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I think a fair way to judge how democratic a country is, is to actually see the prevalence (or lack thereof) of hidden rules/unspoken consensus in politics and society in general.
What you called 潜规则.
In the measurement, china has lots of room for improvement.
Not just celebrities, but apparently some fashion models, flight attendants and railway stewardess too. Personally I would really what that sort of things to change. They do have impact on society's perception and expectations.
Between 2003-2009, the countrys procuratorates at all levels had probed into more than 240,000 cases involved in bribery and dereliction of duty. Only in 2009, 3,194 bribers were held criminally responsible.
The white paper quoted a National Bureau of Statistics poll as saying that during the 2003- 2010 period, the publics satisfaction rating over the governments anti-corruption efforts rose to 70.6 percent from 51.9 percent. Meanwhile, the survey shows 83.8 percent of Chinese think corruption has been kept down to varying extents in 2010, compared with 68.1 percent in 2003.
Not talking strictly in that area. Hiddens rules just seem more common in asia because we tend to 靠关系混饭吃 more. And also in academia as well.
Countries like Germany, north european countries and NZ in general are much better in this regard.
Rules and regulations seems to be more relational in asian cultures. In some cases there seems to be a almost half-life like property to it.
Not talking strictly in that area. Hiddens rules just seem more common in asia because we tend to 靠关系混饭吃 more. And also in academia as well.
Countries like Germany, north european countries and NZ in general are much better in this regard.
Rules and regulations seems to be more relational in asian cultures. In some cases there seems to be a almost half-life like property to it.
Not talking strictly in that area. Hiddens rules just seem more common in asia because we tend to 靠关系混饭吃 more. And also in academia as well.
Countries like Germany, north european countries and NZ in general are much better in this regard.
Rules and regulations seems to be more relational in asian cultures. In some cases there seems to be a almost half-life like property to it.
The opposite of democracy is dictatorship.
A dictatorship is defined as a government dominated by one person.
The Communist Party of China has the same number of members as Turkey has people overall. 77 million.
It is not a dictatorship.
Therefore, we are a democracy already.
Communist Party of China - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The CPC is the world's largest political party,[9] claiming nearly 78 million members[10] at the end of 2009 which constitutes about 5.6% of the total population of mainland China.
Demographics of the People's Republic of China - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
19.8% of the population is under the age of 15, and therefore cannot participate in politics. My estimates are, probably another 10% of the population is 15-22 (the minimum age to join CPC is 22). About 8% of the population eligible to join, are members. Or, one member per 12 people. The average extended family in China has 8-9 people. Therefore, approximately one person per family is a CPC member.