---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 12:21 PM
Subject: China growing, lacks America's creativity
To:




*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS*
Nov. 30, 2011

*China growing, lacks America's creativity*

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

As an educator at the University of Guam, I taught my students that
learning is an ongoing developmental process involving the acquisition and
synthesis of new information.

In the course of discussing how China's "paramount leader," Deng Xiaoping,
transformed the country from economic backwardness to a more modern
economy, I referenced Deng's famous slogan: "It doesn't matter whether a
cat is white or black, as long as it catches mice" -- a metaphor for Deng's
belief that it doesn't matter whether the political economy is capitalist
or socialist, so long as there is economic stability and growth.

Through guided discussion, my students were encouraged to consider whether
the principles of individual freedom and rights are necessary components of
the economic stability and growth Deng sought to achieve in China, an
exercise in the acquisition and synthesis of new information.

Last month, Singapore's former minister, Lee Kuan Yew, spoke in Washington,
D.C., on the "rise of China" and "America's Edge." It caused me to dust off
a copy of a speech Lee made two years ago on "The Fundamentals of
Singapore's Foreign Policy: Then and Now."

Lessons from an analysis of both speeches may be useful to Southeast Asian
democrats in their fight for rights and freedom.
Singapore example

Lee's April 2009 speech contains a lesson Cambodian democrats in particular
should remember: "Friendship, in international relations, is not a function
of goodwill or personal affection." Actions in international politics are
dictated by national interest.

In Lee's words, Singapore "is of no intrinsic interest to any developed
country when it can invest in our larger neighbors endowed with more land,
labor and natural resources." Therefore, "We must make ourselves relevant
so that other countries have an interest in our continued survival and
prosperity as a sovereign and independent nation" through creating a
political and economic space.

Lee noted that in the 1960s and 1970s, the Chinese media berated Singapore
as a "lackey of the American imperialists," but this changed after Deng
personally saw how China "had fallen behind" the supposedly backward cities
of Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur. So, when Deng visited Singapore in 1978, he
saw that Singapore had exceeded even Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur, those cities
he had thought were the most economically vibrant in the region.

According to Lee, when Deng toured southern China in February 1992, the
Chinese leader said, "There is good social order in Singapore. They govern
the place with discipline. We should draw from their experience, and do
even better than them."

Lee recounted that exchanges between Singaporean and Chinese delegations
then began to increase. "Hundreds of Chinese officials continue to be
trained in Singapore," Lee affirmed, and "since 1996, we have trained over
16,000 Chinese officials."

In his 2011 speech, Lee told the same Deng story to an American audience in
Washington, D.C., as he spoke about the China-U.S. relations.
America's edge

With a current average economic growth rate of more than 10 percent per
year, China is on the rise as a "heavyweight," hence, the U.S. will need to
"adjust" its posture and policies, advised Lee. "Equable relations between
the two are most important for peace and stability in the Asia Pacific, and
indeed the whole world."

For the last two years, said Lee, China has become more assertive on the
world stage. But Lee believes China is "in no hurry to displace the US as
the No. 1 power in the world and to carry the burden that is part and
parcel of that position."

"To grow, China needs American markets, American investments and, with it,
American technology," and China wants to send thousands of its students to
U.S. universities and research institutions "to work and learn the kind of
intellectual milieu that enables Americans to be so innovative and
creative."

"The Chinese have a large talent pool. But they lack diversity, talented
people from other cultures and other systems to enrich the mix of their own
talents," asserted Lee.

Chinese civilization dictates China must maintain a "strong center" to keep
the provinces and the warlords from drifting into chaos, and to keep the
country prosperous, explained Lee. "There is unity and uniformity of
thought at the highest levels of Chinese leaders," said Lee. "This is their
cultural heritage."

Noting that change already is under way in China as its citizens are
exposed to previously foreign methods and cultures, Lee said, "One thing is
for sure: The present (Chinese) system cannot remain unchanged for the next
50 years."

"America's advantage is in its diversity of centers of talent," Lee
declared. "The different schools of thought contend and, out of that
contention, come new ideas, innovations and creations," while "Chinese
tradition and culture tend to produce a more uniform Mandarinate."

"America started with waves of immigrants from Western Europe followed by
more waves of migrants from other parts of the world. Each wave brings
fresh inputs of ideas and energy." In comparison, "China's population" is
home grown and 90 percent Han; "There has been little or no immigration."
Competitiveness

Lee admits to America's "tremendously difficult economic times," but
expresses his confidence that "America's innate creativity, resilience and
innovative spirit will allow it to confront its core problems, overcome
them and regain competitiveness."

He urged that the U.S. not view China's rise as a "zero-sum game," but to
find a way to work together through "dialogues, hard negotiation and mutual
reassurances."

*A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam. Write
him at [email protected].*

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201111300400/OPINION02/111300318

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