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Asian Essay Research Paper Two years after (стр. 2 из 2)

economic situation. Indeed, after these measures were instituted, China’s

trade deficit decreased (Hansell D2) and the stock markets’ volume attained

record highs (”Stocks Surge” D2). To be sure, Chinese investors remain

somewhat wary about the stock market and, ironically enough, more control

of the stock markets appears to be necessary (Shenon “A Nail-Biting” D1).

But, in discussing Chinese attempts to control inflation, Philip J. Suttle,

head of emerging markets research at the investment firm of J.P. Morgan,

has predicted that “[i]t looks as though the Chinese are going to have the

soft landing they are aiming for” (quoted in Hansell D2).

China’s interest in stock markets is no longer restricted to

within its own boundaries. This month, Shandong Huaneng Power Development

Company, “the first mainland Chinese company to have its primary listing on

the New York Stock Exchange” (”China Stock” D5), began trading shares. The

stock should be an attractive one to investors: Chinese electrical “demand

… is expected to grow by a whopping 17 million kilowatts a year until the

turn of the century” (Zuckerman D6). Moreover, China stands to gain from

the issue’s sales. “The company plans to use the $311 million dollars it

received from the offering to retire $83 million in loans from … Chinese

state entities. It also plans to expand its overall generating capacity”

(Zuckerman D6). Nor does this signify the only Chinese attempt of raising

capital from foreign sources on foreign soil. “Three more power companies

are expected to be listed in New York and Hong Kong in the coming months”

(Zuckerman D6).

Given the apparent strength of the Chinese economy as shown by

huge public works projects, extensive foreign investments, participation in

the world economy, and a generally higher standard of living by the

populace, it would appear that China is now ready to join the world as a

modern capitalistic and democratic society. However, this is not quite the

case. The CCP retains vestiges of those characteristics of insularity and

intransigence as discussed by Nathan. Because of its human rights record,

the country’s economic growth is being impeded. That is, the politics of

China, which have always been allied with its economics, are now

restricting international growth.

The United States, especially, has been concerned with China’s

treatment of political dissidents. In May, President Clinton decided to

end linking China’s trade status with the United States with its record on

human rights. The president has been criticized for this because of

situations like the following: trials for “‘counterrevolutionary

activities’ [including] … plans to use a remote-controlled airplane to

drop pro-democracy leaflets over … Tienenmen Square” (”China cracks” A13)

have recently begun for fifteen dissidents and labor organizers who were

involved in the Tienenmen Square protests. These trials have “been delayed

twice, first to avoid negative international reaction just before the

decision last September on China’s failed bid to host the 2000 Olympics and

then this spring to avoid influencing Clinton’s trade decision” (”China

cracks” A13). In addition, China has instituted “new laws effective in

June [which] give sweeping powers to China’s State Security Bureau to clamp

down on dissidents” (”China cracks” A13). China is fully aware of United

States’ concerns about its human rights record. Given the fact that the

United States has made it clear to China that that record will be allied

with trade status, China’s timing of such restrictive activities has caused

United States legislators and administrators to question China’s sincerity

in its desire to have a favored trade status with the United States.

Indeed, just in the past few days, it took a

last-minute lobbying campaign by President Clinton

and his Cabinet [to head off a] potentially

embarrassing vote by the House of Representatives to

restrict trade with China as a way to punish Beijing

for reported human rights violations.

(Bradsher A7)

But China’s problems in joining the community of the world

market have more to do than with its political ethos and practices. China

appears not to understand or to be able to follow through on fundamental

modern economic practices. For example, the United States has recently

complained that “China has not complied with international rules on access

to its markets and protection of copyrights and patents” (Gargan 14). Such

non-compliance could make it difficult for China to become a founding

member of the

World Trade Organization, the successor to the

General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and the body

that is intended to promote global free trade by

lowering tariffs and other barriers, [which] will

be formally constituted on January 1, 1994.

(Gargan 14)

The specific nature of the United States’ complaint has to do with China’s

pirating of musical compact disks, video laser disks and computer software.

In fact, it is estimated that such pirating costs American companies a

billion dollars a year. This phenomenon seems to have to do with the

Chinese psychology as described by Nathan. In his 1981 essay he noted that

China did not wish to become a “technological client of the west. The

preferred solution is to buy one item and copy it” (Nathan 52). Clearly,

this is not the way trade works today. It is the United States’ position

that China must adhere to the rules of trade before it can be included in a

trade organization. Needless to say, exclusion from WTO would be

disastrous for any country, but particularly for an emerging market such as

China.

Even on a day to day basis, China’s economic leaders seem

unable to understand how some aspects of a market economy work. In

discussing the status of the Shanghai Stock Market, for example, one stock

dealer referred to it as “crazy” (”Stocks Surge” D2). Moreover, American

analysts have been amazed to discover in the Shanghai market “the lack of

regulation and the poor disclosure requirements. Some companies have been

listed for two or three years and have not issued an annual report”

(Hansell D2). It is no wonder that Chinese investors become anxious about

their investments.

The issuance of shares in the Shandong Huaneng Power

Development Company also demonstrates the lack of expertise on the part of

the Chinese in the modern world market. In fact, according to one Hong

Kong investment analyst, “‘[t]he company wasn’t really a company. It was

just a bunch of discrete plants that they tied a bow around and wrote a

prospectus on’” (Zuckerman D6). The prospectus guaranteed a fifteen

percent annual return on investments. In fact, the return will no doubt be

less than that because of prevailing currency exchange rates and debt that

the company will have to assume.

To be sure, the problems of the Shandong Huaneng Power

Development Company and the Shanghai Stock Exchange may demonstrate only

the problems of an immature economy. Nevertheless, if China wishes to

become a viable member of the world economic community, such shortcomings

will have to be eliminated quickly.

These apparent problems may also be the result of an economic

system that is run by the state. Certainly, one thing that the CCP has

attempted to do is create a market economy while retaining a state

controlled system. This structure may be possible but it does have its

critics. Steven N.S. Cheung, in an essay written in 1989, argued for the

“creation of private property by mandate” (31), feeling that privatization

in China would lead to necessary additional investment in the society’s

infrastructure and the establishment of a “judicial system that is based

firmly on the principle of equality before the law” (Cheung 32). Echoing

Cheung’s sentiments, James Dorn saw problems in the areas of Chinese

banking and finance. In this arrangement, Dorn argued, “the state controls

the bulk of investment resources. The lack of a private capital market has

handicapped economic development in China and hampered rational investment

decisionmaking” (43). In order to become a modern economic state Dorn

argued for the necessity of circumventing “China’s ruling elite who oppose

the dismantling of state monopolies and who benefit from price fixing and

nonprice rationing” (51). Xu Zhiming also saw the necessity for a

revamping of the Chinese system: “We must throw off the traditional system

completely” (249) in order for economic reform to thrive.

Communist Party members, of course, articulate a different

position. In a recent interview that appeared in the Beijing Review, Feng

Bing, Deputy Secretary General of the State Commission for Restructuring

the Economic System, spoke to the issue of economic reform in China. It is

striking that Feng spoke of the benefits that the populace has received as

a result of the economic reform now occurring in China. That is, his

comments appeared to demonstrate the beneficence, or the moral force, of

the Chinese Communist Party vis-a-vis economic reform. He noted that such

reform involves the essence of socialism: “to liberate and develop

productive forces; to eradicate exploitation; to remove polarization; and

… to attain the goal of common prosperity” (”Official” 12). Thus, CCP

leaders still appear to see their roles as representatives of a moral

force. CCP members and leaders wish economic reform not to be judged on

just its practical merits, but also as an effect of the moral force of the

leadership. Economic reform, then, becomes nothing less than a moral

crusade and it is thus easy to see why, for example, China “has staked its

national prestige on becoming a founding member of the World Trade

Organization” (Gargan 14).

Will China succeed in taking its place among the nations of the

world market? Will the CCP succeed in retaining its political power given

the drastic changes in the societal makeup of China that are occurring due

to the changing economic realities? I would suggest that the chances are

better for the former than for the latter. Once the Chinese attain more

sophistication relative to international and national markets, institute a

more manageable banking system, and make a good faith effort to insure

acceptable human rights, the country may well become “the richest economy

in the world within the next 25 years” (Gilder 372). However, whether or

not these conditions can occur without a weakening of the state controlled

system is problematic. The most impressive and far-reaching display of

moral force by the CCP may well have to be a voluntary reduction of its

power over the people. Paradoxically, by weakening itself politically, the

party may demonstrate its true moral force by liberating, politically and

economically, one billion Chinese citizens.