http://www.slate.com/id/2236703/

Karl Who?
China is a Communist country, but I have yet to meet an actual Communist.
By Daniel Gross
Posted Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2009, at 12:14 PM ET

On several occasions during my 10 days in China, I've been told that 
there are 70 million members of the Chinese Communist Party. And yet 
it's nearly impossible to find an orthodox Marxist in Beijing. When you 
stand in Tiananmen Square and look toward the Forbidden City, you see a 
huge portrait of Mao flanked by slogans. The slogans used to say things 
like "Long Live Marxism-Leninism." Today, they're simply nationalistic: 
"Long Live the People's Republic of China!"

While class struggle and common ownership of property may have motivated 
the revolution, Mao's heirs are more interested in outcomes than 
process. At least a dozen times, officials and businesspeople have 
quoted Deng Xiaoping's line about not caring whether a cat is black and 
white, as long as it catches the mouse. Chinese structures—whether 
socioeconomic theories or apartment buildings—don't have to be elegant; 
they just have to stand up. And so far, 30 years into the great China 
experiment, the elites are confident that the grafting of capitalism 
onto a state-controlled economy, overseen by a government controlled by 
a Communist Party, is standing up.

The headquarters building of the China Academy of Engineering is a 
testament to the nation's growing ability to create elegant structures. 
Light spilled in through a large glass wall. The green building was 
paved with recycled marble tiles and boasts a sophisticated heating and 
cooling system that relies on recirculating water from deep in the 
ground. In a large reception area, whose centerpiece was a glass case 
filled with trains and planes, we met Xu Kuangdi, a veteran apparatchik, 
engineer, manager, and leader. Xu, an academic who served as mayor of 
Shanghai from 1995 through 2001, is vice chairman of the National 
Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and 
president of the Chinese Academy of Engineering Sciences. And while the 
format of the meeting was old-school—we sat in large, comfortable chairs 
in a setting more like an audience than interview—there were several 
times during the meeting when I felt as if I were on the set of CNBC's 
Kudlow & Co. For the only class struggle this veteran Communist 
discussed was the struggle of the newly rich to hold onto their gains.

Xu boasted China's engineering triumphs: the 88-story building in 
Shanghai, designed by an American architectural firm but built by 
Chinese engineers; the 67 bridges over the Yangtze River; the Olympic 
structures; high-speed rail; supercomputers. And when we asked how we 
would square the experience of modern China—parts of Beijing are a 
luxury retailer's paradise—with Communist Party doctrine, he had a ready 
response. Karl who? "We're not a bookish party," he said. Besides, the 
Communist Party has always been flexible when it comes to dealing with 
national priorities. It cooperated with the Kuomintang to fight the 
Japanese. "Mr. Marx is still widely respected by the party and the party 
members. He's a great mind in the people's history." Just because many 
of his ideas are outdated—they were devised in a period without today's 
developments in science and technology—it doesn't means he's forgotten. 
"I want to compare it to God in your mind. Maybe you don't go to church 
every week. But that doesn't follow that God is not in your heart." 
Marxism, like religion, is "still a power that controls the morality of 
the people."

Of course, in China, Marxist morality shifts over time. And today, the 
most moral thing that Chinese policies and people can do is promote 
economic growth and development, regardless of the distributional 
outcomes. In our time in China, we heard several reasons why the massive 
country simply couldn't adopt Western-style democracy. The population is 
too large and too diverse. Democracy promotes the sort of arguing that 
hinders growth. The performance of other Asian countries seemed to have 
suffered when fractious democracies emerged from authoritarian or 
military rule. Xu added a new one: It would promote unhealthy class 
warfare. If elections were to be held in a large geographical area where 
gaps between the rich and poor are wide, and in which people have 
different educational backgrounds, "it might cause turbulences to 
society," he said. "If somebody just went out in the street and shouted, 
'I will divide the property of rich people into poor people,' I think he 
would be elected. But it is useless, as parity will not solve the 
problem of economic development." Yes, the creation of wealth in China 
has been wildly uneven. But this, too, is consistent with the party's 
goals, doctrine, and history, according to Xu. "Sometimes when we have 
the faith we have to take different approaches to realize our beliefs. 
The ultimate goal is the common prosperity, but we have to let a group 
of people to get rich first."

How do you say "trickle down" in Mandarin?

Daniel Gross is the Moneybox columnist for Slate and the business 
columnist for Newsweek. You can e-mail him at [email protected] and 
follow him on Twitter. His latest book, Dumb Money: How Our Greatest 
Financial Minds Bankrupted the Nation, has just been published in paperback.

Sent via my BlackBerry Device from Vodacom - let your email find you!

-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

Reply via email to