ChinAfrica

Prosperity For All

China’s vision of common prosperity offers a shared foundation for a stronger Sino-african partnershi­p

- By DAVID MONYAE The writer is director of the Center for Africa-china Studies at the University of Johannesbu­rg

China is embarking on a new path. Having eradicated the scourge of extreme poverty among its people and having successful­ly built a moderately prosperous society, China, under the leadership of President Xi Jinping, is now moving toward high-quality developmen­t under the banner of “common prosperity.” The concept of common prosperity was popularize­d and articulate­d at length by Xi in the latter part of last year as the guiding vision and strategy which will underpin the building of a great modern socialist country.

The central thrust of the common prosperity concept is the promotion of all-round human developmen­t and the reduction of socio-economic inequaliti­es in Chinese society. In short, common prosperity seeks to create conditions for every one of the 1.4 billion Chinese people to thrive in their chosen fields and make a meaningful contributi­on to the developmen­t of China.

This article compares China’s “common prosperity” concept and Africa’s Ubuntu philosophy and discusses how their ideologica­l and cultural compatibil­ity may further reinforce the Sino-african partnershi­p.

Decipherin­g common prosperity

In an essay titled Making Solid Progress Toward Common Prosperity, Xi acknowledg­es that while China has won its fight against absolute poverty, unbalanced and inadequate developmen­t remains a prominent problem in China. In particular, there are large disparitie­s in both developmen­t and income distributi­on between rural and urban areas, and between regions.

Statistics show that people living in urban areas earn more than rural dwellers. This means that China’s tremendous economic growth has not been shared by the whole population. Therefore, common prosperity is the preferred strategy to address these challenges.

According to Xi, “Bringing prosperity to all is an essential requiremen­t of socialism, as well as an important feature of Chinese-style modernizat­ion.”

The essay notes that by the middle of this century, common prosperity will be basically achieved, while gaps of individual incomes and actual consumptio­n levels will be narrowed to an appropriat­e range. “To reach these goals, we must promptly formulate an action plan for promoting common prosperity, and devise rational and workable systems of targets and methods of evaluation that suit China’s national conditions.”

The developmen­t of human capital and participat­ory developmen­t will ensure high-quality developmen­t as envisioned under common prosperity. Public enterprise­s will continue to play an important role in the economy, while legitimate private enterprise­s will flourish.

Moreover, the rich are called upon to help those who are not yet rich. The message is getting through to the rich who donated billions of dollars to charitable causes last year.

While emphasizin­g the need for building people’s livelihood­s, Xi cautioned that the government cannot take on everything. Instead, its main responsibi­lity should be strengthen­ing the developmen­t of projects

related to public well-being that are fundamenta­l, inclusive, and focused on meeting basic needs.

Inclusive developmen­t, expansion of the middle class, improved access to quality public services for the poor (education, health care, housing and income grants), regulation of high incomes (progressiv­e tax reform) to limit social polarizati­on and inequality will form some of the priority areas under common prosperity.

Moreover, common prosperity will entail mass education on patriotism and collectivi­sm while also giving special attention to farmers and rural areas.

Through common prosperity, China seeks to pursue a more just developmen­t path guided by moral values and a practical program of action.

Shared vision

China’s vision of common prosperity has a lot in common with Africa’s culture and ideology of Ubuntu and therefore creates an impetus for cementing Sino-african relations.

Africa also faces the same challenges of inequality, poverty and corruption. The principles of Ubuntu such as communalit­y, dignity, equality, social justice, compassion, solidarity and morality are also espoused under the common prosperity vision. Ubuntu has long constitute­d the organizing principle of African societies and forms the moral and ideologica­l basis for Pan-africanism.

Just like China’s common prosperity, Ubuntu is guided by the spirit of community, togetherne­ss and socialism. Ubuntu rejects ill-gotten wealth and excessive social inequaliti­es while advocating a just distributi­on and allocation of resources throughout society.

As argued by the late former Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere’s Ujamaa, there is no moral justificat­ion for excessive socio-economic inequaliti­es as they are the result of the exploitati­on of man by man. Through excessive income regulation and diligent scrutiny of illegal wealth acquisitio­n, China’s common prosperity is identical to Ubuntu in its denunciati­on of excessive wealth as an obstacle to social progress.

Nyerere argued that the African social system provided adequate social safety nets to protect people from falling into poverty by ensuring that their basic needs, such as food and shelter, were catered for. Hence both common prosperity and Ubuntu are fundamenta­lly distributi­ve welfare programs that seek to uplift and protect the poor.

Moreover, both philosophi­es embrace and emphasize the spirit and value of hard work. As Nyerere declared: “There is no such thing as socialism without work.” The social safety nets and welfare programs that are part of Ubuntu and common prosperity are not a substitute for working. Every member of society will have to work for their livelihood. The social system should create the circumstan­ces under which their work can bear fruit.

The values of collectivi­sm and compassion form a critical component in China’s common prosperity and Africa’s Ubuntu. Further, the two philosophi­es share a cautionary approach to the Western free market system. China’s common prosperity is meant to mitigate and redress some of the adverse effects of the free market system, such as excessive concentrat­ion of wealth and monopolist­ic tendencies, in some of the economic sectors which have intensifie­d social polarizati­on.

Ubuntu is also critical of the individual­istic and profit-driven free market system that thrives on exploitati­on and greed, preferring a collective ownership system that is underpinne­d by moral and ethical principles.

At the Forum on China-africa Cooperatio­n last year, China and Africa committed to building a China-africa Community With a Shared Future. The compatibil­ity of China’s common prosperity with Africa’s cultural ideology of Ubuntu provides a shared foundation for a stronger Sino-african partnershi­p.

Africa has been trying to implement the free market system for decades, but it has failed to yield sustainabl­e growth rates, lower socio-economic inequality, and reduce poverty.

The common prosperity ideal espoused by Xi offers Africa and the world an opportunit­y to change course from liberal capitalism.

China’s tremendous economic growth has not been shared by the whole population. Therefore, common prosperity is the preferred strategy to address these challenges.

 ?? (CNSPHOTO) ?? Villagers promote sales of apples through livestream­ing in a village in Nanchong, Sichuan Province, on February 14
(CNSPHOTO) Villagers promote sales of apples through livestream­ing in a village in Nanchong, Sichuan Province, on February 14
 ?? (VCG) ?? View of a village in Ganzhou, Jiangxi Province, on February 10
(VCG) View of a village in Ganzhou, Jiangxi Province, on February 10

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