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Gordan Chang Predicts China will Collapse Again

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I admit it: My prediction that the Communist Party would fall by 2011 was wrong. Still, I'm only off by a year.



In the middle of 2001, I predicted in my book, The Coming Collapse of China, that the Communist Party would fall from power in a decade, in large measure because of the changes that accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO) would cause. A decade has passed; the Communist Party is still in power. But don't think I'm taking my prediction back.



Why has China as we know it survived? First and foremost, the Chinese central government has managed to avoid adhering to many of its obligations made when it joined the WTO in 2001 to open its economy and play by the rules, and the international community maintained a generally tolerant attitude toward this noncompliant behavior. As a result, Beijing has been able to protect much of its home market from foreign competitors while ramping up exports.

By any measure, China has been phenomenally successful in developing its economy after WTO accession -- returning to the almost double-digit growth it had enjoyed before the near-recession suffered at the end of the 1990s. Many analysts assume this growth streak can continue indefinitely. For instance, Justin Yifu Lin, the World Bank's chief economist, believes the country can grow for at least two more decades at 8 percent, and the International Monetary Fund predicts China's economy will surpass America's in size by 2016.

Don't believe any of this. China outperformed other countries because it was in a three-decade upward supercycle, principally for three reasons. First, there were Deng Xiaoping's transformational "reform and opening up" policies, first implemented in the late 1970s. Second, Deng's era of change coincided with the end of the Cold War, which brought about the elimination of political barriers to international commerce. Third, all of this took place while China was benefiting from its "demographic dividend," an extraordinary bulge in the workforce.

Yet China's "sweet spot" is over because, in recent years, the conditions that created it either disappeared or will soon. First, the Communist Party has turned its back on Deng's progressive policies. Hu Jintao, the current leader, is presiding over an era marked by, on balance, the reversal of reform. There has been, especially since 2008, a partial renationalization of the economy and a marked narrowing of opportunities for foreign business. For example, Beijing blocked acquisitions by foreigners, erected new barriers like the "indigenous innovation" rules, and harassed market-leading companies like Google. Strengthening "national champion" state enterprises at the expense of others, Hu has abandoned the economic paradigm that made his country successful.

Second, the global boom of the last two decades ended in 2008 when markets around the world crashed. The tumultuous events of that year brought to a close an unusually benign period during which countries attempted to integrate China into the international system and therefore tolerated its mercantilist policies. Now, however, every nation wants to export more and, in an era of protectionism or of managed trade, China will not be able to export its way to prosperity like it did during the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s. China is more dependent on international commerce than almost any other nation, so trade friction -- or even declining global demand -- will hurt it more than others. The country, for instance, could be the biggest victim of the eurozone crisis.

Third, China, which during its reform era had one of the best demographic profiles of any nation, will soon have one of the worst. The Chinese workforce will level off in about 2013, perhaps 2014, according to both Chinese and foreign demographers, but the effect is already being felt as wages rise, a trend that will eventually make the country's factories uncompetitive. China, strangely enough, is running out of people to move to cities, work in factories, and power its economy. Demography may not be destiny, but it will now create high barriers for growth.

At the same time that China's economy no longer benefits from these three favorable conditions, it must recover from the dislocations -- asset bubbles and inflation -- caused by Beijing's excessive pump priming in 2008 and 2009, the biggest economic stimulus program in world history (including $1 trillion-plus in 2009 alone). Since late September, economic indicators -- electricity consumption, industrial orders, export growth, car sales, property prices, you name it -- are pointing toward either a flatlining or contracting economy. Money started to leave the country in October, and Beijing's foreign reserves have been shrinking since September.


As a result, we will witness either a crash or, more probably, a Japanese-style multi-decade decline. Either way, economic troubles are occurring just as Chinese society is becoming extremely restless. It is not only that protests have spiked upwards -- there were 280,000 "mass incidents" last year according to one count -- but that they are also increasingly violent as the recent wave of uprisings, insurrections, rampages and bombings suggest. The Communist Party, unable to mediate social discontent, has chosen to step-up repression to levels not seen in two decades. The authorities have, for instance, blanketed the country's cities and villages with police and armed troops and stepped up monitoring of virtually all forms of communication and the media. It's no wonder that, in online surveys, "control" and "restrict" were voted the country's most popular words for 2011.

That tough approach has kept the regime secure up to now, but the stability it creates can only be short-term in China's increasingly modernized society, where most people appear to believe a one-party state is no longer appropriate. The regime has clearly lost the battle of ideas.

Today, social change in China is accelerating. The problem for the country's ruling party is that, although Chinese people generally do not have revolutionary intentions, their acts of social disruption can have revolutionary implications because they are occurring at an extraordinarily sensitive time. In short, China is much too dynamic and volatile for the Communist Party's leaders to hang on. In some location next year, whether a small village or great city, an incident will get out of control and spread fast. Because people across the country share the same thoughts, we should not be surprised they will act in the same way. We have already seen the Chinese people act in unison: In June 1989, well before the advent of social media, there were protests in roughly 370 cities across China, without national ringleaders.

This phenomenon, which has swept North Africa and the Middle East this year, tells us that the nature of political change around the world is itself changing, destabilizing even the most secure-looking authoritarian governments. China is by no means immune to this wave of popular uprising, as Beijing's overreaction to the so-called "Jasmine" protests this spring indicates. The Communist Party, once the beneficiary of global trends, is now the victim of them.

So will China collapse? Weak governments can remain in place a long time. Political scientists, who like to bring order to the inexplicable, say that a host of factors are required for regime collapse and that China is missing the two most important of them: a divided government and a strong opposition.

At a time when crucial challenges mount, the Communist Party is beginning a multi-year political transition and therefore ill-prepared for the problems it faces. There are already visible splits among Party elites, and the leadership's sluggish response in recent months -- in marked contrast to its lightning-fast reaction in 2008 to economic troubles abroad -- indicates that the decision-making process in Beijing is deteriorating. So check the box on divided government.

And as for the existence of an opposition, the Soviet Union fell without much of one. In our substantially more volatile age, the Chinese government could dissolve like the autocracies in Tunisia and Egypt. As evident in this month's "open revolt" in the village of Wukan in Guangdong province, people can organize themselves quickly -- as they have so many times since the end of the 1980s. In any event, a well-oiled machine is no longer needed to bring down a regime in this age of leaderless revolution.

Not long ago, everything was going well for the mandarins in Beijing. Now, nothing is. So, yes, my prediction was wrong. Instead of 2011, the mighty Communist Party of China will fall in 2012. Bet on it.
 
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I admit it: My prediction that the Communist Party would fall by 2011 was wrong. Still, I'm only off by a year.

LOL, this guy already predicted that China would collapse in 2006. :lol:

Now his 2011 prediction was wrong too, what a shocker.

Gordon G. Chang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This guy has predicted the collapse of China, for practically every single year during this past decade.

This guy is trying to use his half-Chinese face to make a few dollars, but having some Chinese DNA does not make you Chinese.
 
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Gordan Chang is a Proven Liar he published a Book in 2001 saying China would collapse in 2006, then said it was off by two years and claimed china would collapse in 2008 then 2011, now 2012 ? How about we move it to 2016 or better yet 2020, Changs just trying to sell his book.

coming-collapse.jpg
 
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Actually I've watched a interview of Chang and he hated being Half Chinese, because he was bullied, Chang claims he's anti CCP however the fact is Chang is Anti Chinese he embraces his white side, Chang also made statements saying China would have been better if Europe colonized China. Chang is noting more then a Clown.
 
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Gordan Chang is a Proven Liar he published a Book in 2001 saying China would collapse in 2006, then said it was off by two years and claimed china would collapse in 2008 then 2011, now 2012 ? How about we move it to 2016 or better yet 2020, Changs just trying to sell his book.

coming-collapse.jpg
this is his strategy of sequal sensational novelty that only naive people'd buy

---------- Post added at 05:37 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:35 AM ----------

Actually I've watched a interview of Chang and he hated being Half Chinese, because he was bullied, Chang claims he's anti CCP however the fact is Chang is Anti Chinese he embraces his white side, Chang also made statements saying China would have been better if Europe colonized China. Chang is noting more then a Clown.

this statement also remarked by another clown liu xiao bo
 
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Star√ation;2442269 said:
Maybe he mis-typed the word "China", it's could be "US" instead.

Chang is just trying to sell his book combined with his hatred for his Chinese heritage. these days China collapse material Runs like Gold :D

---------- Post added at 01:38 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:37 PM ----------

this is his strategy of sequal sensational novelty that only naive people'd buy

---------- Post added at 05:37 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:35 AM ----------



this statement also remarket by another clown liu xiao bo

That Clown also supported the Iraq war and fact is Liu Xiaobo would be called a hero in the west :D
 
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Gordon Chang is a drug dealer and he knows what his junkies need to take their mind off their own problems.

Exactly. He sells two types of drugs.

One of the drugs is called "delusion"... and the other drug is called "denial".

If a proper Economist writes a paper about how China will collapse, and they use logical/reasonable arguments to back up their case, I will like to read it. It could even be helpful to us, so we can fix any of the problems they mention.

Gordon Chang on the other hand really is like a drug dealer, making promises every year so that the anti-China junkies can get high off the fumes.
 
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Chang is just trying to sell his book combined with his hatred for his Chinese heritage. these days China collapse material Runs like Gold :D

Hmmm...so if I want to make some money I can write some BS about China's impending fall. Maybe he isn't a clown but a good con-artist (or fraud). Given the state of the American economy, I guess one have to do whatever is necessary to make money.
 
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Star√ation;2442269 said:
Maybe he mis-typed the word "China", it's could be "US" instead.

correct, there has been significant domestic unrest in the developed economies. entire cities like Oakland, Athens and Rome are in open rebellion against their regime, but the media blackout doesn't let you see anything.
 
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Chang hates himself for being Chinese, he claimed he was anti CCP however he hates being Chinese embraces his white half, we can expect more of his Kind in the coming years.
 
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Hmmm...so if I want to make some money I can write some BS about China's impending fall. Maybe he isn't a clown but a good con-artist (or fraud). Given the state of the American economy, I guess one have to do whatever is necessary to make money.

Changs a pretty bad Con Artist he made claims in 2006, 2008, and now 2011, your right with the USA economy they need something to feel good about :azn:
 
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