China\'s Quest. The History of the Foreign Relations of the People\'s Republic of China - John Garver

(Steven Felgate) #1

8 { China’s Quest


military-like discipline for the purpose of mobilizing the masses and lead-
ing them to seize and retain state power. This disciplined, centralized party
was to be the revolutionary vanguard that would lead the immense task of
reconstructing society. For patriotic young Chinese of the 1920s–1940s, a
Leninist party offered a way to accomplishing the immense and perhaps
otherwise unachievable goal of changing Chinese society. It is sometimes
said that the most important Bolshevik contribution to the history of the
twentieth century was the type of revolutionary organization that Lenin
forged, independent of any specific end pursued via that organization. Yet
while some CCP leaders were quite willing after 1949 to dilute or delay the
pursuit of the communist utopia for the sake of more mundane matters
like economic development, Mao was not among them. To the end of his
days, Mao used his power to move China toward the communist utopia. Of
course, another way of saying this is that a utopian vision justified Mao’s
absolute and ruthless dictatorship.
Exactly how socialism was to be built, and on what basis the transition from
socialism to communism was to be prepared in terms of economic and polit-
ical institutions, was worked out by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
(CPSU) in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) in the decades after


  1. By the time the CCP began setting up the PRC in 1949, the CPSU already
    had thirty-two years of “experience in building socialism.” That experience
    seemed very successful to followers of the Marxist-Leninist creed. After 1949,
    Soviet economic and political models were imposed on China with breath-
    taking boldness. China’s new communist leaders expected the Soviet model
    to quickly transform China into a rich, highly industrialized, technologically
    advanced, and powerful socialist state—just as they imagined had happened
    in the USSR. Unfortunately, the economic and political models imported by
    the CCP as a way of “saving China” proved to be deeply dysfunctional. To
    a large extent, China’s subsequent history entailed modifying or discarding
    those dysfunctional Soviet models. This too had a deep impact on PRC for-
    eign relations.
    In the economic sphere, the Soviet socialist model centered on planning
    by the state. State planning replaced markets in organizing economic ac-
    tivity. Marx had explained how market-based production and sale of goods
    entailed immense waste and was full of “contradictions” and thus irrational.
    A  planned economy would be much more rational and “scientific,” Marx
    declared. Market-based production, Marx explained, led to underutilization
    of advanced machinery and technology. Markets also led to severe economic
    downturns, because impoverished workers were unable to purchase all the
    goods produced by profit-seeking capitalist enterprises. Most egregious of all,
    Marx taught, the selling of their labor by workers for a wage to capitalists con-
    stituted a massive transfer of wealth from the laboring to the property-owning
    class. The result was, inevitably, great poverty side by side with vast wealth.

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