First Things
 
What Christianity Contributes to China’s Economic  Rise
 
by Brian J. Grim  1 . 5 . 15  
What has fueled China’s remarkable economic  growth that has lifted more 
than 500 million people out of abject poverty and  positioned it to become the 
world’s largest economy?
 
In part, it’s been fueled by the pipeline of market  mechanisms, modern 
technology and Western management practices that former  paramount leader Deng 
Xioaping untapped in the 1980s. 
But according to _Yukong  Zhao_ 
(http://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2014/10/02/what-drives-chinas-success/) , 
a China expert at Siemens Corporation, 
these explanations are  insufficient given the potential drags on the 
economy from government  inefficiency and corruption, which President Xi 
Jinping 
is struggling to  contain. 
Zhao argues that Western learning and pro-growth  government policies have 
set loose the real creators of China’s economic  success—its people and the 
largely Confucian culture that makes them, in his  words, “ambitious, 
hardworking, thrifty, caring for their families and  relentlessly pursuing good 
education and success.” 
Zhao may be onto something. China is a lot more  religious than you might 
think. Yes, China certainly has more religiously  unaffiliated people than 
any other country, and it is led by a party officially  committed to atheism. 
But what is less well know is that China is home to the  world’s second 
largest religious population after India, according to the _latest  demographic 
estimates_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2012/12/18/global-religious-landscape-exec/)  by Pew 
Research. This represents a religious bull  market when 
compared to the years of the Cultural Revolution when religion was  completely 
outlawed, believers brutalized, and all religious institutions  boarded up. 
Today, China has the  world’s largest Buddhist population, largest folk 
religionist population,  largest Taoist population, seventh largest Christian 
population, and seventeenth  largest Muslim population—ranking between Yemen 
and Saudi Arabia in size. This  also makes China one of the world’s most 
religiously diverse nations, something  _research_ 
(http://theweeklynumber.com/1/post/2014/04/countries-with-very-high-religious-diversity-including-china-o
utpace-world-in-economic-growth.html)   shows to be associated with 
economic growth. 
But the projected growth of Christianity is of  particular note. A study by 
Purdue University’s Fenggang Yang (cited recently in  the _Economist_ 
(http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21629218-rapid-spread-christianity-forcing
-official-rethink-religion-cracks) )  finds that China’s Christian 
population may become the world’s largest by  2030. 
The ongoing growth of Christianity and the growth of  China’s economy may 
be related, according to a _new  study_ 
(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1043951X14001369)  in the 
China Economic Review by Qunyong 
Wang (Institute of  Statistics and Econometrics, Nankai University, Tianjin) 
and Xinyu Lin (Renmin  University of China, Beijing). 
Wang and Lin find that Christianity boosts China’s  economic growth. 
Specifically, they find that robust growth occurs in areas of  China where 
Christian congregations and institutions are prevalent. 
Using provincial data from 2001 to 2011, Wang and Lin  investigated the 
effect of religious beliefs on economic growth. Among the  different religions 
analyzed, they found that Christianity has the most  significant effect on 
economic growth. 
Why might that be? Wang  and Lin note that Christian congregations and 
institutions account for 16.8  percent of all religious institutions, more than 
three times larger than the  share of Christians in the general population 
(_about 5  percent_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/files/2011/12/ChristianityAppendixC.pdf) ). 
Such institutions elsewhere tend to stimulate economic  growth for 
individuals and communities, according to _studies_ 
(http://www.sacredplaces.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/SPAR.pdf)   led Prof. 
Ram Cnann of the University of 
Pennsylvania. There’s no reason to  believe that they don’t have the same 
effect in China. 
The economic benefits of religious institutions  include direct spending 
for goods, services and salaries, as well as a broader  “halo effect.” This 
includes the real but often unmeasured benefits of religious  congregations, 
such as the safety net and networks provided to individuals, the  magnet 
effect of attracting everything from lectures to weddings, and valuable  public 
spaces that provide communities with centers of cultural, ethical,  
spiritual and even recreational value. 
Wang and Lin argue that Chinese Christianity’s social  doctrines may also 
have economic impact. They suggest that Christian ethics  emphasize the 
overall development of human beings, not just economic  development. For 
instance, they observe that the Christian obligation to be  accountable to God 
and 
their fellow believers tends to result in legal and  rational investment 
behavior rather than illicit or wild speculation. 
It may be that the impact of Christianity identified  by Wang and Lin might 
even reinforce the economic impact of Confucianism  identified by Zhao. In 
a public _dialogue_ 
(http://english.pku.edu.cn/News_Events/News/Global/7362.htm)   at Peking 
University in November 2010, world-renowned Confucian 
scholar, Tu  Weimin of Harvard, and Christian theologian, Jürgen Moltmann of 
the 
University  of Tübingen, found commonalities between Confucianism and 
Christianity. For  instance, Confucius’s famous silver rule, “Do not do to 
others 
what you don’t  want to be done to you,” is a pragmatic mirror image of 
Jesus’s more demanding  golden rule, “Do to others whatever you would have 
them do to you.” 
Wang and Lin also note positive, though inconsistent  economic effects from 
China’s other major faiths, including Buddhism, Islam and  Taoism. 
(Confucianism wasn’t included in their study, and is not counted as an  
official 
religion by the government.) 
Wang and Lin conclude that the implication is not for  the country to favor 
one faith above another, but to “build a better-informed  economics, and in 
the long run, better policy.” 
One clear implication is that the government policy of  highly restricting 
religion, including allowing _local  government officials_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/05/china-christianity-wenzhou-zhejiang-churches)
  
to destroy and deface churches in Wenzhou—often called  China’s Jerusalem—
must be reconsidered. Such restrictive policies may undermine  an important 
source of China’s economic success. Just as China has radically  deregulated 
its economy with successful outcomes, further deregulation of  religion 
would be one way to keep China’s economic miracle alive for decades to  come.

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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