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China passes private property law for capitalist elite
By John Chan
30 March 2007
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At end of the 12-day National Peoples Congress (NPC) in Beijing
on March 16, some 3,000 hand-picked lawmakers rubber-stamped a
Property Law. The enactment of this law, which follows the opening
of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) membership to private businessmen
in 2002, is a significant step in establishing the dominance of
capitalist property relations in China.
The law declares: The property of the state, the collective,
the individual and other obligees is protected by law, and no
units or individuals may infringe upon it. By elevating
private property to the same status as state property, the law
gives formal legal protection to Chinas burgeoning private
enterprises and legitimises capitalist exploitation of the working
class for the first time in six decades.
The bill was shelved last year due to its controversy. A petition
against the law, endorsed by hundreds of retired officials and
academics, warned that it would increase social inequality and
legalise the corrupt plundering of state-owned assets by officials.
With the unceasing advance of privatisation, our country
already has a serious gap between rich and poor, which is polarising
into two extremes, the petition declared.
According to the Hong Kong-based Asia Weekly, prior
to the NPC, President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao sent officials
to tour the provinces to drum up support for the law. When delegates
arrived in Beijing, they were instructed to vote yes,
as top officials feared that even a 10 percent no
vote would be a political embarrassment. In just three minutes,
a law under debate for 14 years was pushed through with 2,799
in favour, 37 abstentions and 52 against.
The vote on the law highlighted two glaring issues in China
today: the CCPs fraudulent claim to be socialist
and the growing concentration of wealth in the hands of the new
property-owning elite.
A comment on the CCPs official web site on March 16 absurdly
declared that socialism was the reason China had overtaken
Canada, Italy, France and Britain as the worlds fourth largest
economy. This rise had demonstrated to humanity that socialism
is the future, socialism is superior to capitalism.
In fact, the CCP has transformed China into the worlds
largest sweatshop where foreign investors and local entrepreneurs
have amassed huge profits exploiting cheap labour with little
or no restriction. The 2006 list of the top 10 Chinese billionaires
compiled by Forbes magazine shows that the beneficiaries
of Chinas socialism are not workers, but capitalists.
No. 1 was Wong Kwong Yu, owner of the countrys largest
home appliance retailer, Gome Appliance. Just 37 years old, his
personal fortune was estimated at $US2.3 billion. Next on the
list was Xu Rongmao, a resort and hotel property tycoon worth
$2.1 billion. No. 3 was Rong Zhijian, the son of the famous Red
Capitalist Rong Yiren, who supported Mao Zedong after the
1949 revolution. Rong had $2 billion. His Citic group helps Beijing
acquire overseas supplies of oil and strategic raw materials.
No. 4, Zhu Mengyi, was a former state bureaucrat who owns the
nationwide property group Hopson. His fortune was $1.9 billion.
No. 5, Yan Cheung, runs one of the worlds largest paperboard
manufacturers, Nine Dragons. Her wealth stood at $1.5 billion.
Ranked no. 6 was Zhang Li, another property developer, valued
at $1.45 billion. No. 7, Shi Zhengrong, owns Nasdaq-listed Suntech,
one of the worlds largest and fastest growing solar energy
corporations. Worth $1.43 billion, Shi is one of a growing number
of Western-educated entrepreneurs. No. 8 was Liu Yongxing ($1.16
billion), whose East Hope Group is based on the aluminum industry.
No. 9 was Guo Guangchang ($1.15 billion). His Fusun Group is one
of Chinas largest private conglomerates in steel, property
and retail. Last on the list was Lu Guanqiu ($1.14 billion), whose
Wanxiang Group was described by Forbes as an auto
parts empire.
How these super-rich, and a multitude of smaller private bosses,
amassed their wealth is a contentious issue in China. In 2005,
Forbes listed a young businessman and rising political
star, Zhang Rongkun, as Chinas 16th richest man. Last year,
however, Zhang was charged with stealing 3.2 billion yuan or over
$400 million from pension funds in Shanghai. Together with the
ex-Shanghai party boss, Chen Liangyu, he is accused of forming
part of a corrupt syndicate.
With deepening social inequality, the current CCP leadership
can no longer simply repeat Deng Xiaopings 1980s slogan
of let some people get rich first. It is obvious that
the few who have enriched themselves have done so at the expense
of the majority of the population. Instead, in an attempt to prop
up his increasingly discredited regime, President Hu calls for
the building of a socialist harmonious society.
Chinese society is neither socialist or harmonious.
In the past the CCP falsely equated socialism with bureaucratic
state control over the economy. Much of the state sector was privatised
in the 1990s, however. The labour minister admitted this month
that another 5 million workers would be laid off from state enterprises
this year. By contrast, the private sector, including foreign
investment, now accounts for 65 percent of the economy and provides
70 percent of tax revenues.
As for social harmony, the new Property Law will
do the opposite, by deepening the divide between rich and poor.
The CCP leadership claimed the new law would protect farmers against
forced evictions by local officials seeking to provide land for
real estate developments or industrial projects. But the law only
clarifies land usage for up to 70 years and reaffirms the state
ownership of land.
The nationalisation of land after the 1949 revolution was a
capitalist, not a socialist, measure. From the standpoint of capitalist
production, private land ownership is parasiticbecause private
rent is a deduction from the surplus value extracted from the
working classand an obstacle to the free movement of capital.
State ownership of land not only provides greater corporate profits,
but allows the government to more easily establish infrastructure
or economic zones for investors.
By stimulating the growth of market relations in the countryside,
state ownership also accelerates the destruction of small-scale
farming and thus the migration of rural labourers into the cities.
The result has been an abundance of cheap labour for global corporations,
supervised by Beijings police-state regime, and a growing
social polarisation.
According to official statistics, Chinas Gini co-efficienta
measurement of income inequalityis approaching 0.5, far
above the alarming level of 0.4 that indicates vulnerability
to social unrest. Urban incomes are 3.2 times those of rural areas,
up from 2.5 times in 1978. Within the cities, in 2005 (the latest
data available) the top 10 percent of the population earns 9.2
times the bottom tenth, up from 8.9 times in 2004. In rural areas,
the gap was 7.3 times, compared with 6.9 a year earlier. Overall,
the richest 10 percent now control 40 percent of private assets,
compared to just 2 percent by the poorest.
Social discontent has produced an escalating wave of protests.
Just two days before the NPC, about 20,000 people, mainly migrant
workers, clashed with more than 1,500 armed police after private
owners lifted bus fares in the Zhushan township of Hunan province.
Several police cars were burned and dozens of people were injured.
One student was reportedly killed.
To placate public anger, Premier Wen dramatically increased
social spending this year. The funding features increases of 15
percent for rural areas, 87 percent for public healthcare, 42
percent for education system and 14 percent for social security.
The $51 billion allocated for the countryside includes the extension
of a subsidised healthcare insurance system and a minimum living
allowance. The $27 billion for a social safety net
is meant to provide limited protection for rural migrant workers
and a rapidly aging population. The $11 billion for education
includes the elimination of school fees for rural children.
These measures are drops in the ocean. The social security
net is a market-based system partly copied from Western
countries. Only partially funded by government, workers have to
buy insurance to secure limited protection in case they lose their
jobs or suffer serious illness. In healthcare, commercial insurance
companies are expected to exploit a huge market of 6 trillion
yuan or $780 billion in private annual medical bills, constituting
70 percent of total national medical costs.
Where cash is handed out to the most destitute, the assistance
is minimal. Allowances for the poorest farmers are just above
the national poverty line of 683 yuan ($88) a year. In 2006, the
population covered by this program was just 15 million, up by
82 percent from 2005. A similar urban network covered 22.4 million
people, who each received just $21 a month.
Economic instability will only further fuel social tensions.
Premier Wen projected Chinas economic growth to be 8 percent
in 2007. However, he set the same target last year. The actual
rate in 2006 turned out to be 10.7 percent, as his government
could do little to stop investment bubbles driven by private investors
and local authorities. Hot money flowed into the share
market, which skyrocketed 130 percent last year but showed marked
instability in February.
In a media press conference after the NPC, Wen admitted Chinas
economic situation was unsteady, unbalanced, uncoordinated
and unsustainable. But the premier emphasised that the pro-capitalist
policy would not be reversed. Using what is now the official doublespeak,
he told reporters China was at the 100-year first
stage of its socialism, in which the main task was
to promote market-oriented reform.
See Also:
China boosts military spending: signs
of a US-fuelled arms race
[8 March 2007]
Beijing prepares the
army to repress domestic unrest
[5 December 2006]
A riot in China over
deteriorating public health care
[27 November 2006]
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