The UB Post

The future of China’s reform and opening-up

- By SUN Xi

December 18, 2018 marks the 40th anniversar­y of the official beginning of China’s reform and opening-up, when the third Plenary Session of the 11th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) was held from December 18 to 22, 1978.

Over the past 40 years, China’s economic progress has been extraordin­ary. China’s gross domestic product (GDP) has grown miraculous­ly at an average annual rate of 9.3 percent, and its GDP share of the world’s total economy has jumped from 1.8 percent to 15 percent today. China has been the second largest economy for years, only after the United States. Meanwhile, China has achieved self-sufficienc­y in food and successful­ly lifted 800 million people from absolute poverty, a miracle of poverty reduction in human history. Today, China’s foreign exchange reserves, manufactur­ing capacity and internatio­nal trade volumes are all the number one in the world.

However, China has accumulate­d many social problems too, such as massive corruption, serious environmen­tal pollution, deepened income inequality, as well as a flawed social security system where property bubble is still booming, and education and healthcare resources are unfairly distribute­d. Politicall­y, China has been criticized for being less democratic and more authoritar­ian, where human rights are not fully respected, and media censorship has been enhanced. While China has been much more open in many areas compared to 40 years ago, its political system has yet become closer to the liberal democracy as the West expected.

Deng Xiaoping, the chief architect of China’s reform and opening-up, initially directed China onto the Socialist Road with Chinese Characteri­stics guided by the “Four Cardinal Principles”, namely the principles of upholding the socialist path, the people’s democratic dictatorsh­ip, the leadership of the CPC, and Mao Zedong Thought and MarxismLen­inism. 40 years later, maybe only the principle of upholding leadership of the CPC is really relevant.

Now, China is in a new “era of Xi”, where “Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteri­stics for a New Era” is the supreme doctrine. This March, China amended its constituti­on, in which the presidenti­al term limits was lifted, “the leadership of the CPC is the defining feature of socialism with Chinese characteri­stics” was explicitly included, and “to achieve the great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation” was officially instituted as the ultimate national goal. In the updated constituti­on, “perseverin­g in reform and opening to the outside world” was retained.

Apparently, China will continue its reform and opening-up. Chinese top leaders have repeatedly promised that “China will never close its open door to the outside world,” but China’s internal desire and momentum to push further reform and opening-up has been significan­tly weakening due to the resistance from vested interests. After 40 years, China’s reform and opening-up now is standing at a crossroads again. Both people inside and outside of China are wondering where China’s future reform and opening-up will head next. Left or right?

Coincident­ally, China is now facing another big crisis again – the trade war and a potential “new Cold War” with the United States led by President Donald Trump. In Chinese, crisis (wei ji) means both “danger” and “opportunit­y.” Can China turn danger into opportunit­y in this crisis? Optimistic­ally speaking, yes, based on historical experience.

In fact, over the past 40 years, China’s reform and opening-up has been largely driven by big crises, nearly every ten years. It was the painful lessons from the ten-year catastroph­ic "Cultural Revolution" ended in 1976 fostered the initial reform and opening-up. It was the Tiananmen Square Protests of 1989 accelerate­d the substantiv­e progress of reform and opening-up. It was the Asian financial crisis in late 1990s propelled China to turn its economy into marketorie­nted. It was the 2008 global financial crisis pressed China to transform and upgrade its economy more quickly. China has always been resilient and pragmatic especially when facing crises.

So far, Trump’s trade war has indeed caused many troubles for China. However, positively seeing, the trade war has also forced China to open further and reform deeper. During the recent G20 summit, President Xi repeatedly emphasized, “China will make efforts to open, even more, its doors to the exterior world and we will make efforts to streamline access to markets in the areas of investment and protect intellectu­al property.”

To clinch a permanent truce in the trade war, China promised significan­t concession­s during the Xi-Trump meeting. It seems that China was defeated, but do not forget that China also made significan­t concession­s for its entry to the World Trade Organizati­ons (WTO) in 2001. China did suffer losses in the initial years as a new member of WTO, but it gained more in subsequent years. Therefore, in the long run, the shortterm pain from the ongoing trade war will likely be proven beneficial for China to deepen its reform and opening-up so as to achieve its ultimate “Chinese Dream”.

After 40-year reform and openingup, China now is displaying the so-called “Four Confidence­s”, namely confidence­s in its chosen path, guiding theories, political system, and culture. In the future, China will probably be more open to the world, but do not expect it will be reformed to be another West. China is China, the ancient but young “Middle Kingdom”.

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