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Chinese Communist Party to declare itself open to the capitalist
elite
By John Chan
13 November 2002
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The 16th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP),
which has been meeting in Beijing since November 8, is set to
formally open party membership to Chinas business elite.
Before the congress concludes on November 14, its 2,114 delegates
from across China will elect a new 200-member Central Committee,
a 21-member Politburo and an all-powerful seven-member Politburo
Standing Committee that will be responsible for removing the few
remaining barriers to the untrammeled capitalist exploitation
of the Chinese masses.
On November 7, a 236-member preparation committee, headed by
vice-president Hu Jintaothe heir apparent to the party leadershipannounced
that the Three Represents theory of current general
secretary Jiang Zemin would be the theme of the congress. Jiangs
theory calls for the abolition of a clause in the CCPs constitution
that officially prohibits private businessmen from becoming party
members and serving in the government.
The removal of the clause is intended to bring the CCP constitution
into line with the reality of the partys character and social
composition as it prepares to accelerate market reforms. In a
rambling opening address to the congress, Jiang articulated the
class interests of the new Chinese elite. He called for the Beijing
regime to persevere in opening up to the capitalist
market and declared the CCP should protect the legitimate
rights and interests of businessmen and property owners.
His speech drew thunderous applause.
The formal opening of the CCP to business layers represents
a turning point. However, the orientation of Chinese Stalinism
towards the capitalist class emerged long before Jiangs
declarations. As early as the 1930s, Mao Zedong rejected the international
socialist perspective of Marxism and declared the aim of the CCP
to be the establishment of a bloc of four classesa
regime that included sections of the Chinese capitalist elite.
Maos successor, Deng Xiaoping, opened China to the capitalist
market in 1979 and actively sought investment from the émigré
Chinese bourgeoisie in Hong Kong and Taiwan.
The fact that Jiangs theory formalises what
has already emerged was highlighted by this years Forbes
magazine list of Chinas 100 richest multi-millionaires.
A quarter declared they were CCP members. Most Chinese CEOs
of private companies or transnational corporations also have party
connections. Jiangs eldest son, for example, heads the countrys
largest telecom firm, China Netcom, which was split off from a
former state-owned communication operation and sold to private
interests. During the 1990s, tens of thousands of state-owned
enterprises were either bankrupted or privatised to facilitate
the growth of private capital.
The Washington Post noted on the opening day of the
congress: With its pro-growth polices, ban on independent
trade unions and low environmental standards, the [CCP] government
has created an advantageous atmosphere for the economic elite
to make money. Policies so favor the rich and business that Chinas
economic program, in the words of one western ambassador, resembles
the dream of the American Republican Party.
New York Times columnist Joseph Kahn commented on November
10: After a 20-year transition, the worlds last major
left-wing dictatorship, the Communist Party of China, has transformed
itself. It is now, arguably, the worlds last major right-wing
dictatorship.
By openly proclaiming itself a party of the economic
elite that has benefited from its free market agenda, the
CCP is hoping to consolidate a reliable base of support for its
continued rule. Among Chinas rural peasantry and the industrial
working class, a seething hostility is building up over official
corruption, poverty, the loss of services, unemployment and the
widening gap between rich and poor.
According to the Hong Kong Centre for Human Rights and Democracy,
an estimated 200,000 demonstrations took place last year against
government economic and social policies. Even as the congress
convened, human rights groups reported that 1,000 laid-off steel
and textile workers in north eastern China were protesting against
unemployment in Liaoyang, the capital of northeastern Liaoning
province, while brewery workers demonstrated in Changchun, Jilin
province, against the corrupt sale of company land to state officials.
By any objective measure, class tensions across China far exceed
those in the months leading up to the mass anti-government demonstrations
that were brutally suppressed on June 4, 1989, in Beijings
Tiananmen Square. In a paper titled, The most serious warning:
The social unrest behind the economic prosperity, Hu Angang,
the leading economist for the official Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences, warned in August that China was on the eve of
an uncontrollable crisis like an earthquake or volcanic eruption.
The real rate of urban unemployment is estimated to be 10 percent
and is predicted to rise to 15 percent. By official estimates,
12 percent or 37 million people fall under the category of urban
poor. There are an estimated 150 million surplus
workers in the countryside eking out a marginal existence.
WTO entry
Over the next five years, these tensions will dramatically
heighten as the government implements the far-reaching economic
restructuring required by the terms of its entry into the World
Trade Organisation (WTO). The business elite view the WTO as the
means to attract new foreign direct investment and greater access
to Western markets for Chinese exports. For millions of poor peasants,
it will mean being driven off the land by cheap agricultural imports.
In urban areas, many more jobs will be eliminated as foreign companies
are allowed access to Chinas previously protected markets.
According to a report in the November issue of the Hong Kong
based political journal Cheng Ming, Chinese premier Zhu
Rongji warned senior officials in a four day-long State Council
meeting in mid-October that the CCP is facing serious challenges
from below as it carries out the WTO agenda.
Zhu reportedly said: The economic situation and social
contradictions are increasingly sharp and explosive; the party
has not controlled corruption; the laid-off and unemployed millions
are denouncing the government and the Communist Party; the peasants
are facing heavy burdens and want to rebel. The political crisis
can erupt at any time if these three major problems cannot be
solved properly and on time. Otherwise, it will not be only a
few cities, but thousands and millions marching on the streets
demanding the downfall of the Communist Party.
This prospect underlies the formulation of Three Represents
and its adoption by the CCP Congress. After several years of factional
debate within the CCP, a consensus has emerged that the lesson
to be drawn from the Tiananmen events is that the regime must
build a solid base among the urban upper and middle-classes, while
making no democratic concessions to the masses.
Commenting on the sentiment of the political establishment,
Chinese sociologist Kang Xiaoguang wrote in the influential state
journal Strategy and Management earlier this year: There
is a stable alliance between the political, economic and intellectual
elite of China. The main consequence is that the elite wont
challenge the government. The economic elite love money, not democracy.
Their vanity will also be satisfied as the party has promised
them party membership and government positions. He noted
the government believed it could weather the opposition of workers
and peasants by keeping them like scattered sand,
lacking any national organisation or coherent political program.
The selection of the new party leadership at the present congress
is being guided by such criteria. Due to their age, the three
main Chinese leaders must retiregeneral secretary and president
Jiang; National Peoples Congress chairman Li Peng; and premier
Zhu. Of the seven members of the current Politburo Standing Committee,
only vice-president Hu Jintao is expected to continue in an official
post.
Whatever the final composition of the new leadership, the names
being suggested indicate that the exiting leaders intend to retain,
at least for the coming years, their influence over decision-making
and command over the military.
Rumours are rampant that Li Ruihuan, the president of the Peoples
Political Consultative Committee, is expected to resign from the
Politburo even though he is eligible to remain. In the Machiavellian
world of Chinese Stalinism, his departure can only mean he has
fallen out of favour with the state and military hierarchy. For
several years, he has publicly advocated a weakening of the CCP
dictatorship and the introduction of token democratic reforms
such as allowing non-CCP organisations to be formed.
Hu Jintao, a protégé of Deng Xiaoping and ruthless
defender of the CCP dictatorship, is almost certain to become
the new party boss and also be declared Chinas president
next March when Jiang steps down. Joining him in the Standing
Committee as the new premier and in charge of economic policy
will be Wen Jiabao, who is known in international financial circles
as a committed proponent of the wholesale deregulation and opening
up of the Chinese economy.
The other members are likely to be close political associates
of Jiang or Li Peng. Four Jiang associates have been named: Zeng
Qinghong, the head of the party apparatus under Jiang; Jia Qinglin,
party boss in Beijing; Huang Ju, party boss in Jiangs base
Shanghai; and vice-premier Wu Bangguo. Luo Gan, a figure close
to Li Peng, the military and the police, is expected to take the
final seat.
The Three Represents and the touted leadership
provide a clear anticipation of how the Chinese regime intends
to try to survive. The CCP is more openly fashioning itself as
the instrument of a developing Chinese capitalist class, which
hopes to continue to profit as the junior partner of the major
transnationals in the exploitation of the countrys cheap
labour and natural resources.
See Also:
Behind the delay in the Chinese
Communist Party Congress
[5 October 2002]
Factional conflict as Beijing
prepares for major leadership change
[3 May 2002]
Chinese think-tank
warns of growing unrest over social inequality
[15 June 2001]
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