The Standard (St. Catharines)

China’s problem with infallibil­ity

- GWYNNE DYER GWYNNE DYER’S NEW BOOK IS “THE SHORTEST HISTORY OF WAR.”

Even the Pope claims to be infallible only on matters of faith and doctrine.

On the chance of rain or the speed of a racehorse, he will freely admit that he is just as fallible as you and I.

Whereas secular dictators, and especially ones who are building a personalit­y cult, are implicitly claiming to be infallible about everything.

This is quite a burden, although it helps that dictators can deny things have gone wrong, and punish anybody who says otherwise.

Neverthele­ss, sooner or later people are bound to notice that things really have gone wrong. That is President Xi Jinping’s main problem at the moment, but it is also China’s.

For more than two years now, Xi has loudly proclaimed that China’s ZERO-COVID policy has been a brilliant success that demonstrat­es the superiorit­y of the Chinese system and of his own leadership. And for a while there, the evidence was on his side.

The COVID-19 death toll in China is still under 6,000, while COVID fatalities in the United States, with only a quarter of China’s population, are nearing the million mark.

However, China achieved this miracle only by almost completely shutting its borders and imposing draconian shutdowns.

That succeeded for a while, just as it did in Australia and New Zealand, two geographic­ally isolated countries that followed essentiall­y the same policy. But their government­s knew that this could not be a permanent policy, and as soon as the great majority of their population­s were fully vaccinated they began to release the restrictio­ns.

Happily, by then the Omicron variant was taking over, making COVID even more infectious but far less lethal, especially for vaccinated people. Xi seems to have missed that memo.

At the moment, 340 million people, around one-quarter of the population, are under full or partial lockdown in 46 different cities.

Given the huge infection rate of Omicron — in both the United States and the United Kingdom around 70 per cent of the population have had COVID at least once — this policy cannot logically have a long-term future.

The ceaseless lockdowns are hitting China so hard that second-quarter growth in an economy that used to boast of at least 10 per cent growth rates is forecast to be only 1.8 per cent.

This means not only unemployme­nt and potential unrest, but Chinese customers elsewhere shifting away from dependence on supply chains originatin­g in China.

And yet Xi perseveres. His regime has not even speeded up vaccinatio­ns in China, although fewer than half the over 60s have even had one booster shot.

Nothing must be allowed to suggest that the ZERO-COVID policy is failing, because an absolute dictator must appear infallible.

Xi has boasted so much of the “success” of his victory over COVID, made it so much his own signature achievemen­t, that no doubt can be admitted.

This autumn marks the end of the two five-year terms that Xi would have been permitted under the Communist Party’s post-mao rules, which were designed precisely to thwart other would-be absolute dictators from gaining powers.

His plan was to be elected to a rule-breaking third term at the 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party next October or November, and even a year ago he looked like a shooin.

You’d still be unwise to bet against Xi’s chances of a third term (and as many more as his lifespan allows), but he himself is now running scared.

Which probably means that there will be no change in the current, crazy COVID policy at least until the end of the year.

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