What's new

Xi Jinping’s Reform Express Gathers Steam

AgentOrange

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Aug 25, 2014
Messages
1,247
Reaction score
4
Country
Canada
Location
Canada
Xi Jinping’s Reform Express Gathers Steam

By: Arthur R. Kroeber

After the enthusiasm which greeted the launch of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s landmark reform blueprint at the Third Plenum of the 18th Central Committee in November 2013, the mood among observers of China’s economy has gradually soured. A common view is that progress on economic reforms has been slow, bogged down not only by the opposition of vested interests but also by the government’s own distraction with its endless anti-corruption campaign, and by its anxiousness to support short-term growth through easy monetary policy.

This popular take misses the mark in three respects. First, the top priority of Xi’s reform is not about economics; it is to remake China’s system of governance. Successful reform of government and administration, along with more specific market reforms, will, in turn, enable more sustainable economic growth. Second, China’s leaders clearly reject the view that to be serious about structural economic reform, they must accept a sharp cyclical slowdown. Instead, they believe that maintaining relatively rapid growth in the short term will give them more breathing room to push through their complex economic agenda. Finally, a tally of economic reform measures this year shows that progress has in fact been impressively brisk.

Governance, Not Economics, Tops the Agenda

Understanding the primacy of governance reform is essential to grasping the role of the anti-corruption campaign, which has resulted in the investigation or disciplining of over 70,000 officials at all levels of government in virtually every province, and has now spread to senior levels of the People’s Liberation Army. This campaign is often portrayed as a cynical effort by Xi Jinping to consolidate power, eliminate his enemies and curtail the influence of retired senior leaders, notably former Presidents Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao. These motives no doubt play a large role, but the campaign is too far-reaching, and has gone on for too long, for them to be a full explanation.

It is now apparent that the campaign’s central goal is to sharply reduce the system’s tolerance of corruption, which has been quite high since the beginning of economic reforms in the late 1970s. This, in turn, suggests a desire to renegotiate the basic bargain between the central and local governments that has held throughout the reform period. In essence, that bargain tasked local officials with maximizing economic growth, in exchange for which they were tacitly permitted to skim off part of the financial gains from that growth. Central authorities only cracked down when the graft reached grotesque proportions (as with smuggling scandals in Xiamen and other coastal cities in south China in the late 1990s), or when political and policy interests converged in an exemplary prosecution (as in the purge of Shanghai party Secretary Chen Liangyu in 2005, which both removed a Politburo rival to Hu Jintao and sent a message to cities to rein in property speculation).

This bargain proved effective in stimulating sustained rapid growth while China was still a low-income country. But the nation’s economy has now matured and with a per capita national income of $6,560, China now qualifies as an upper-middle income country, by the World Bank’s definition. To sustain high growth at this income level, China needs better governance, a more reliable legal system and considerably less corruption. Thus, the anti-graft campaign is not incidental to or a distraction from the main reform agenda—it is an essential part of the foundation of a more successful economic and political system.

Similarly, the legal system reform outlined at the Fourth Plenum in October, while disappointing many Western observers because it sanctified the Communist Party’s position above the laws that apply to everyone else, is in fact a significant step towards a more consistent, predictable, rules-based system. As Cheng Li has pointed out, the very act of devoting a Plenum to legal issues has made possible a discussion about how to create rule of law in China (see “Fourth Plenum Has Opened Discourse on Constitutionalism, Governance”). And the specific reforms that legal scholars believe are likely—creation of circuit courts to limit the influence of parochial interests, more consistent publication of court decisions, prohibition on Party interference in most cases and the creation of limited avenues for public-interest litigation against polluting industries—have the potential to make Chinese governance fairer, more transparent and more responsive to citizens' concerns. As with the anti-corruption drive, a key theme is to readjust the balance of power in favor of the central government at the expense of the localities.

A final element in the governance reform agenda is the important but often-overlooked fiscal program adopted by the Politburo on June 30. By 2016, China will complete its first major overhaul of the nation’s taxation and government spending system in two decades. Key items include the elimination of land-based local government financing and its replacement by provincial bond issues; restructuring of taxes to reduce local governments’ revenue shortfalls and encourage them to promote consumer services, rather than heavy industry; and stronger resource and environmental taxes to arrest environmental degradation and promote more efficient energy use. Once more, much of the focus is on redefining the core role of local governments: their main mission will shift from promotion of economic growth to effective provision of public services.

Cyclical Economic Management Supports the Reform Agenda

Once we understand the primary role of governance, the sequencing of reform measures becomes more evident, and the relative tardiness of more narrowly economic reforms becomes more understandable. But skeptics have another concern: that the government is losing sight of its long-term structural reform goals in a desperate effort to keep short-term gross domestic product (GDP) growth above seven percent. The premise of this worry is that unless the authorities are willing squeeze out inefficiencies and curb the rapid rise in debt—measures which inevitably require a sharp slowdown in growth—then the structural reforms have little chance of success. In short, the economic model cannot change unless the old, bad habits are punished by clear failure.

Two pieces of recent evidence support this view. First, early in 2014, Beijing relaxed monetary policy and started removing long-standing administrative restrictions on house purchases, in order to prop up a property market that seemed on the brink of collapse. These measures reversed the tight monetary policy of the second half of 2013, which succeeded in bringing credit growth down from 23 percent in April to around 16 percent by the end of the year. Second, the new, looser policy meant that the country’s aggregate debt-to-GDP ratio continued to rise in 2014. After rising from 145 percent of GDP in 2008 to 220 percent in 2013, this ratio continued to climb in 2014 and now exceeds 230 percent of GDP. In absolute terms, this figure is not alarming—most developed countries, including the United States, have significantly higher ratios. But the rapid increase in leverage in a short time is usually a harbinger of financial problems.

It is a mistake, however, to assume that the continued increase in leverage shows that Beijing is incurably addicted to its old debt-fueled growth model, or that the authorities have decided to prioritize growth over reform. First of all, the credit stimulus used to support the property market this year was extremely modest: the year-on-year growth rate of credit ticked up only about one percentage point for a few months, and quickly dropped again once stimulus was withdrawn. The removal of administrative restrictions on house purchases arguably played a larger role in the property stabilization than did easy credit.

More important, Beijing’s approach to deleveraging is a deliberate policy choice driven by the conviction that growth and reform are partners, rather than antagonists. A relevant comparison is the debate between U.S. and European policymakers after 2008 about the appropriate response to the global financial crisis, which left the rich economies stuck with low growth and big debts. Washington argued that policy must focus on sustaining growth (through ultra-easy monetary policy and large fiscal deficits), and that fiscal consolidation should take a back seat. European officials, especially in Germany, argued that fiscal consolidation and debt reduction had to be a top priority, even if it harmed growth. Beijing obviously favors an American-style approach to deleveraging and structural adjustment. Given the superior performance of the U.S. economy (relative to Europe) since the global crisis, this is a defensible choice.

Economic Reforms are Proceeding Smartly

The last point is that, in fact, China’s rollout of specific reform measures over the past year has been impressive. In addition to the fiscal reform package, whose significance has been severely underrated by the market-obsessed international financial media, achievements of 2014 include:

• Abolition of registered capital requirements for new firms, which caused growth in new-company registrations to surge to over 20 percent, the highest rate in a decade.

• Switching the resource tax on coal from a volume to a value basis, a long-delayed measure which should discourage excessive investment and promote energy efficiency.

• Publication of a plan to deregulate all pharmaceutical prices beginning in 2015.

• Publication by virtually all provinces of plans for “mixed-ownership” reform of state enterprises.

• A significant opening of the capital account via the Shanghai-Hong Kong Connect program which permits investors in those two financial hubs to put money directly in each others’ stock markets.

• The publication of draft rules on deposit insurance, paving the way for implementation next year, followed by full liberalization of deposit interest rates.

Clearly these are just initial steps and much work needs to be done to broaden these reforms in ways that will have material impact on China’s $8 trillion economy. But it is hard to think of another major world leader whose government has accomplished so much in such a short period of time. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, for instance, came to office two years ago promising “three arrows” of monetary easing, expansive fiscal policy and deep structural reform. So far he has delivered only one—monetary easing, which has driven the yen down and the stock market up—but structural reform is missing in action and fiscal policy was disastrously captured by Ministry of Finance hawks, whose consumption-tax increase drove the country into a needless recession. The U.S. government is gridlocked and is still fighting over a health care reform law passed five years ago. Six years after the global crisis, Italy has just begun to put in place long-overdue reforms to its labor market, and France, under its last two presidents, has done nothing at all to address its structural economic malaise. Xi Jinping can certainly be criticized on many issues, but failure to deliver on his reform agenda is not one of them.

Source: Xi Jinping’s Reform Express Gathers Steam | Brookings Institution

@Chinese-Dragon @TaiShang @Keel @Yizhi @Shotgunner51 @ChineseTiger1986 @terranMarine @Beast @Beidou2020 @Nihonjin1051 @rcrmj @opruh @Raphael @JSCh @bolo @every other Chinese member here (except Superboy. :lol:)
 
Last edited:
. .
Honestly before Xi Jinping came to power, I was a bit worried due to all the Taizidang rumors.

But I have been impressed by every decision that Xi Jinping has made so far, especially in terms of economic reforms, and clamping down on corruption. I agree with the economics behind his decisions, and more importantly the purpose behind it.

He really exceeded my expectations, now I'm thinking he just might become the next Deng Xiaoping. Or maybe EVEN better. :cheers:

And he came at exactly the right time as well. The next 10 years will be the defining point for China in the next century.
 
.
China is a developing nation, hence has a greater room for maneuver to adjust and re-adjust as the dynamics change. Now seems to be the right time to move from growth-oriented economic development (which naturally allowed for certain shortcomings such as little emphasis on the environment or questionable business practices) to more comprehensive development that takes more into account the social and natural implications of growth.
 
. .
Premier: China to Balance Growth and Structural Reforms

Premier Li Keqiang said Monday that China would balance efforts to stabilize economic growth and boost structural reforms in 2015, as downward pressure on growth still remains.

Speaking at a plenary meeting of the State Council, the premier said that China has entered a new normal development method and downward pressure would remain in the Chinese economy in 2015.

"As the global economy is undergoing a deep restructuring and slow recovery, China's government will likely face heavy tasks in tackling the difficulties," Li said.

He called for adhering to reform and innovation to balance the economy and adjust structure this year.

The premier stressed the Q1 performance is crucial to the whole year's results, and the government shall work on making a good start this year. Research, detailed plans and timely monitoring are necessary to tackle the problems of economic expansion.

Governments need to be well prepared to ensure a smooth Spring Festival rush to protect the safety of passengers, Li said.

Social welfare and salaries of migrant workers shall be supervised, while food safety and fire safety shall be guaranteed, the premier added.

(Xinhua News Agency January 19, 2015)
 
.
Honestly before Xi Jinping came to power, I was a bit worried due to all the Taizidang rumors.

But I have been impressed by every decision that Xi Jinping has made so far, especially in terms of economic reforms, and clamping down on corruption. I agree with the economics behind his decisions, and more importantly the purpose behind it.

He really exceeded my expectations, now I'm thinking he just might become the next Deng Xiaoping. Or maybe EVEN better. :cheers:

And he came at exactly the right time as well. The next 10 years will be the defining point for China in the next century.


China is a developing nation, hence has a greater room for maneuver to adjust and re-adjust as the dynamics change. Now seems to be the right time to move from growth-oriented economic development (which naturally allowed for certain shortcomings such as little emphasis on the environment or questionable business practices) to more comprehensive development that takes more into account the social and natural implications of growth.

What's even better is that he hasn't allowed himself to be distracted from the goals at hand. Take the Umbrella movement - many western pundits were practically creaming themselves at the prospect of chaos in China. And what did Xi Jinping do? Nothing. He knew that Chinese Hong Kongers would sort out their own business and would get fed up with traitors in their midst in no time. What originally started with hundreds of thousands of protesters ended up with only a few thousand protesting the *British*, of all people. :omghaha: All done with zero violence and less than 60 arrests. Against the backdrop of American police brutality in Ferguson and NYC, China came out smelling like a bed of roses. And China did this with zero resources spent and no distraction from the hard reforms it's undergoing.

Xi Jinping is a smart guy. Hope he keeps it up. :cheers:
 
Last edited:
.
China’s Global Political Shift
F. William Engdahl


I have been to China over the years more than a dozen times. I have spoken with people at all levels of policy-making, and one thing I have come to realize is that when Beijing makes a major policy change, they make it carefully and with great deliberation. And when they arrive at a new consensus, they execute it with remarkable effect on all levels. That is the secret to their thirty-year economic miracle. Now China’s top leadership has made such a policy decision. It will transform our world over the next decade.


On November 29, 2014, a little-noted but highly significant meeting took place in Beijing as Washington was absorbed with its various attempts to cripple and ultimately destabilize Putin’s Russia. They held what was termed The Central Conference on Work Relating to Foreign Affairs. Xi Jinping, Chinese President and Chairman of the Central Military Commission, delivered what was called “An Important Address” there.

Careful reading of the official Foreign Ministry statement on the meeting confirms it was indeed “important.” The central leadership of China has now made official a strategic global shift in geopolitical priorities in Chinese foreign policy.

No longer does China regard its relationship with the United Sates or even the EU as of highest priority. Rather they have defined a new grouping of priority countries in their carefully-deliberated geopolitical map. It includes Russia, as well as the entire BRICS rapidly-developing economies; it includes China’s Asian neighbors as well as Africa and other developing countries.

To give a perspective, as recently as 2012 China’s foreign ptries in the world, including China); Multilateral Organizations (UN, APEC, ASEAN, IMF, World Bank etc.), and public diplomacy which determines which situations to become engaged in around the world. Clearly China has decided those priorities no longer work to her advantageolicy priorities were described in a general framework: Great Powers (principally the USA, EU, Japan, and Russia); Periphery (all countries bordering China); Developing Countries (all lower income coun.

In his address to the meeting, President Xi highlighted a sub-category of developing countries: “Major Developing Powers (kuoda fazhanzhong de guojia). China will “expand cooperation and closely integrate our country’s development” with the designated Major Developing Powers, Xi declared. According to Chinese intellectuals, these are countries now deemed especially important partners “to support reform of the international order.” It includes Russia, Brazil, South Africa, India, Indonesia, and Mexico, that is, China’s BRICS partners, as well as Indonesia and Mexico. China has also ceased calling itself a “developing country,” indicating the changed self-image.

Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin indicated one significant aspect of the new policy when at the conference in Beijing he declared that the “imbalance between Asia’s political security and economic development has become an increasingly prominent issue.” China’s proposal to create an Asian “community of shared destiny” aims to resolve this imbalance. That implies closer economic and diplomatic ties with South Korea, Japan, India, Indonesia, even Vietnam and the Philippines.

In other words, although the relationship with the United States will remain highest priority because of America’s military and financial power, we can expect an increasingly outspoken China against what it sees as American interference. This was seen clearly in October when the official China Daily wrote an OpEd during Hong Kong’s “Umbrella Revolution” asking, “Why does Washington Make Color Revolutions?” The article named the Vice President of the US Government-financed regime-change NGO, National Endowment for Democracy as involved. Such directness would have been unthinkable just six years ago when Washington tried to embarrass Beijing by stirring up violent protests by the Dalai Lama Movement in Tibet just before the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

China is openly rejecting the usual Western criticism on human rights and recently declared a freeze in China-UK diplomatic relations following a meeting by the Cameron government with the Dalai Lama and to Norway over its recognition of dissident Liu Xiaobo. Over the past year, step-by-step Beijing has dismissed Washington’s criticism of its reclamation of its historical claims in the South China Sea.

But perhaps most significant, in recent months, China has boldly moved an agenda to build alternative institutions to the US-controlled IMF and World Bank, a potentially devastating blow to US economic power if it succeeds. To counter the US attempt to economically isolate China in Asia through creation of a US Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), Beijing has announced its own Chinese vision of a Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP), an “all inclusive, all-win” trade deal that really promotes Asia-Pacific cooperation.

Elevating Russian Relations

At present, what clearly emerges is China’s decision to make its relation with Putin’s Russia central to this new priority strategy. Despite decades of mistrust following the 1960 Sino-Soviet split, the two countries have begun a depth of cooperation unprecedented. The two great land powers of Eurasia are welding economic bonds that create the only potential “challenger” to future American global supremacy, as US foreign policy strategist, Zbigniew Brzezinski described it in his The Grand Chessboard in 1997.

At a time when Putin was engaged in a full-scale NATO economic sanctions war aimed at toppling his regime, China signed not one, but several gigantic energy deals with Russian state companies Gazprom and Rozneft, allowing Russia to offset the growing threat to her west European energy exports, a life-and-death issue for the Russian economy.

During the November APEC meeting in Beijing, where Obama was given an unmistakable Chinese diplomatic downgrade for the official photo by being told to stand next to the wife of one of the Asian presidents while Putin stood beside Xi. In politics symbols, especially in China carry great import as an essential part of communication. During the same occasion, Xi and Putin agreed

To build a West Route Gas Pipeline from Siberia to China, as an addition to the historic East Route Pipeline agreed with Russia in May. When both are completed, Russia will deliver 40% of China’s natural gas. At the same occasion in Beijing the Chief of the Russian General Staff announced significant new areas of cooperation between Russian Armed Forces and the Chinese PLA.

Now, in the midst of Washington’s full-scale currency war against the Russian ruble, China has announced its readiness, if asked, to help its Russian partner. On December 20 amid a record fall in the Ruble to the dollar, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said that China will provide help if needed and is confident Russia can overcome its economic difficulties. At the same time Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng said expanding a currency swap between the two nations and making increased use of yuan for bilateral trade would have the greatest impact in aiding Russia.

There are other synergies between Russia and China where both coordinate more closely, including Putin’s decision to meet in Spring with the North Korean President, as well as with India, a long-time Russian ally with whom China has had fragile relations since the 1950’s. As well Russia has a strong position with Vietnam going back to the Cold War and development by Russian oil companies of Vietnam’s offshore oil discoveries. In short, for both, once in a harmonized geopolitical strategy, Brzezinski’s worst geopolitical nightmare is taking on a life of its own, thanks, largely, to the very stupid policies of Washington’s neo-conservative warhawks, President Obama, and the very rich, loveless families who pay their bills.

All of these moves, while fraught with danger, signal that China has deeply understood the Washington geopolitical game and the strategies of the neo-conservative US warhawks and, like Putin’s Russia, have little intention of bending their knee to what they see as a Washington global tyranny. The year 2015 shapes to be one of the most decisive and interesting in modern history.

F. William Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a degree in politics from Princeton University and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”
First appeared:
China’s Global Political Shift | New Eastern Outlook


What's even better is that he hasn't allowed himself to be distracted from the goals at hand. Take the Umbrella movement - many western pundits were practically creaming themselves at the prospect of chaos in China. And what did Xi Jinping do? Nothing. He knew that Chinese Hong Kongers would sort out their own business and would get fed up with traitors in their midst in no time. What originally started with hundreds of thousands of protesters ended up with only a few thousand protesting the *British*, of all people. :omghaha: All done with zero violence and less than 60 arrests. Against the backdrop of American police brutality in Ferguson and NYC, China came out smelling like a bed of roses. And China did this with zero resources spent and no distraction from the hard reforms it's undergoing.

Xi Jinping is a smart guy. Hope he keeps it up. :cheers:

Indeed. Mr. Xi has proven to be a master strategist and a true statesman.

Fidel Castro wrote in his Aug. 4th “Reflection”: “Xi Jinping is one of the strongest and most capable revolutionary leaders I have met in my life.”

I guess he is revolutionary in the sense that he has undertaken a much critical systemic restructuring of China, something which has been (I guess rightfully) ignored in the past three or so decades.

As for the Western pundits chronic skepticism. Well, I guess they would not oppose a transitory leader like Mr. Deng, wearing cowboy hat and hugging Carter, but Mr. Xi is not "that kind of leader" and hence the frustration.
 
.
What's even better is that he hasn't allowed himself to be distracted from the goals at hand. Take the Umbrella movement - many western pundits were practically creaming themselves at the prospect of chaos in China. And what did Xi Jinping do? Nothing. He knew that Chinese Hong Kongers would sort out their own business and would get fed up with traitors in their midst in no time. What originally started with hundreds of thousands of protesters ended up with only a few thousand protesting the *British*, of all people. :omghaha: All done with zero violence and less than 60 arrests. Against the backdrop of American police brutality in Ferguson and NYC, China came out smelling like a bed of roses. And China did this with zero resources spent and no distraction from the hard reforms it's undergoing.

Xi Jinping is a smart guy. Hope he keeps it up. :cheers:

Yep that was a master move, he just waited until our polls showed that 70-80% of Hong Kongers were fed up of the Umbrella movement.

Then he allowed the protest leaders to turn themselves in to the Hong Kong Police. :lol:
 
.
Indeed. Mr. Xi has proven to be a master strategist and a true statesman.

Fidel Castro wrote in his Aug. 4th “Reflection”: “Xi Jinping is one of the strongest and most capable revolutionary leaders I have met in my life.”

I guess he is revolutionary in the sense that he has undertaken a much critical systemic restructuring of China, something which has been (I guess rightfully) ignored in the past three or so decades.

As for the Western pundits chronic skepticism. Well, I guess they would not oppose a transitory leader like Mr. Deng, wearing cowboy hat and hugging Carter, but Mr. Xi is not "that kind of leader" and hence the frustration.

Agreed. I'll admit that I doubted him when he upped the ante regarding the Diaoyu dispute. But true to form, Xi Jinping played the long game and it ended with Abe in Beijing seeking reconciliation whilst acknowledging that the islands were under dispute - something that Jiang and Hu were never able to achieve.

You're also right in that a lot of westerners hate him. Because he has balls and looks after China's interests first.
 
.
I was also skeptical before for him being a princeling, but now obviously he has exceeded many expectations, very well done, proud of having him as our leader.

However despite the great works we have seen, I do have two yuans to offer:

- I appreciate his strong man approach in bulldozing the bad guys, yet I still expect to see more solid actions from him in structural reforms in order to eradicate the breeding ground that gave birth to these bad guys in the first place.
domestic governance.

- I would also like to see a more relaxed environment allowing more creativity to prosper. We have gone through the stage of "made in China", now we should go for "created in China". Ideas and bright minds cannot be manufactured, they can only be groomed.
 
Last edited:
.
Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew describes Xi - “I would put him in the Nelson Mandela’s class of persons. A person with enormous emotional stability who does not allow his personal misfortunes or sufferings affect his judgment. In other words, he is impressive,”. Enough said.
 
.
Whether Xi is better than Deng is debatable, times were different back in the 70s and 80s and China was in a different position. Deng made correct calls with the reforms and bide with its time strategic thinking. His secretary did say he often saw Deng smoking his cigar gazing in the room as if he was lost in his thoughts. I'm convinced he was thinking far ahead looking into the future until China arises. As an old leader he was like a very ripe ginger :agree:
Xi on the other hand is dealing with other internal issues plaguing China and geopolitics which affects not only China but the rest of the world.

Lets take the student protest in HK as an example, i dare say some foreign countries were probably looking forward to another '89 crackdown so the international community could condemn China and attacking her image. The opposite took place and we know how the protest had ended. The fact no PLA intervention took place is not a testimony of being soft, it's in fact a brilliant move to allow the protest to last like 3 months. On the other side where Black Americans were killed by cops around the same time we witnessed police violence had exploded unproportionally against protesters. In '89 utilizing the PLA to crackdown the protest was the right decision by Deng, it resulted the sanction which made us independent in turn.

We are now in a transition and at a crucial moment, the world has not recovered from the last financial crisis and reforms are necessary to sustain our growth. Looking forward to how it unfolds in the following years.
:china:
 
. . .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom