The Sunday Guardian

China has a distorted vision of the world

China engages in beggar-thy-neighbour policies it deems advantageo­us, and distorts the world’s markets according to the dictates of its political demands, while dismissing criticism of such behaviour as unfair to a developing country

- Hospitalit­y staff outside the Great Hall of the People during the closing session of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference (CPPCC) in Beijing, China on Thursday. REUTERS

The emergence of any new global power often profoundly shifts the political and economic landscape and causes considerab­le discomfort among the establishe­d order. China’s resurgence is doing that, but apart from the inevitable uncertaint­y and tension associated with any shift in global power, much of the angst other nations in Asia and around the world are feeling with respect to Beijing’s rise is its failure to acknowledg­e a willingnes­s or desire to play by many of the same rules that the rest of the world plays by.

China’s leaders nurse a profound grievance against perceived “colonialis­ts” and “aggressors”, part of a well-conceived strategy to portray China as needing to constantly be on the defensive. On one hand, Beijing seeks to leverage benefits consistent with being a developing country, playing upon the West’s historical guilt over colonialis­m, while exploiting its continued belief that economic developmen­t will inexorably lead to pluralism. On the other hand, it does not hesitate to attempt to parlay its growing power into influence whenever and wherever it can, in a Janus-like strategy that gives Beijing leeway and flexibilit­y in crafting its internatio­nal political and economic policy on its own terms.

At home the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) remains deeply paranoid that its rule could fall apart at any time, even though—given its vise-like control over the Chinese people, economy and informatio­n flow— it must realise that this is an extremely remote possibilit­y; the CCP’s perpetuati­on of state capitalism ensures the political survival of the ruling class. As a government that now presides over the second largest (soon to be the largest) economy in the world—and one that depends intimately on flows of internatio­nal goods and capital—the CCP no longer simply practises state capitalism at home, it applies it globally with great success.

Although the West has long played mercantili­st games, it gradually migrated toward the belief that liberalisa­tion of internatio­nal markets is mutually beneficial for all countries. But China continues to see internatio­nal economics as a zero sum game, finding its “developing” status a convenient cloak and justificat­ion for the applicatio­n of global state capitalism. It engages in beggar- thy- neighbour policies it deems advantageo­us, and distorts the world’s markets according to the dictates of its political demands, while dismissing criticism of such behaviour as unfair to a developing country. Similarly, on political issues, China portrays naked self interest as the reasonable demands of a developing country, and displays this behaviour in nearly every arena in which it interacts with the world, from foreign aid and investment to multilater­al institutio­ns and internatio­nal relations.

The deliberate undervalua­tion of the yuan in the previous decade pointed to further distortion­s of internatio­nal markets by China’s state capitalism. The Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics estimated that the yuan was undervalue­d by between 20% and 40% at the time, amounting to a massive export subsidy. However, the yuan’s undervalua­tion was just the tip of the iceberg. As importantl­y, Chinese banks receive a hidden subsidy: a wide spread between the rates paid on household deposits and the rates banks charge for loans. Domestic bankers, who are in effect state employees (given that the banking system is largely government run) funnel the artificial­ly cheap money to state-owned enterprise­s. Since households have no investment alternativ­e to domestic banks, they in effect provide a huge subsidy to Chinese industry. The CCP’s state capitalism mandates growth and employment through exports and investment at all costs in order to ensure its political supremacy.

Politicall­y, China is an irredentis­t power that arguably has done more to advance global nuclear proliferat­ion than any other state apart from Pakistan, while routinely doing business with some of the world’s worst government­s. Apart from the issues of Taiwan and the South China Sea, China lays claim to much of India’s state of Arunachal Pradesh, and caused major jitters in 2009 with incursions into the territory combined with strident rhetoric. It has blocked Asian Developmen­t Bank projects approved for India over the issue. It helped Pakistan develop its nuclear arsenal and ballistic missile technology. The largest recipients of Chinese military aid have in the past been India’s neighbours, including Myanmar, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. India fears that China remains engaged in a concerted campaign to undermine and contain it. In addition, China continues developing its “string of pearls” strategy in the Indian Ocean, investing significan­t resources to develop deep water ports in the Bay of Bengal, the Arabian Sea, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and the Seychelles. These appear to be a basis for the projection of a powerful naval presence into what India considers its backyard.

Meanwhile, China blocks action against or actively supports a rogue’s gallery of nations, among them Iran, North Korea, Sudan, and Zimbabwe. It claims it has no influence over their actions, based on its policy of non- interferen­ce, but China’s support clearly requires a quid pro quo, be it natural resource wealth, business ties, or a geopolitic­ally strategic use. China has avoided sanctions from the internatio­nal community, partly due to the image it has cultivated of itself as a non-interferin­g developing country. While the West has also projected its power and dealt with equally noxious states, domestic political constraint­s make such “deals with the devil” increasing­ly difficult to sell to electorate­s attuned to human rights, ethics, and governance, and who are provided with the freedom of speech to object to their government­s’ actions. No such freedom exists in China.

As long as the CCP continues to govern, China will continue to comport itself according to its zerosum vision of the world. And with President Xi now president for life, the most the West can hope for is that the CCP’s interests converge toward those of the larger globalised world. Even as China speaks of a peaceful rise within the existing internatio­nal structure, its behaviour, which at times may be described as impertinen­t, belies the West’s desire to have faith in its words. Indeed, many nations around the world appear to be running out of patience at China’s uncompromi­sing approach to the promotion of its own self-interest. Of course, other leading nations act in their own self-interest, but they do not have the same disdain for human rights, the same desire to control their own people, or to create their own set of rules to abide by. Daniel Wagner is CEO of Country Risk Solutions and author of Virtual Terror.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India