Xi Jinping: The Illusion of Greatness
Politics
is always about pomp and pageantry, but as pure, stultifying ritual few
occasions can compare to the convening of the Chinese parliament, the
National People’s Congress, which ended this week. No matter what is
happening in China or the world, it always follows the same eye-glazing
program—a “work report” that summarizes already-known plans;
questionable proposals that are discussed to make it seem that a
deliberative body is convening; gatherings of delegations that are
unelected and largely powerless; and finally a press conference that is
as real as a fight in a kung-fu movie.
And
yet this performance is never without meaning. This year it was meant
to highlight the inexorable rise of Xi Jinping as one of China’s
greatest leaders in decades. He is soon to complete his first five-year
term and is almost sure to be reappointed to a second term at the
nineteenth National Congress of the Communist Party of China in the
fall. This week’s session of parliament is a kick-off for this event,
and its dullness was doubly important, meant to show just how powerful
and strong a leader Xi has become, smoothly mastering domestic politics
while facing down challengers like Donald Trump abroad.
But
performances lend themselves to multiple interpretations. And after the
recent session of parliament another reading emerges: that Xi might be
one of China’s strongest leaders on paper—mustering an array of titles
and able to silence dissent almost at will—but much less impressive when
it comes to achieving reforms.
Xi,
for example, is often compared to Deng Xiaoping, the man who ran China
for about twenty years from the late 1970s to the mid 1990s. Deng
derived his reputation as the dominant leader of the late twentieth
century from his ability to keep the Communist Party firmly in
control—think the Tiananmen massacre—but also to experiment with bold
new economic policies. It was under Deng that China launched what are
still its most substantive economic reforms, such as freeing up farmers
from disastrously inefficient state collectives, closing down rust-belt
factories, and setting the country on the path to joining the World
Trade Organization.
Xi
came to power offering a similarly broad range of reforms and pledging
to “rejuvenate” the nation. But his measures have been limited to the
classic nationalist-authoritarian-traditionalist playbook. He has
pursued an expansionist foreign policy, occupying and militarizing vast
reaches of the South China Sea, while at home he has cracked down on
corruption and promoted traditional values.
A
crucial part of this has been enhancing his own control. At a plenum of
the Communist Party last autumn, Xi was elevated to a “core” leader,
putting him on a higher plane than other leaders in the recent past—the
idea being that China needed even firmer leadership to get through tough
times.
During
the recent session of parliament, this was reflected in how Xi and his
image dominated domestic coverage of the event, even though the
parliament is usually the place for the premier, Li Keqiang, to shine.
Li seemed like an afterthought this year, and his press conference on
Wednesday—usually the culmination of the session—was so low-key as to be
almost irrelevant.
The
sidelining of China’s premier, the nominal number two in the hierarchy,
has been accompanied by another development that is slowly becoming
clearer: Xi seems not to have appointed a successor. Because Chinese
politics is not very well institutionalized, it is hard to say that this
is significant at this point in the year, but it’s fair to say that
most observers expected that a successor would have surfaced by now. The
lack of one means either that the Party is divided (possible) or that
Xi intends to elevate a loyalist closer to the Party congress so he can
rule from behind the curtain once he retires in five years (likely).
So
after five years of Xi, his main accomplishments seem to have been to
consolidate his power while satisfying people’s desire for social change
through crackdowns and promoting traditionalism. The problem is that
these efforts come at the expense of actual reforms.
The
government, for example, talks endlessly of China needing to improve
its legal system. But the main legislation at parliament involved
setting up a continental European-style “civil code.” In theory this
could enshrine personal liberties and make the legal system work more
effectively. But the problem isn’t a lack of laws; it’s the
politicization of the system. All sensitive decisions are still made by
Party functionaries, not independent judges. So the code is likely to be
largely a tool to allow the Party more legal cover for ruling, rather
than bringing it more under the rule of law.
Equally
pressing is the need for significant economic reforms. State
enterprises suck in valuable capital from the banking system, which
continues to be state-run, to the detriment of more dynamic private
enterprises. Urbanization has taken off, but is based on expropriating
land at below-market prices. Farmers still don’t own their land or have
meaningful land transfer rights. Rural residents still have a hard time
getting full rights in urban areas. And of course censorship has become
so overwhelming that even constructive criticism is increasingly
marginalized, causing many moderates to lose hope that their voices can
be heard.
The
complete failure to reform the economy means that the government’s
argument about low growth—that China’s economy has slowed only
temporarily while the economy restructures—appears less and less
plausible. Instead, what could be happening is that the country’s
inability to reform further is sending it into the feared middle-income
trap—a country that cannot take the next step to become a truly
prosperous society.
Will
any of this matter to Xi? His popularity could fall if the economy
continues to stagnate, while property prices continue to remain far
beyond the reach of ordinary people. But leaders like Putin have
remained popular despite far worse economic situations thanks to
overseas adventures and blaming foreigners for the country’s woes.
But
what is clear is that Xi’s image as a strong and capable leader seems
less and less believable. As the country enters its political season and
Xi’s reappointment approaches, he begins to look different. Instead of
being the transformer China needed, he might yet prove to be little more
than a vigorous custodian of the status quo.
March 17, 2017.-