Diễn đàn của người dân Quảng Ngãi
giới thiệu | liên lạc | lưu niệm

 April 23, 2025
Trang đầu Hình ảnh, sinh hoạt QN:Đất nước/con người Liên trường Quảng Ngãi Biên khảo Hải Quân HQ.VNCH HQ.Thế giới Kiến thức, tài liệu Y học & đời sống Phiếm luận Văn học Tạp văn, tùy bút Cổ văn thơ văn Kim văn thơ văn Giải trí Nhạc Trang Anh ngữ Trang thanh niên Linh tinh Tác giả Nhắn tin, tìm người

  Trang Anh ngữ
EVERYTHING YOU THINK YOU KNOW ABOUT CHINA IS WRONG
BAN ĐIỀU HÀNH
Các bài liên quan:
    NỀN KINH TẾ "5 KHÔNG" CỦA TRUNG CỘNG
    VÌ SAO MỸ “VIỆN TRỢ” CHO TRUNG CỘNG DÙ NỢ HÀNG NGÀN TỶ USD? (Bình Nguyên)
    CÔNG CUỘC CẢI CÁCH Ở TRUNG CỘNG ĐÃ CÙNG ĐƯỜNG?
    SỨC MẠNH KINH TẾ ĐÁNG NGỜ CỦA TRUNG CỘNG
    HỔ GIẤY TRUNG HOA (PAPER TIGER)
    CHINA’S BRAINWASHED YOUTH
    CHINA’S RICKY FINANCES
    RỦI RO TÀI CHÍNH CỦA TRUNG HOA
    PAPER TIGER
    CHINA LIES, DAMN LIES, AND SECRET STATISTICS


EVERYTHING YOU THINK YOU KNOW ABOUT CHINA IS WRONG.
By Minxin Pei

Aug. 29, 2012


Are we obsessing about its rise when we should be worried about its fall?

For the last 40 years, Americans have lagged in recognizing the declining fortunes of their foreign rivals. In the 1970s they thought the Soviet Union was 10 feet tall - ascendant even though corruption and inefficiency were destroying the vital organs of a decaying communist regime. In the late 1980s, they feared that Japan was going to economically overtake the United States, yet the crony capitalism, speculative madness, and political corruption evident throughout the 1980s led to the collapse of the Japanese economy in 1991.
 


Could the same malady have struck Americans when it comes to China? The latest news from Beijing is indicative of Chinese weakness: a persistent slowdown of economic growth, a glut of unsold goods, rising bad bank loans, a bursting real estate bubble, and a vicious power struggle at the top, coupled with unending political scandals. Many factors that have powered China's rise, such as the demographic dividend, disregard for the environment, supercheap labor, and virtually unlimited access to external markets, are either receding or disappearing.

Yet China's declining fortunes have not registered with U.S. elites, let alone the American public. President Barack Obama's much-hyped "pivot to Asia," announced last November, is premised on the continuing rise of China; the Pentagon has said that by 2020 roughly 60 percent of the Navy's fleet will be stationed in the Asia-Pacific region. Washington is also considering deploying sea-borne anti-missile systems in East Asia, a move reflecting U.S. worries about China's growing missile capabilities.

In the lead-up to the Nov. 6 U.S. presidential election, both Democrats and Republicans have emphasized perceived Chinese strength for reasons of both national security and political expediency. Democrats use China's growing economic might to call for more government investment in education and green technology. In late August, the Center for American Progress and the Center for the Next Generation, two left-leaning think tanks, released a report forecasting that China will have 200 million college graduates by 2030. The report (which also estimates India's progress in creating human capital) paints a grim picture of U.S. decline and demands decisive action. Republicans justify increasing defense spending in this era of sky-high deficits in part by citing predictions that China's military capabilities will continue to grow as the country's economy expands. The 2012 Republican Party platform, released in late August at the Republican National Convention, says, "In the face of China's accelerated military build-up, the United States and our allies must maintain appropriate military capabilities to discourage any aggressive or coercive behavior by China against its neighbors."

The disconnect between the brewing troubles in China and the seemingly unshakable perception of Chinese strength persists even though the U.S. media accurately cover China, in particular the country's inner fragilities. One explanation for this disconnect is that elites and ordinary Americans remain poorly informed about China and the nature of its economic challenges in the coming decades. The current economic slowdown in Beijing is neither cyclical nor the result of weak external demand for Chinese goods. China's economic ills are far more deeply rooted: an overbearing state squandering capital and squeezing out the private sector, systemic inefficiency and lack of innovation, a rapacious ruling elite interested solely in self-enrichment and the perpetuation of its privileges, a woefully underdeveloped financial sector, and mounting ecological and demographic pressures. Yet even for those who follow China, the prevailing wisdom is that though China has entered a rough patch, its fundamentals remain strong.

Americans' domestic perceptions influence how they see their rivals. It is no coincidence that the period in the 1970s and late 1980s when Americans missed signs of rivals' decline corresponded with intense dissatisfaction with U.S. performance (President Jimmy Carter's 1979 "malaise speech," for example). Today, a China whose growth rate is falling from 10 to 8 percent a year (for now) looks pretty good in comparison with an America where annual growth languishes at below 2 percent and unemployment stays above 8 percent. In the eyes of many Americans, things may be bad over there, but they are much worse here.

Perceptions of a strong and pushy China also persist because of Beijing's own behavior. The ruling Chinese Communist Party continues to exploit nationalist sentiments to bolster its credentials as the defender of China's national honor. Chinese state media and history textbooks have fed the younger generation such a diet of distorted, jingoistic facts, outright lies, and nationalist myths that it is easy to provoke anti-Western or anti-Japanese sentiments. Even more worrisome is Beijing's uncompromising stance on territorial disputes with America's key Asian allies, such as Japan and the Philippines. The risk that a contest over disputed maritime territories, especially in the South China Sea, could lead to real armed conflict makes many in the United States believe that they cannot let down their guard against China.

Sadly, this gap between the American perception of Chinese strength and the reality of Chinese weakness has real adverse consequences. Beijing will use China-bashing rhetoric and the strengthening U.S. defense posture in East Asia as ironclad evidence of Washington's unfriendliness. The Communist Party will blame the United States for its economic difficulties and diplomatic setbacks. Xenophobia could become an asset for a regime struggling for survival in hard times. Many Chinese already hold the United States responsible for the recent escalations in the South China Sea dispute and think the United States goaded Hanoi and Manila into confrontation.

The most consequential effect of this disconnect is the loss of an opportunity both to rethink U.S. China policy and to prepare for possible discontinuity in China's trajectory in the coming two decades. The central pillar of Washington's China policy is the continuation of the status quo, a world in which the Communist Party's rule is assumed to endure for decades. Similar assumptions underpinned Washington's policies toward the former Soviet Union, Suharto's Indonesia, and more recently Hosni Mubarak's Egypt and Muammar al-Qaddafi's Libya. Discounting the probability of regime change in seemingly invulnerable autocracies has always been an ingrained habit in Washington.

The United States should reassess the basic premises of its China policy and seriously consider an alternative strategy, one based on the assumption of declining Chinese strength and rising probability of an unexpected democratic transition in the coming two decades. Should such a change come, the geopolitical landscape of Asia would transform beyond recognition. The North Korean regime would collapse almost overnight, and the Korean Peninsula would be reunified. A regional wave of democratic transitions would topple the communist regimes in Vietnam and Laos. The biggest and most important unknown, however, is about China itself: Can a weak or weakening country of 1.3 billion manage a peaceful transition to democracy?

It is of course premature to completely write off the Communist Party's capacity for adaptation and renewal. China could come roaring back in a few years, and the United States should not ignore this possibility. But the party's demise can't be ruled out, and the current signs of trouble in China have provided invaluable clues to such a highly probable seismic shift. U.S. policymakers would be committing another strategic error of historic proportions if they miss or misread them.

Minxin Pei



Minxin Pei wears many hats: Born in Shanghai, he became a dual Chinese-American citizen after moving to the United States to attend graduate school at Harvard. Minxin Pei was an adjunct senior associate in the Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment. He is the Tom and Margot Pritzker ‘72 Professor of Government and the director of the Keck Center for International and Strategic Studies at Claremont McKenna College.

His research focuses on democratization in developing countries, economic reform and governance in China, and U.S. – China relations. He is the author of From Reform to Revolution: The Demise of Communism in China and the Soviet Union (Harvard University Press, 1994) and China’s Trapped Transition: The Limits of Developmental Autocracy (Harvard University Press, 2006). Pei’s research has been published in Foreign Policy, Foreign Affairs, the National Interest, Modern China, China Quarterly, Journal of Democracy, and many edited books. Pei is a frequent commentator on CNN and National Public Radio; his op-eds have appeared in the Financial Times, New York Times, Washington Post, Newsweek International, and the International Herald Tribune. He is a columnist for L’espresso, a major Italian news magazine and a regular contributor to the Diplomat, a leading online international affairs journal. Pei received his Ph.D. in political science from Harvard University.

Selected Publications: “Think Again: Asia’s Rise,” Foreign Policy (July–August 2009); “The Color of China,” the National Interest (March 2009); “How China is Ruled, the American Interest (Spring 2008); “Corruption Threatens China’s Future,” Carnegie Policy Brief No. 55 (2007); China’s Trapped Transition: The Limits of Developmental Autocracy (Harvard University Press, 2006).

* * *

Related story: please click here
Vietnamese text: please click here
More: English topic, please click here
Main homepage: www.nuiansongtra.com  


Nếu độc giả, đồng hương, thân hữu muốn: 

* Liên-lạc với Ban Điều Hành hay webmaster 
* Gởi các sáng tác, tài liệu, hình-ảnh... để đăng 
* Cần bản copy tài liệu, hình, bài...trên trang web:

Xin gởi email về: quangngai@nuiansongtra.net 
hay: nuiansongtra1941@gmail.com

*  *  *

Copyright by authors & Website Nui An Song Tra - 2006


Created by Hiep Nguyen
log in | ghi danh