Asian_Geographic_Issue_4_2017

(John Hannent) #1
bottom right A Mao
statue behind a special
forces truck in Chengdu

right People in Hong Kong
at a vigil in remembrance
of those who died in the
Tiananmen massacre

Pedro Nueno, president of CEIBS and professor
at Spain’s IESE Business School, agrees: “Chinese
people live much better now than they did 20 years ago.
The fact that labour is much more expensive may deter
some businesses from setting up camp in China, but it’s
a huge victory for a country where domestic demand
is driving the economy, rather than exports and foreign
investment. Some say China is in trouble because it has
grown at its slowest pace in the last quarter of a century,
but I say a well distributed growth of five percent is
much better than a concentrated eight percent.”
Nueno believes that Chinese leaders are among
the smartest in the world. He defends the claim by
explaining how they use another characteristic of
communist states: government intervention. “The
Communist Party has reigned over different problems
of the market economy – the real estate bubble, for
example. It has set rules to make it more difficult for
speculators to manipulate the market. The same goes
for stocks, where the real value and market value of
companies were a world apart. The situation required an
adjustment, and Beijing didn’t hesitate. Their wisdom is
preventing a crash like the one in the US a decade ago.”
But not everybody likes this. Asked about the
protectionism that the American and European
Chambers of Commerce criticise in their annual
reports, Xu says: “It’s not something exclusive to China.
The US – especially with Donald Trump in charge –
and the European Union subsidise their companies,
contravening World Trade Organisation regulations.
They’re right to demand more economic reforms,
but they should also acknowledge the market economy,
and the profound reforms of China.”
Macroeconomics aside, Chinese millennials –
born long after the Cultural Revolution – are the most
confused about the meaning of communism. “They
teach us a theory that has nothing to do with reality.

The Mao we love the most is the one printed on 100
yuan bills,” jokes Chen Qing, a 25-year-old salon stylist.
“We have an entrepreneurial heart, but sharing is not
one of our strong features.”
Zhu Liya, a 26-year-old owner of a pearl trading
company, adds: “Communism as imagined by Marx
or Mao doesn’t fit Chinese people.”
Ding Chen, a purchase manager at a foreign-
owned engineering company, doesn’t see China as a
communist country either. “It’s just an authoritarian
government with a capitalist economy where laws
protect leaders’ businesses,” the 30-year-old says.
“That explains why the gap between the rich and the

Their mission is guided by a set of
questions: Why – and how – did
the mammoth disappear some the
mammoth disappear some the

1934–35
Mao Zedong launches the
Long March and establishes
CPC’s headquarters in Yunnan

1912
Puyi becomes the last
emperor of China and a
republic is established

1921
The Communist Party of China
(CPC) is founded

key events


1911
The Wuchang Uprising leads
to the Xinhai Revolution,
which ends imperial rule
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