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China’s broken promise of prosperity Inequality will haunt Xi Jinping's third term

“We want to be citizens, not slaves.” (Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images)

“We want to be citizens, not slaves.” (Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images)


October 19, 2022   5 mins

At the Chinese Communist Party’s 20th Congress this week, Xi Jinping will be nominated for a precedent-defying third term of office. But his grasp on power has not gone unchallenged. Days before the Congress began, a rare protest took place on Sitong bridge in Beijing, calling for the removal of “dictator and traitor Xi Jinping”. “We want to be citizens, not slaves,” read one banner.

It is an inauspicious time for the CCP. In his opening speech, Xi warned of a period of fragility ahead. The government is having to contend with a faltering economy, hindered by a bust in the real-estate market and the ongoing ramifications of Zero-Covid policies. In a further blow to investor confidence, China’s National Bureau of Statistics has delayed the release of its economic growth and other figures until after Congress. All this is taking place against a troubled international backdrop characterised by China’s support for Russia’s protracted war in Ukraine, and rising hostility with the United States.

So far, at least in public, the Congress has been more about pomp and politics than policy. China-watchers will be looking for clues as to which new political leaders will join Politburo and the Politburo Standing Committee on Saturday. But they will also be listening out for any reference to two important policy initiatives.

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The first revolves around radical new US Commerce Department regulations, brought into effect last Friday, which are designed to restrict China’s access to a broad array of advanced semiconductor equipment, whether US-made, or using US technology. The restrictions will also apply to Americans working in the Chinese semiconductor manufacturing industry, making them subject to US law.

The move sends a clear message: that the US government is no longer prepared to accommodate China’s semiconductor technology acquisition practices. The regulations seem to be designed to hinder, if not decapitate, China’s advanced chip industry, and in doing so confirm the CCP’s narrative that the US is out to contain China and interfere with its right to take its proper place in the world system. In his speech, Xi spoke of the need to protect China from “external attempts to suppress and contain” it. We should expect Beijing to retaliate after the Congress, hitting back economically against American firms and business interests.

The second issue is Common Prosperity. Resurrected in 2021, Common Prosperity is a political slogan and a theme that Xi has described as an essential part of socialism. It is designed to capture the government’s intention to improve the quality of life for China’s middle class and its aspirant members, including owners of small-businesses, migrant workers, and farmers. Its alleged goal is to lower those income and regional inequalities that have blighted China’s economic and social progress, and which might, if unaddressed, trigger social stress and unrest.

Common Prosperity, however, remains a vague concept. Xi has explained that it is not about egalitarianism, or a Western-style welfare state. In his opening address to the Congress, Xi spoke about the need to ensure income distribution and wealth accumulation were “well-regulated”. However, there is nothing on China’s policy agenda that would suggest more generous benefit arrangements for pensions, unemployment, medical needs, housing, and education.

This does not accord with the liberal capitalist view that inequality can be narrowed via redistribution — but the CCP thinks about these things differently. It believes that if you can grow the economy enough and regulate private capital properly, the benefits will flow to all citizens. Hence its crackdown on private firms and entrepreneurs in the technology, financial and data platform sectors, the gig economy, and private tutoring. Healthcare and housing providers have also been in the policy crosshairs. The CCP has insisted there needs to be a more “orderly expansion of capital”, presumed to mean more scrutiny over what firms spend money on. It has also brought in a series of measures designed to make private firms align their commercial interests with CCP goals and oblige them to make “donations” to party causes.

There is no question that China has a major problem with income inequality, which is not only high now, but has remained persistently high over time. Its Gini coefficient — a measure of income inequality where 0 equates to perfect equality and 1 to total inequality — was about 0.54-0.55 in 2019, according to the China Family Panel Studies survey. This was far higher than in most developed economies. The top 20% of income earners receive about 46% of income, virtually unchanged over the last decade or so, while the bottom 40% get slightly more than 13%. Until now, Chinese citizens have been willing to accept that the CCP would continue to enhance living standards and prosperity for future generations, but if citizens begin to doubt this, the government will have to watch out.

Income inequality is high in China, partly because of familiar problems of richer households getting most of the benefits of economic growth, but also because wages and salaries — and, therefore, consumption — account for a low proportion of GDP, and the state for a relatively high 40% of GDP. Compared with developed nations, Chinese households are much worse off because social welfare payments and transfers to households account for about 8-9% of GDP, compared with 15-20% in the US and the EU. 

If Common Prosperity were a solution to inequality rather than an empty slogan, China would have to set about reforming its income distribution and tax and social security systems, as well as redistributing income and wealth from the public to the private sector. Moreover, it would have to address important structural problems, including the status of the roughly 200 million migrant workers — around 71% of the total — who do not have urban registration (or hukou), and therefore do not get free access to public education, housing, or welfare in the cities where they work. It would also seek to improve the lot of a rapidly ageing population as the cohort of citizens aged over-60 rises from 250 million, or 18% of the population, to well over 400 million, or almost 35%, by 2045. This could exacerbate inequality if nothing is done about it. 

One of the most pressing tasks is to increase educational attainment and employment opportunities for China’s citizens, especially those who live in rural areas. Whereas in the past, China needed workers who were simply numerate, literate, and disciplined, it now needs workers who are educated to much higher levels and who can compete in an increasingly technological and digital work environment. But the trend is going the wrong way: in 2020, around 60% of Chinese workers in urban areas were employed in the informal sector where low skills and poor pay prevail, up from 40% about 20 years ago.

Building a modern workforce is no easy task. By 2020, only about 37% of Chinese workers had high school educational qualifications or better, compared with 78% in developed nations, and only about 17% had tertiary sector qualifications, compared with 35% in wealthy countries. Nowadays, younger Chinese are getting better schooling than their parents, but it will take a generation or more to improve overall educational attainment assuming that requisite improvements are made in schools and universities.

Meanwhile, Chinese households are facing much greater uncertainty. Xi’s tech and regulatory crackdown, and especially the bust in real estate, has reduced the asset wealth of the middle class, while the faltering economy and rising unemployment have made everyone worse off. Even the tech industry is laying people off, and now with the Chinese semiconductor industry under the cosh, further job losses are likely. Zero-Covid policies, which look likely to persist at least until next spring, if not longer, have not helped the cause of fighting inequality because so many low-pay and low-skill workers have been affected in the retail, ride-hailing, transportation, hospitality, and catering sectors.

The CCP’s legitimacy has rested on its ability to assure citizens that economic prosperity would only improve, and yet the prospects in this decade and beyond suggest strongly that this might not happen as expected. China’s growth rate is shrinking from about 5-6% in the 2010s to perhaps no more than 2.5-3% in the 2020s. Common Prosperity may be the CCP’s last chance to address the heart of the problem, but as far as we can tell, this is based more on hope than evidence. The possibility emerges, then, of either rising social stress or unrest — or of political instability in the upper echelons of the CCP.

Notwithstanding the rhetoric and fanfare of success that will doubtless ring from the Great Hall of the People this week, China faces testing and, in some ways, troubling times ahead. Its economy is Xi Jinping’s Achilles’ heel.


George Magnus an economist and author of Red Flags: Why Xi’s China is in Jeopardy. He is an Associate at the China Centre at Oxford University.

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Brett H
Brett H
1 year ago

It’s so absurd that a Marxist state like China exists for all to see and yet we have Marxists in our Western communities trying to drive us in that direction. Whatever they might say about Marxism to suit their ideological wars, this is Marxism in action. There is no collective wealth, the people are not cared for, even though China has a huge successful economy, there is no equality and there is no assured future.
This is no right-wing rhetoric, it’s there to see. There is no reason for Marxism to have not succeeded in China. They are powerful enough to exist without fear, they have enough money to influence other countries and they feel strong enough to put pressure on the West in their own interests. So why hasn’t it succeeded? Well, we know why: because it’s a lie.

Last edited 1 year ago by Brett H
Steve Murray
LL
Steve Murray
1 year ago
Reply to  Brett H

Does anyone seriously believe that China is being run as a Marxist state?
Who owns the “means of production”?
Lip service to Marxism has been the only possible response to its utopianism.

Michael Davis
MD
Michael Davis
1 year ago
Reply to  Steve Murray

Where has Marxism not turned into an oppressive dictatorship run nominally by the party but in reality by the man with fewest scruples

Marxism has had many chances, where has it been successful

Aphrodite Rises
Aphrodite Rises
1 year ago
Reply to  Michael Davis

Marxism is Christianity without God and has far too high an opinion of human nature. The vast majority of people are not interested in working for the common good – it is not a motivator; which is not to say they are not willing to cooperate when it is in their own interest to do so. Those who are the politically most successful in communist regimes are the greatest hypocrites within the society, they are those who will pay lip service to any ideaology to promote themselves. It was not surprising that when Russia switched from communism to capitalism, those high up in the communist party were very quick to switch to capitalism and seize the country’s assets.

Brett H
Brett H
1 year ago
Reply to  Steve Murray

“Who owns the “means of production”?”
Really. You’re still trotting out that line?

Sam Brown
Sam Brown
1 year ago
Reply to  Brett H

China is effectively an autocracy… a capitalist economy heavily regulated by a single controlling body led by a single and ultimate power, for the benefit of the connected and all freedoms to alter this condition rigorously and ruthlessly put down. It is as close to 1984 as you are likely to find ….

Arjen van der Schoot
Arjen van der Schoot
1 year ago

I’m reading Elizabeth Economy’s book “the world according to China” and find it very insightful. Her research uncovers the reasoning for the sanctioning of the export of USA made or designed chips to China. I paraphrase content from the 5th chapter: “The US initiatives [to block chips], (…) were about the Third Offset – a strategy he worked on at the Pentagon (…) in 2014 to ensure that the United States maintained an innovation edge in military-related technologies and technology platforms. Turpin described a sense of shock when US officials realized how quickly China had developed its own military-technological offset strategy to manage competition with the United States. In order to maintain a deterrent Turpin explained the United States needed to be one to two generations ahead of the competition. If you lose that advantage, there is no deterrent. In a world in which China was now the global hub of electronics manufacturing, however, the Chinese, Turpin argued, “were effectively inside the system with the United States” and “it was no longer possible for the United States to ‘out-innovate’ China and then deny them the fruits of that innovation.”

Last edited 1 year ago by Arjen van der Schoot
Terry M
Terry M
1 year ago

Income inequality is high in China, partly because of familiar problems of richer households getting most of the benefits of economic growth, but also because wages and salaries — and, therefore, consumption — account for a low proportion of GDP, and the state for a relatively high 40% of GDP. Compared with developed nations, Chinese households are much worse off because social welfare payments and transfers to households account for about 8-9% of GDP, compared with 15-20% in the US and the EU. 
Let me get this right. China’s government uses 40% of GDP but passes out 8-9% in social benefits. Presumably, the remaining 31% is simply lining the pockets of oligarchs/apparatchiks/CCP members. That is cronyism on an incredible scale.
IF the Chinese people ever get the ability to strike back it will be vicious. That’s why we love 2A.
“When governments fear the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny.”
― Thomas Jefferson

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago
Reply to  Terry M

Do your research on the Chinese domestic/ retail savings and investment induatry size and growth?

Ian Stewart
Ian Stewart
1 year ago

The writer suggests there could be unrest if economic inequality isn’t addressed, referring to the Gini measure. But the unrest would only come from the working class masses who are thoroughly suppressed.
Does economic inequality actually help to reinforce an authoritarian regime by ensuring the support of the middle and upper classes? (I’m sure this will have been studied by people.)

Last edited 1 year ago by Ian Stewart
Aaron James
Aaron James
1 year ago

The big one is how to change the GDP from one based on Industry to a Service economy. Because unless they can do that they are done – and the Chinese workers like to make money, not spend it, so I do not think it possible.

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago
Reply to  Aaron James

but they save! Just look at Ping An and China Life?… add up the billions each week that go into workplace pensions, savings funds, life and health insurance?.. and as millions more come into work, billions more pour into Chinese fund managers… who invest in equities, US treasuries, other bonds…

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

It is only a matter of time, as the older idealog politicians age and die, that ‘ young China’ ditches any semblance of Communism and re-identifies itself as America’s successor as world power no 1.

The Chinese are far to intelligent to adopt the woke LGBT/racism/ global warming new communism cum National Socialism enveloping the US and UK, and in a couple of generations we will be the poor Marxists, and servants to China India and other Asian countries. Meanwhile, Africa will go nowhere apart from re enslavery and re-colonialisation by India and China and the Arab muslim states and Pakistan will slide into oblivion, as their energy power saps away, as the rest of the world advances oil and gas production elsewhere… and the electro/ car/ eco relgion becomes recognised and a lie..

Steve Jolly
Steve Jolly
1 year ago

Xi overplayed his hand in the prior decade and too many people in the US, including the general public, caught on to China’s economic warfare. The US response, while belated, is not too late to create serious problems for the Chinese economy. Unfortunately, that also gives Xi, or whoever else takes power in China, a ready made scapegoat to blame all the problems on, creating hostility to the US and the West throughout the Chinese public. China then turns their manufacturing capacity away from making cheap crap for Americans and into building weapons, responding to economic troubles in a manner similar to Germany in the 1930’s. That’s the way the ball is rolling and there’s probably no way for anybody, even the leaders of China and the US, to stop it. Even if Xi were to lose power, which seems unlikely, China still faces the same problems the author mentions. Nor is the US likely to backpedal on its containment strategy given that China is deeply disliked by broad swaths of voters on both the left and right, albeit for different reasons. China policy is the one area where the two parties have a broad bipartisan consensus, and that consensus is by and large supported by the American people themselves. A politician trying to rebuild the relationship into what it was in 2010 would likely be doing so against public opinion. In other words, the die is cast. In whatever form it takes, the China-America conflict is happening and everyone will have to either choose a side or walk a dangerous tightrope of trying to appease both without triggering retaliation from the other.

Last edited 1 year ago by Steve Jolly
John Huddart
John Huddart
1 year ago

Perhaps this explains Xi’s apparent obsession with ‘re-uniting’ Taiwan with mother China? Fortunately for all concerned, having seen the catastrophic mess that Putin has plunged Russia into, he won’t be keen to follow him down the rabbit hole. So it’s probably just a way of distracting the world and the Chinese people from their current economic woes?

Arjen van der Schoot
Arjen van der Schoot
1 year ago
Reply to  John Huddart

The Ukraine mess is also a precedent for how officially unallied nations support each other with weaponry and tactical advice and can tilt the power equation in unforeseen ways.

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

One thread throughout ‘ Unherd’ are the endless displays of contributors utter ignorance of modern economic, investment and capital markets functions, and their relationship with savings/pensions and retail investment.. AND this relationship to the ownership of companies in the manufacturing sector, and the associated service industries.

see below?

Is it surprising that nu britn is in such an economic and fiscal mess if this medium and its ignorance, and lack of knowledge of matters economic and financial is an example?

It is matched only by the arrogance of the expressed ignorant opinions?!!