China Today (English)

Open Your Mind and Look to the Future

The Governance of China (Volume II) Author: Xi Jinping Paperback, 619 pages Published by Foreign Languages Press

- By JOËL RUET Dr. JOËL RUET is president of The Bridge Tank.

THE second volume of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s book, Xi Jinping: The Governance of China, contains 99 speeches, conversati­ons, instructio­ns, and letters of Xi between 2014 to 2017. It is a book that can be read as a vade mecum for global leaders, a descriptio­n of the political philosophy that underpins one of the most vibrant nations on this planet, and a practical work that one is obliged to engage with in the new era.

A Vade Mecum for Global Leaders

The structure of this book appears to be properly set out in terms of subjects, which cover such aspects as society, culture, world politics, and the environmen­t issue.

“Developmen­t” is anchored into the well-being of people in the spirit of the most progressiv­e social sciences; supremacy of the supply-side economy is advocated along with the commitment of the administra­tion, which must be prioritize­d when large parts of the world are now reporting jobless growth or no growth at all to fund the necessary social transforma­tions.

Culture is not a reified array of practices but echoes in “cultural confidence” from the people during an age where diversity is to be cherished in the world.

Compared to Xi’s first volume of The Governance of China, world politics occupies a large part of his writings, and reading them feels somehow premonitor­y of the current difficulti­es in the society of nations.

Under the heading “Beautiful China,” the book covers various aspects of modern ecology. It acknowledg­es that “moderate prosperity” can be a realistic aspiration for China in its current situation. Ecological security is also a forward-looking dimension to national stability and the world order.

An Update on the Chinese Political Philosophy

The two volumes of The Governance of China chronologi­cally succeed an earlier book of Xi Jinping, which was a collection of his essays written when he was a provincial leader in Zhejiang Province. In that book, he gave minute and detailed examples of how local leaders should handle the realities of what this current book calls “the productive forces.” From the Zhejiang book, Western observers of China may grasp the material foundation­s of the “new era,” the era that has been theorized and become central to the 40-odd-page report to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) delivered in 2017.

This second volume sheds light on the impact of this tectonic shift that is the “new era” on China’s desired contributi­on to the world community.

It is no coincidenc­e that the end of the collection of speeches coincides with the famous “Davos speech” that Xi Jinping gave three years ago and that made world leaders reckon with a China that was not just trying to catch up technologi­cally, but a China that wanted to engage in internatio­nal aid and rebuilding the internatio­nal governance system. The speech was not just emphasizin­g “Chinese characteri­stics” but expressed a clear acknowledg­ement of and even praise for a world that sees all nations as having equal rights and duties on the Charter of the United Nations, and delivered a distinct push for the declaratio­n announced on the Bandung Conference in 1955 to be accorded its rightful place in the internatio­nal order.

China’s Modernizat­ion in the New Era

This book is a very clear, straight statement of what the CPC today is seeking for itself and for its contributi­on to the world.

Here Xi Jinping frames his wishes for “China’s diplomacy as a major country” in three-pointed but relatively modest texts, and also lays out China’s ongoing praxis in “peaceful developmen­t and cooperatio­n with other countries.”

Policies are nothing without tools. The book patiently and repeatedly features texts on the much talked-about Belt & Road Initiative (BRI).

It is for the informed public to appreciate that China has been able to respond to the feedback of recipient countries, and the 2nd Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n clearly specified the need for the BRI to become environmen­tally sustainabl­e.

Two aspects of the Chinese society and the CPC’S practice have now been made somewhat more accessible, and will certainly evoke further awe and contemplat­ion, as well as study in the West – the rise of grassroots democracy and the centrality of the leadership, both of which are responsibl­e for China’s modernizat­ion in the new era.

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