China: Xi Gets Ready for the Final Countdown
What drives China and Russia is that sooner rather than later they will be ruling the Heartland.
President Xi Jinpingâs 1h45min speech at the opening of the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing was an absorbing exercise of recent past informing near future. All of Asia and all of the Global South should carefully examine it.
The Great Hall was lavishly adorned with bright red banners. A giant slogan hanging in the back of the hall read, âLong Live our great, glorious and correct partyâ.
Another one, below, functioned like a summary of the whole report:
âHold high the great flag of socialism with Chinese characteristics, fully implement Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era, carry forward the great founding spirit of the party, and unite and struggle to fully build a modern socialist country and to fully promote the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.â
True to tradition, the report outlined the CPCâs achievements over the past 5 years and Chinaâs strategy for the next 5 â and beyond. Xi foresees âfierce stormsâ ahead, domestic and foreign. The report was equally significant for what was not spelled out, or left subtly implied.
Every member of the CPCâs Central Committee had already been briefed about the report â and approved it. They will spend this week in Beijing studying the fine print and will vote to adopt it on Saturday. Then a new CPC Central Committee will be announced, and a new Politburo Standing Committee â the 7 that really rule â will be formally endorsed.
This new leadership line-up will clarify the new generation faces that will be working very close to Xi, as well as who will succeed Li Keqiang as the new Prime Minister: he has finished his two terms and, according to the constitution, must step down.
There are also 2,296 delegates present at the Great Hall representing the CPCâs over 96 million members. They are not mere spectators: at the plenary session that ended last week, they analyzed in-depth every major issue, and prepared for the National Congress. They do vote on party resolutions â even as those resolutions are decided by the top leadership, and behind closed doors.
The key takeaways
Xi contends that in these past 5 years the CPC strategically advanced China while âcorrectlyâ (Party terminology) responding to all foreign challenges. Particularly key achievements include poverty alleviation, the normalization of Hong Kong, and progress in diplomacy and national defense.
Itâs quite telling that Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who was sitting in the second row, behind the current Standing Committee members, never took his eyes off Xi, while others were reading a copy of the report on their desk.
Compared to the achievements, success of the Xi-ordered Zero-Covid policy remains highly debatable. Xi stressed that it has protected peopleâs lives. What he could not possibly say is that the premise of his policy is to treat Covid and its variants as a U.S. bioweapon directed against China. That is, a serious matter of national security that trumps any other consideration, even the Chinese economy.
Zero-Covid hit production and the job market extremely hard, and virtually isolated China from the outside world. Just a glaring example: Shanghaiâs district governments are still planning for zero-Covid on a timescale of two years. Zero-Covid will not go away anytime soon.
A serious consequence is that the Chinese economy will most certainly grow this year by less than 3% â well below the official target of âaround 5,5%â.
Now letâs look at some of the Xi reportâs highlights.
Taiwan: Beijing has started âa great struggle against separatism and foreign interferenceâ on Taiwan.
Hong Kong: It is now âadministered by patriots, making it a better place.â In Hong Kong there was âa major transition from chaos to order.â Correct: the 2019 color revolution nearly destroyed a major global trade/finance center.
Poverty alleviation: Xi hailed it as one of three âmajor eventsâ of the past decade along with the CPCâs centenary and socialism with Chinese characteristics entering a ânew eraâ. Poverty alleviation is the core of one of the CPCâs âtwo centenary goals.â
Opening up: China has become âa major trading partner and a major destination for foreign investment.â Thatâs Xi refuting the notion that China has grown more autarchic. China will not engage in any kind of âexpansionismâ while opening up to the outside world. The basic state policy remains: economic globalization. But â he didnât say it â âwith Chinese characteristicsâ.
âSelf-revolutionâ: Xi introduced a new concept. âSelf-revolutionâ will allow China to escape a historical cycle leading to a downturn. And âthis ensures the party will never change.â So itâs the CPC or bust.
Marxism: definitely remains as one of the fundamental guiding principles. Xi stressed, âWe owe the success of our party and socialism with Chinese characteristics to Marxism and how China has managed to adapt it.â
Risks: that was the speechâs recurrent theme. Risks will keep interfering with those crucial âtwo centenary goalsâ. Number one goal was reached last year, at the CPCâs 100thanniversary, when China reached the status of a âmoderately prosperous societyâ in all respects (xiaokang, in Chinese). Number two goal should be reached at the centenary of the Peopleâs Republic of China in 2049: to âbuild a modern socialist country that is prosperous, strong, democratic, culturally advanced and harmonious.â
Development: the focus will be on âhigh-quality developmentâ, including resilience of supply chains and the âdual circulationâ economic strategy: expansion of domestic demand in parallel to foreign investment (mostly centered on BRI projects). That will be Chinaâs top priority. So in theory any reforms will privilege a combination of âsocialist market economyâ and high-level opening, mixing the creation of more domestic demand with supply-side structural reform. Translation: âDual-circulationâ on steroids.
âWhole-process democracyâ: that was the other new concept introduced by Xi. Translates as âdemocracy that worksâ, as in rejuvenating the Chinese nation under â what else â the CPCâs absolute leadership: âWe need to ensure that people can exercise their powers through the Peopleâs Congress system.â
Socialist culture: Xi said itâs absolutely essential âto influence young peopleâ. The CPC must exercise ideological control and make sure the media fosters a generation of young people âwho are influenced by traditional culture, patriotism and socialismâ, thus benefitting âsocial stabilityâ. The âChina storyâ must go everywhere, presenting a China that is âcredible and respectableâ. That certainly applies to Chinese diplomacy, even the âWolf Warriorsâ.
âSinicise religionâ: Beijing will continue its drive to âSinicise religionâ, as in âproactivelyâ adapting âreligion and the socialist societyâ. This campaign was introduced in 2015, meaning for instance that Islam and Christianity must be under CPC control and in line with Chinese culture.
The Taiwan pledge
Now we reach the themes that completely obsess the decaying Hegemon: the connection between Chinaâs national interests and how they affect the civilization-stateâs role in international relations.
National security: âNational security is the foundation of national rejuvenation, and social stability is a prerequisite of national strength.â
The military: the PLAâs equipment, technology and strategic capability will be strengthened. It goes without saying that means total CPC control over the military.
âOne country, two systemsâ: It has proven to be âthe best institutional mechanism for Hong Kong and Macau and must be adhered to in the long termâ. Both âenjoy high autonomyâ and are âadministered by patriots.â Xi promised to better integrate both into national strategies.
Taiwan reunification: Xi made a pledge to complete the reunification of China. Translation: return Taiwan to the motherland. That was met with a torrent of applause, leading to the key message, addressed simultaneously to the Chinese nation and âforeign interferenceâ forces: âWe will not renounce the use of force and will take all necessary measures to stop all separatist movements.â The bottom line: âThe resolution of the Taiwan issue is a matter for the Chinese people themselves, to be decided by the Chinese people.â
Itâs also quite telling that Xi did not even mention Xinjiang by name: only by implication, when he stressed that China must strengthen the unity of all ethnic groups. Xinjiang for Xi and the leadership mean industrialization of the Far West and a crucial node in BRI: not the object of an imperial demonization campaign. They know that the CIA destabilization tactics used in Tibet for decades did not work in Xinjiang.
Shelter from the storm
Now letâs unpack some of the variables affecting the very tough years ahead for the CPC.
When Xi mentioned âfierce storms aheadâ, thatâs what he thinks about 24/7: Xi is convinced the USSR collapsed because the Hegemon did everything to undermine it. He wonât allow a similar process to derail China.
In the short term, the âstormâ may refer to the latest round of the no holds barred American war on Chinese technology â not to mention free trade: cutting China off from buying or manufacturing chips and components for supercomputers.
Itâs fair to consider Beijing keeps the focus long-term, betting that most of the world, especially the Global South, will move away from the U.S. high tech supply chain and prefer the Chinese market. As the Chinese increasingly become self sufficient, U.S. tech firms will end up losing world markets, economies of scale, and competitiveness.
Xi also did not mention the U.S. by name. Everyone in the leadership â especially the new Politburo â is aware of how Washington wants to
âdecoupleâ from China in every possible way and will continue to provocatively deploy every possible strand of hybrid war.
Xi did not enter into details during his speech, but itâs clear the driving force going forward will be technological innovation linked to a global vision. Thatâs where BRI comes in, again â as the privileged field of application for these tech breakthroughs.
Only this way we can understand how Zhu Guangyao, a former vice minister of finance, may be sure that per capita GDP in China in 2035 would at least double the numbers in 2019 and reach $20,000.
The challenge for Xi and the new Politburo right away is to fix Chinaâs structural economic imbalance. And pumping up debt-financed âinvestmentâ all over again wonât work.
So bets can be made that Xiâs third term â to be confirmed later this week â will have to concentrate on rigorous planning and monitoring of implementation, much more than during his previous bold, ambitious, abrasive but sometimes disconnected years. The Politburo will have to pay way more attention to technical considerations. Xi will have to delegate more serious policymaking autonomy to a bunch of competent technocrats.
Otherwise, we will be back to that startling observation by then Premier Wen Jiabao in 2007: Chinaâs economy is âunstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated and ultimately unsustainableâ. Thatâs exactly where the Hegemon wants it to be.
As it stands, things are far from gloomy. The National Development and Reform Commission states that compared to the rest of the world, Chinaâs consumer inflation is only âmarginalâ; the job market is steady; and international payments are stable.
Xiâs work report and pledges may also be seen as turning the usual Anglo-American geopolitical suspects â Mackinder, Mahan, Spykman, Brzezinski â upside down.
The China-Russia strategic partnership has no time to lose with global hegemonic games; what drives them is that sooner rather than later they will be ruling the Heartland â the world island â and beyond, with allies from the Rimland, and from Africa to Latin America, all participating in a new form of globalization. Certainly with Chinese characteristics; but most of all, pan-Eurasian characteristics. The final countdown is already on.
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