." So far, the systems seem to
                  be tracking businesses more than individuals, but, in June
                  2019, 27 million people already were on the list restricting
                  air travel and 6 million on the one restricting access to
                  high-speed trains. Some people are beginning to object to the
                  growing "surveillance state" with millions of CCTV cameras
                  everywhere, using face-recognition technology. Source 
              2015 - Announcement of the "Made
                    in China 2025 Strategy" that called for
                  government-supported development of technologies and
                  production capabilities in high-priority sectors including
                  artificial intelligence, advanced robotics, electric cars and
                  other new energy vehicles, 5G information technology,
                  aerospace engineering, emerging bio-medicine, and others. That
                  led to impressive advances, but also international concerns
                  over: (1) compliance with international trade rules, (2)
                  pressure on foreign companies to share their technologies, (3)
                  international technological espionage (for example, Meng
                  Wanzhou, the CFO of Huawei, China's largest private company,
                  was arrested at in Canada in 2018 and accused of financial
                  fraud and theft of trade secrets), (4) security concerns over
                  including Chinese technology in telecommunications and other
                  systems that are critical for national and global security. 
              2016 - Donald Trump elected to the
                  presidency in U.S. after saying that China's trade policy was
                  responsible for “the greatest theft in the history of the
                  world.” Between July 2018 and August 2019, the U.S. announced
                  plans to impose tariffs on more than $550 billion of Chinese
                  products, and China retaliated with tariffs on more than $185
                  billion of U.S. goods.  
                 
              2017 - Internment camps built in
                  Xinjiang province (far West) that have imprisoned about a
                  million people without trials, and subjected them to anti-
                  Islamic behavior modification or "brain
                    washing." At a lower level of violence, Christian and
                  other religious communities have been subject to tighter
                  controls with more house churches closed and foreigners
                  expelled. 
              October 2017 - In his speech
                    to the 19th Party Congress, Xi included a section, Thought
                    on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era,
                  reaffirming some of the ideas from Deng
                    Xiaoping and Jiang
                    Zemin, but also holding out the Chinese system as a
                      model for other countries, and giving a stronger
                  reaffirmation of the relevance of Marxism: 
                  "The banner of socialism with Chinese characteristics is
                    now flying high and proud for all to see. It means that the
                    path, the theory, the system, and the culture of socialism
                    with Chinese characteristics have kept developing, blazing a
                    new trail for other developing countries to achieve
                    modernization. It offers a new option for other countries
                    and nations who want to speed up their development while
                    preserving their independence; and it offers Chinese wisdom
                    and a Chinese approach to solving the problems facing
                    mankind." 
                    After
                  the Party Congress, dozens of Chinese universities established
                  new academic programs dedicated to Xi Jinping Thought and
                  Marxism, heightening the new cult of personality around Xi.
                  Also, see the videos by Zhang Weiwei of Fudan University (here
                  and here),
                  making claims for the superiority of the "Chinese Model."  
              March 2018 - Amendments of the
                  Constitution removed term limits for Party leader, raising the
                  possibility that Xi will be a "leader for life." The Chinese
                  system was now promoted as a "model for other countries." 
              2020-2023 - The
                  trade war with China that was initiated by Trump continued
                  under the Biden administration and then escalated after China
                  failed to discourage the Russian invasion of Ukraine in
                  February 2022. In September 2022, U.S. national security
                  advisor Jake Sullivan announced intention to prevent the
                  transfer of technologies to China in computing (including
                  advanced chips, quantum computing and artificial
                  intelligence), biotechnology, and clean energy. Strong actions
                  have been taken to prevent transfer of advanced chips and
                  their technology by U.S. companies and foreign companies using
                  U.S. licenses.  
              B. 
                      Agriculture 
              Before
                  World War II, traditional system—small-scale
                  subsistence farming on private land. 
              1953-1957
                  - small farms merged into Soviet-style collectives
                  with average of 160 families. 
              1958 -
                  collectives merged into people's communes with
                  3,000-5,000 families, organized in production brigades and
                  production teams. The commune served as the basic unit of
                  local government, running schools, clinics, etc.
              1961-1965
                  - policy of "Agriculture First." 
              a.  
Communes
                  reduced in size to about 1,700 families.
              
                  
              
              b.  
Incomes
                  linked to performance of production teams and individuals
                  according to work-point system. 
              
                  
              
              c.  
Families
                  allowed to operate small private plots. 
              1966-1978
                  - progress prevented by Cultural Revolution and the post-Mao
                  succession crisis. 
              1981 -
                Household
                      Responsibility System (HRS)
                  actively promoted by government, Covered 98% of rural
                  population within 3 years. 
              a.  
Communal
                  fields were divided into small family plots. Note: In some
                  ways, this was a return to family farming that was practiced
                  before 1949.
              
                  
              
              b.  
Households
                  contracted with production team to cultivate a tract of land
                  in exchange for fixed quotas of certain agricultural products
                  to the team at fixed prices. 
              
                  
              
              c.  
System
                  modified in 1984-1985: communes abolished; land ownership
                  transferred local villages and townships; allowable terms of
                  the contracts extended to 15 years (30 years after 1995);
                  household could transfer its contracted land to another
                  household.
              
                  
              
              d.  
System
                  was big initial success, based on stronger incentives and more
                  even distribution of labor effort over the land. 
              
                  
              
              e.  
By
                  1985, grain production returned to lower trend growth and then
                   declined from 1998-2003. Largely caused by diversion of
                  land from agriculture and from grain  acreage to fruit
                  and high-value crops. Since 2003, recovery of grain production
                  explained largely by heavy investments in agriculture.
              
                  
              
              f.  
Recent
                  research by Chinese scholars at Zhejiang University and
                  Stanford University suggests that inflexibility of the Chinese
                  system of land tenure has kept farm sizes very small (about
                  0.1 hectares or .25 acres), which limits their productivity
                  and causes overuse of agricultural chemicals, causing
                  "enormous damages to environmental quality and human health in
                  China." Recent reforms have made it easier for farmers to
                  transfer the use rights of their land, aimed at creating
                  larger, more efficient, farms  
                
              
                  
              
              g.  
On
                  the positive side, the household responsibility system raised
                  productivity, allowing excess workers to move to industrial
                  jobs in the cities.  On the negative side, that left an
                  aging population in charge of the farms, and rural incomes
                  have fallen behind urban.  
                
              
               
                 
              China Cereals Area,
                  Production, and Yield (production/hectare) 
              
               
                Source: https://www.fao.org/faostat/en/#country/351   
               
              
              C. 
                      Population Policy 
              Under
                  Mao - 1949-1970 - large families encouraged, except that Liu
                  Shaoqi encouraged 2-child families during the 1961-1965 pause.
                
              1971-1978
                  - "Later, Longer, Fewer" policy encouraged couples to have
                  fewer children, aimed at 2-child families. Fertility rates
                  dropped rapidly from 5.8 births per woman in 1970 to 2.7 in
                  1978.
              1979-2015
                  - The "One-Child Family" policy, which initially was enforced
                  strictly and pretty horribly (forced abortions, etc, etc).
                  There were loopholes for ethnic minorities, agricultural
                  families, and pairs of only-children, so about half of
                  households could eventually have 2-children.
              Beginning
                  in 2015, two children were allowed for all; raised to three in
                  May 2021; and then all limits and penalties removed in
                    July 2021.  
                
              Now
                  the government is pushing a return to "traditional family
                  values" and larger families, but the population is not
                  responding. In 2022, China's population declined (by 850,000)
                  for the first time since 1961, and it fell behind India in
                  population in 2023. It's expected to reduce the overall growth
                  rate of the Chinese economy. 
                
              The
                  One Child policy probably supported poverty reduction, but has
                  caused many distortions of the age and gender structure of the
                  population and has created a culture of "little emperors and
                  empresses." A socialism of only-children?  
                  China now has one of the most rapidly aging populations in the
                  world, following the example of Japan, so India is expected to
                  serve as a stronger engine of growth in the global economy in
                  the medium term.
               
                Source:
                https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/10/china-will-grow-old-before-it-gets-rich/  
               
              C. 
                      GDP Growth 
                
                
              After
                  tumultuous swings during 1950-1979, the average rate of GDP
                  growth during 1980-2015 was nearly 10%. During 2016-2021, that
                  slowed to 6%. During 2022-2027, that's expected to slow again
                  to 5% or lower. What explains all of that?
                
               
                Source: Yan Wang & Yudong Yao, "Sources of China's Economic
                Growth, 1952-1999," 
                World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 2650, July 2001.  
              During
                  the Maoist pre-reform era (1953-1977), economic growth was
                  explained mainly by growth of physical capital and (before the
                  disruption of the Cultural Revolution) by rising educational
                  levels. The contribution from growth in the labor force was
                  small and TFP growth was negative. 
                  NOTE: TFP = Total Factor Productivity = growth of GDP that
                    is NOT explained by growth of the labor force, educational
                    levels ("human capital"), or growth of the physical capital
                    stock. Growth that arises from more efficient use of labor
                    and capital resources. Extensive
                      research suggests that maintenance of TFP growth is
                    important for avoiding the Middle Income Trap and making
                    progress toward a higher standard of living. 
                  
              
              Source: World Bank Group and
                Development Research Center of the State Council, PRC.  
                Innovative China: New Drivers of Growth. Washington, DC,
                2019. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32351  
               
               
               
                
                  According to estimates of the World Bank and Chinese State
                  Council (above), economic growth was derived about equally
                  from growth of the active labor supply, physical capital per
                  worker, and improvements in TFP during the early reform era
                  (1978-1987 and 1988-1997). During that period: 
                  a.  Agricultural reform (family responsibility) that
                  raised productivity and generated savings for a high
                  investment rate and allowed release of workers to higher
                  productivity industrial jobs in cities. 
                  b. Opening the country allowed inflow of overseas capital and
                  technology, sources of industrial raw materials, markets for
                  industrial goods, and improved educational opportunities  
                  c.  The working-age share of the population was rising. 
                   
                
              During
                  the years since 1998, the contribution of employment growth
                  has fallen with a declining and aging population, and the
                  contribution of TFP has declined because: 
                  a.  Getting closer to the global tech frontier, so
                  improvements grow harder. 
                  b.  Attempt to move more workers from manufacturing into
                  the service sector is likely to reduce productivity growth. 
                  c.  Rising trade protectionism, especially after the
                  Great Recession and the Trump and Biden elections. 
                
                   
                  d.  Authoritarianism under Xi Jinping.
              
                        
                  e.
                  Zero-tolerance COVID policy - Chinese traditional vaccines
                  provide less protection than Western mRNA vaccines, and that's
                  especially true for Omicron. 
                
               
               
              VIII.   
                  How Far Can One Leg Go?
              A. 
Chinese
                  advantages in the coming century:
              1.  
Long
                  and stable cultural heritage.
              2.  
                  Relatively well educated population and very high levels of
                  investment in R&D .
              3.
                    Untapped natural resources. 
               
              B. 
                  Challenges:
              1.  
Slowing
                  economic growth, even before COVID-19 and rising debt levels
              2.  
                  Necessity of transitioning from export-based development to a
                  more internally-based system and capital dependent growth to
                  higher productivity. 
              3.  
                  Need to strengthen the independence of financial institutions
                  and access of the private sector to financing. According to a
                  World Bank survey, many Chinese firms say this is their most
                  significant constraint. Private firms are almost twice as
                  likely to be turned down for a loan than state-owned
                  enterprises.
              4.  
                  Rising authoritarianism, ideology over pragmatism, and cult of
                  personality under Xi Jinping. Is continued economic growth
                  possible without political reform? 
                
              5.  
                  Declining international approval, driven by backsliding on
                  "one country, two systems" in Hong Kong; alleged COVID-19
                  cover-up; treatment of Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang and other
                  religious groups; South China Sea islands and shipping
                  disputes; large trade imbalances; technological espionage and
                  other tech-based security concerns, etc, etc. Opinions were
                    already growing more negative before the COVID crisis,
                  and have
                    taken another dive afterward. Many countries are growing
                  more protectionist generally, and especially so with China.
               
                  Editorial Comment: While our relationship with China will be
                  more complicated going forward, it will be impossible to
                  address the big global problems, such as pandemics, climate
                  change, cyber-terrorism, etc, etc, without some level of
                  dialogue and cooperation. Also, if we are going to influence
                  Chinese behavior, we will do that more effectively in
                  cooperation with our allies who share many of our democratic
                  values.
                
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