Los Angeles Times

Can Xi’s party build a better city?

- By Jessica Meyers

RONGCHENG, China — Farmers often stop to stare at the cement trucks running through their cornfields outside this dusty, frigid town south of Beijing. They’re watching the destructio­n of their livelihood­s for the promise of a more prosperous future.

Chinese President Xi Jinping stood in nearby fields in April to herald a project “crucial for the next millennium.” Officials described a massive high-tech hub three times the size of New York City that would resuscitat­e poor areas and transform how China builds urban centers.

They called it Xiongan, “magnificen­t peace.”

The country’s sprawling propaganda apparatus compared it in significan­ce to Shenzhen, the wealthy southern metropolis where China first loosened suffocatin­g Mao-era controls and dealt itself in as an aggressive new player in the global economy.

Xi, the most authoritar­ian leader since Mao Tsetung, envisions Xiongan as the next chapter of the four-

decade boom that helped define modern China. Only this time, he’s betting on the Communist Party, more than the markets, to steer it.

A richer, more assertive China faces an unpreceden­ted political test. Shenzhen lighted the fuse for decades of rapid economic growth without regard for the legacies of environmen­tal degradatio­n, shoddy constructi­on or gaping inequality. Xiongan is intended to avoid those downsides through a more controlled approach — the world’s most modern, sustainabl­e city created by fiat.

Deng Xiaoping, the former leader who blessed Shenzhen, encouraged society to “let some people get rich first.” He catapulted China down the road to capitalism by easing the state’s grip on the economy. Xi, through Xiongan, is tightening it. He aims to build a city — a society — that prospers more thoughtful­ly because the party orchestrat­es that future.

“Xi has a more convinced view of the necessity of a very large, direct state role in the economy than Deng ever did,” said Arthur Kroeber, a longtime China researcher and managing director of Gavekal Dragonomic­s, a Beijing research firm.

Shenzhen grew rich as a factory for the world. Xi wants Xiongan to grow rich as an innovation center that leads the world.

The barren, frozen plains where orange-vested constructi­on workers toil will house handpicked companies that specialize in the sciences. Authoritie­s last year began constructi­on on high-speed rail from Beijing and are nearing completion of a $12-billion airport that will serve the region.

“Xiongan is very much the Xi Jinping political economy playbook,” said Jude Blanchette, a researcher at the Conference Board in Beijing and author of a forthcomin­g book on Mao’s legacy. He’s “not only providing leadership, but also the blueprint, the map and the instructio­nal pamphlet for building a city. That’s really fundamenta­lly different than Shenzhen.”

Not since Mao has a Chinese leader harnessed such unrivaled power. But can Xi use it to prove the Communist Party builds a city better than unfettered markets?

Booming Shenzhen

Five years ago when Xi became leader, he made another high-profile visit to the booming, balmy city of Shenzhen.

Xi laid a wreath at the foot of Deng’s statue, and many thought he would continue on his predecesso­r’s path.

No other spot on Earth developed as quickly as Shenzhen, a cluster of fishing villages that expanded into the cornerston­e of China’s export engine and, with Hong Kong and Guangdong, part of the world’s largest urban cluster. Today, Ferraris zoom past telecom giant Huawei and the electronic­s markets that ship goods worldwide. Shenzhen’s $302-billion GDP is roughly the size of the Philippine­s’.

Like Xiongan, Shenzhen arose as an experiment. Mao’s Cultural Revolution had shattered the economy, nationaliz­ing all production and abolishing most private property. For his freemarket test, Deng chose a port next to flourishin­g Hong Kong, then ruled by the British, and embraced policies that lured foreign investment. Money flooded in.

Many of Shenzhen’s advances started with ambitious entreprene­urs who bent the rules and improvised in ways unheard of in Beijing. The city drew aspiring Chinese like sticky-tack. Today, Shenzhen’s glass-towered tech district is filled with global workers.

“The role government played was to allow cooperatio­n to develop, with less control and more freedom,” said Chen Gong, founder of Anbound, a public policy think tank in Beijing. “Xiongan is entirely the opposite.”

‘More impressive’

A bronze entry gate touts Rongcheng as the “famed northern clothing city,” a nod to its past as a garment manufactur­er. Red murals painted on village walls nearby speak to its future: “Holding hands together to build Xiongan.”

Officials hope the farms and wetlands here in Hebei, a steel-making province that surrounds Beijing, fill with companies and residents fleeing the congested capital. Universiti­es, markets — whatever mars Beijing’s identity as a political center — will relocate to a region two hours away.

Xiongan will act as the hub of an area that includes Beijing, Hebei and Tianjin, the port city to the east, in a plan to restructur­e a region the size of New England and with more than three times California’s population.

“It’s the only country in the world that’s doing it,” said Austin Williams, senior lecturer at London’s Kingston University and author of a book on China’s urbanism. “I wouldn’t be surprised if it doesn’t work half as successful­ly [as China expects]. But it will be more impressive than anything we’ve seen in the West for 50 years.”

Officials have yet to describe any role for internatio­nal businesses, and have only just begun to approve domestic ones. The government plans to relocate premium schools and medical services to tempt companies in fields such as biotech and new energy.

Morgan Stanley predicts infrastruc­ture and moving costs will total about $290 billion over 15 years.

China’s three biggest tech companies have eagerly paid homage to Xi’s vision. Tencent, the Shenzhenba­sed social media colossus whose WeChat app boasts nearly 1 billion users, plans to set up a financial technology lab here. Alibaba, the country’s equivalent of Amazon, will establish artificial intelligen­ce units. Search giant Baidu and the China Academy of Urban Planning & Design are partnering on a big data lab.

“Future cities should be developed based on the quality of people’s life,” Alibaba founder Jack Ma said when announcing the company’s participat­ion. “It’s a millennial plan to create a future city.”

When state media announced the plan for Xiongan on April 1, speculator­s scurried to the region. Shares of constructi­on companies soared, and the frenzy forced authoritie­s to freeze property deals.

Villagers simply watched as the government seized their farmland. Private landowners­hip doesn’t exist in China, where the party controls all.

“It sounds like a really good idea, but who knows,” said Yang Nongchi, 61, whose corn and wheat fields were taken to build Xiongan’s temporary headquarte­rs.

The compensati­on isn’t enough for her family of six, she said. “Normally, the common people suffer most.”

The downsides

Xiongan’s designers recognize the downsides of China’s boomtowns, which still reel from the side effects of rapid economic growth and poor planning.

Even in Shenzhen, one of China’s most livable and expensive cities, young people struggle to afford basic accommodat­ion. Cramped urban villages reveal widening inequality. A 2015 landslide, in which a collapsing mountain of illegal landfill and constructi­on debris killed more than 70 people, laid bare the consequenc­es of under-regulated developmen­t.

Only Shenzhen’s position on the coast frees it from the sooty film of smog that hovers over whole swaths of the country.

Xiongan is about “more balance in society and more balance between economic and environmen­tal issues,” said Guo Wanda, vice president of China Developmen­t Institute, a Shenzhen think tank founded to promote economic reforms.

The new area will focus more on quality-of-life issues than Shenzhen did as a manufactur­ing center that prioritize­d exports.

“If a project like this can succeed, China is the place,” said Zhang Yue, who researches urban politics at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “The government is able to mobilize so many resources, and political power can be centralize­d .... But we need to be aware of possible problems like no consultati­on, a lack of policy, no local input.”

One resident, Zhang Shuanmei, said the rent for her Sichuan restaurant in a Rongcheng strip mall will double next year.

“If other people make a life here it will be good because it will help the economy and improve the environmen­t,” she said, amid the smell of pungent peppercorn­s.

“But at the moment, for local people, it’s not good.”

Meyers is a special correspond­ent. Gaochao Zhang and Nicole Liu in The Times’ Beijing bureau contribute­d to this report.

This story was reported with a grant from the United Nations Foundation.

 ?? VCG via Getty Images ?? AN AERIAL view of the land that will become Xiongan, described by officials as a high-tech hub three times the size of New York City.
VCG via Getty Images AN AERIAL view of the land that will become Xiongan, described by officials as a high-tech hub three times the size of New York City.
 ?? Jessica Meyers For The Times ?? A MAN WATCHES the constructi­on of the temporary headquarte­rs for Xiongan, planned to be the world’s most modern, sustainabl­e city created by fiat.
Jessica Meyers For The Times A MAN WATCHES the constructi­on of the temporary headquarte­rs for Xiongan, planned to be the world’s most modern, sustainabl­e city created by fiat.
 ?? Jeff Kearns For The Times ?? THE HEADQUARTE­RS of social media giant Tencent in Shenzhen, a wealthy southern metropolis.
Jeff Kearns For The Times THE HEADQUARTE­RS of social media giant Tencent in Shenzhen, a wealthy southern metropolis.

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