SinoNet: Fw: MCLC: Karl, China needs you

Jacqueline Winter dujuan99 at yahoo.com
Don Mar 16 09:47:16 CET 2006


Yeah. This reminds me of Zhang Wei's "Old Ship" (Gu Chuan) once again. The main hero of this popular 1980s' novel, which I have mentioned in connection with Zheng He here some time ago, studies the Communist Manifesto every night. Great book. 
 Martin
 
----- Forwarded Message ----

MCLC LIST
From: Li Dong (D.Li at massey.ac.nz)
Subject: Karl, China needs you
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Source: New Statesman (2/20/06): http://www.newstatesman.com/200602200018

Karl, China needs you
By Isabel Hilton 

Just when it seemed it was all over for Marx, the Chinese Communist Party
has had a spectacular change of heart, writes Isabel Hilton

According to Hu Jintao, China's president and general secretary of the
Chinese Communist Party, Marxism is still applicable in China. And, in a
recent announcement that has startled analysts, the party has pledged
"unlimited funds" to the cause of "reviving" Marxism in China, in an attempt
to turn the country into the global centre for Marxism studies.

The project is nothing if not ambitious: 3,000 "top Marxist theorists" and
academics from across the country are to be summoned to Beijing to compile
more than a hundred Marxism textbooks, each one to contain contributions
from between 20 and 30 scholars. Each textbook will be funded to the tune of
one million yuan (£70,000). In addition, the party promises a huge
investment of human and financial resources to build more research
institutes, train more theorists and produce more academic papers, all with
the full support of the Politburo.

Li Changchun, a member of the Politburo Standing Committee and the party's
chief official in charge of ideology, was reported to have told a meeting of
propaganda officials and theorists that the leadership saw the project as a
means of resolving various issues facing the country, and had given it
"unlimited" support. The Institute of Marxism at the Shanghai University of
Finance and Economics will host an international seminar - on 1 April,
appropriately enough - while the newly established Academy of Marxism at the
notoriously liberal Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (Cass) is planning
one for next year. All over China, heads will be bent over translations of
Das Kapital as school and university students fulfil their mandatory quota
of Marxism studies. In turn, teams of translators will be hired to translate
the new textbooks into foreign languages for the waiting world.

This most remarkable ideological high-wire act since new Labour abandoned
Clause Four is a sign, perhaps, that the CCP's identity crisis is reaching
fever pitch. Marxism, or the local variant of it, was the ideology that
produced stagnation in China for the first 40 years of the revolution, an
ideology that few in China today remember, let alone subscribe to, and which
the Chinese Communist Party itself appeared to abandon as a working model in
1992. China's current success derives from ditching Marx in favour of Warren
Buffett. 

Since then the country has enjoyed such spectacular capitalist-style growth
that the expectation that the Chinese Communist Party will be ruler of the
world's largest economy within two decades may well be fulfilled.

In the past decade and a half, the party has dismantled the state sector,
thrown hundreds of millions out of work, given up on collective agriculture,
celebrated the art of getting rich (not least through its own corruption),
embraced the market "with Chinese characteristics", dumped the principles of
free education, healthcare and cheap housing for the workers and created one
of the most unequal societies in the world. Workers are not allowed to form
trades unions, have little job protection, suffer appalling labour
conditions and routinely go unpaid for months on end: a recent study by the
National People's Congress concluded that migrant workers were owed more
than £5bn in unpaid wages. Meanwhile, the peasants suffer the depredations
of greedy and powerful local officials, against whom they have no redress.
China's 2005 National Human Development Report concluded that inequality was
growing fast by every index and that its Gini coefficient, which measures
income inequality, had increased by more than 50 per cent in the past 20
years. China now ranks 85th in the UNDP's 177-nation Human Development
Index. 



In the course of its rapid development, China has created conditions that
capitalists elsewhere can only envy. The only shreds of former Marxist
practice left are the repressive nature of the state and the party's undying
conviction that, as the vanguard of the proletariat, it has the right to
remain in power for ever.

But just when it looked as though it was all over for Karl, the Chinese
Communist Party appears to have had a change of heart. Would Marx have any
advice for a Communist Party that found itself in such a situation?

Plenty, says Cheng Enfu, executive president of the Academy of Marxism at
Cass. Far from abandoning Marxism, according to Professor Cheng, China has
taken the lead in its development. One of two academics invited to lecture
Politburo members last year on the need to modernise Marxism, Professor
Cheng said recently that the Politburo had been studying the knotty question
of how to reconcile the contradictions between Marx and free-market reforms.
President Hu himself had chaired a meeting of top leaders to study ways to
apply Marxist precepts to China's economic modernisation, one of several
held since early last year to find Marxist answers to what the president
called "a series of changes, contradictions and problems in all fields".

Professor Cheng offered a clue about the approach he plan- ned to adopt to
this challenge: the aim, he said, was to "modernise" Marxism by building a
theoretical system with "Chinese characteristics".

Quite how the Chinese masses will respond to this resurrection, it is hard
to predict. Many of them, after all, appear to be in a revolutionary mood
already, although, lacking the benefit of the CCP's organisation and
leadership, they have not yet turned to the overthrow of a system that Marx
would have had little trouble identifying as exploitative and oppressive.

Violent protests in China have been growing as fast as the economy,
according to official statistics. In 2004, the ministry of public security
reported 74,000 such incidents, up from 58,000 in 2003, and 17 of them
involving more than 10,000 people. The 2005 reports showed another jump to
87,000 incidents of "public order disturbances", up 6.6 per cent on 2004;
events that "interfered with government functions" jumped 19 per cent, while
protests seen as "disturbing social order" grew by 13 per cent.

Perhaps the leadership hopes that a revival of Marxism might stop these
restless citizens asking themselves what right a Communist Party that has
abandoned the notion of the workers' state has to perpetuate its own power.
Just in case, however, the CCP has also been investing heavily in the
million-strong People's Armed Police, the main force that the government
uses to deter revolutionary thoughts among its people. In a recent article
in the party's aptly named Qiushi ("seeking the truth") magazine, the two
highest-ranking PAP generals promised to enhance the combat effectiveness of
the paramilitary force to deal with the increasing numbers of "sudden
incidents". 

Last August, the government announced the institution of specialised
riot-police units in 36 cities; a month later, it announced a ban on any
internet material that "incites illegal demonstrations". Would that include
Marx himself? After all, in his Theses on Feuerbach, the sage observed that
"the philosophers have hitherto only interpreted the world in various ways.
The point," he wrote, "is to change it."