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The Historical
Significance of Mao Zedong
By
Henry C.K. Liu (廖子光)
This article appeared in AToL on April
13, 21013
The protracted history of the Chinese socialist revolution started 94
years ago in 1919 on May 4, when 5,000 students from Beijing University
and twelve other schools held a political demonstration in front of
Tiananmen, the focal point of what is today known as Tiananmen Square.
The demonstration sparked what came to be known in history as the May
Fourth Movement of 1919-21, an anti-imperialism movement rising out of
patriotic reactions to dishonorable foreign relations of the government
of China’s then warlord Yuan Shi-kai (袁世凯) that led to unjust treatment
of China by Western powers at the Versailles Peace Conference. May
Fourth was a political landmark that consolidated the nation's
collective awareness that Western democracy is as imperialistic as the
Western monarchy it overthrew. This national collective awareness
turned China from Western democracy towards the path of modern
socialism through Marxist-Leninist proactive revolution.
Mao Zedong at the time of the May 4th Movement was 26 years old and a
librarian assistant in Beijing University where he spent time in the
stacks reading about heroic nationalist leaders such as George
Washingon, Napoleon and Bismark and became inspired by their
world-changing patriotic deeds.
As a son of a small farming family that enjoyed comfortable living on
three arces of land in rural Shao-shan in Hunan province, Mao in his
youth spent his spare time after working in the field reading Chinese
history and literature in the newly-opened public library in nearby
Changsha. He was particularly inspired by the legalist policies of Qin
Shi Wang (秦始皇; 259 BC – 210 BC) and the theme of Water Margin (水浒传), a
14th century novel of uiversal brotherhood and one of the Four Great
Classical Novels of Chinese literature.
Before going to Beijing, Mao attended First Normal School of Changsha,
coming under the influenced of several progressive teachers there,
including a professor of ethics named Yang Changji (杨昌济 1871-1920), who
urged Mao and other students to read a radical newspaper, New Youth
(新青年) founded by Marxist Chen Duxiu (陈独秀1879–1942), Dean of the Faculty
of Letters at Beijing University.
In 1918, after graduating from First Normal School of Chansha, Mao
moved to Beijing, to join Yang Changji who had been recently appointed
professor at Peking University by Cai Yuanpei (蔡元培1868-1940), the
progressive president. Yang recommended Mao to be an assistan to
university librarian Li Dazhao (李大钊1889–1927), a Marxist intellectual
in China who later participated the the founding of the Chinese
Communist Party in Shanghai in 1921.
Li wrote a series of articles in New
Youth on the October Revolution
which had just taken place in Russia, during which the Bolshevik Party
under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin (1870–1924) seized state power.
Lenin had put forth the theory of imperialism as the final stage of
capitalism based on the writings of John Atkinson Hobson (1858-1940),
building on the socio-economic-political theory of Karl Marx
(1818-1883) and Friedrich Engels (1820–1895) in the mid-19th century
from observation on turbulent European conditions.
Li's articles helped create interest in Marxism in the Chinese
revolutionary movement, as an alternative to Western-style democracy
that had been subscribed by the 1911 bourgeios Revolution led by Sun
Yat-sen, but had proved wanting in the behavior of Western democracies
at the 1919 Versailles Peace Conference. Marxism was then recognized by
Chinese revolutionary intellectuals as a more effective ideology in the
struggle against Western imperialism even when many of the concepts of
Marxism apply only to Euroepan situations.
The May Fourth Movement marked a turn by anti-imperialist Chinese
intellectuals towards revolutionary Marxism. The success of the
Bolshevik Revolution in Russia was a major factor in forming the views
of Li Dazhao on the revolutionary role of the state. Li initiated the
Peking Socialist Youth Corps in 1920 and in July 1921 co-founded the
Communist Party of China (CPC) with Chen Duxiu, who had been exposed to
socialist ideas in Japan, as a political institution with the secular
program to seize power of the state to carry out socialist revolution
in China. A revolutionary state is the rationale for a one-party
government, provided that the ruling party represents the interest of
the people. Li was a mentor to Mao Zedong who openly acknowledged
having been influenced by Li’s ideas.
The first edition of Stalin’s Problems
of Leninism, which appeared in
April 1924, seven years after the October Revolution of 1917, asks: “Is
it possible to attain the final victory of socialism in one country,
without the combined efforts of the proletarians of several advanced
countries?” The answer was: “No, it is not. The efforts of one country
are enough for the overthrow of the bourgeoisie [in one country]. This
is what the history of our revolution tells us. For the final victory
of socialism, for the organization of socialist production, the efforts
of one country, especially a peasant country like ours, are not enough.
For this we must have the efforts of the proletariat of several
advanced countries.”
The strategic key words on socialist internationalism are ‘final
victory’ which cannot be achieved with just ‘socialism in one country’,
and the phrase “the proletariat of several advanced countries”. But
‘final’ implies not immediate but in the future, even the distant
future. And international communism was focused not on the whole world,
but on “the proletariat of several advance countries” where
evolutionary conditions were considered as ripe. It was not focused on
the peasantry still living under agricultural feudal societies outside
of Europe or the oppressed people of imperialist colonies and
semi-colonies.
To both Lenin and Stalin, the path to liberation in the colonies of the
Western empires was to strengthen the only socialist country in the
world, namely the Soviet Union, and to weaken capitalism at the core,
namely industrialized economies, to end its final stage of imperialism.
In theory, the liberated industrial workers of the Western advanced
economies would in turn help liberate the oppressed peasants in the
colonies and semi-colonies in the still not industrialized economies.
Unfortunately, actual events failed to support this theory. There was
no worker uprising in the advanced economies. In fact, unionism in the
advanced economies sided with management and turned anti-communist.
These trends support the truth that liberation cannot be delivered by
others and must be won by the victims themselves. Each oppressed group
must struggle for self liberation through internal political
consciousness.
Both Lenin and Stalin failed to recognize the inherently powerful but
latent revolutionary potential of the peasants of the pre-industrial
colonies and semi-colonies of the Western Empires, which had to wait
until the emergence of Mao Zedong in China to force the world to
acknowledge this truth in history. Mao, in placing his faith in the
revolutionary potential of the Chinese peasantry, redefined the term
“proletariat” to mean those deprived of property, a property-less
class, a meaning oringinally understood in Latin in Roman times, away
from the European idea of the proletariat as the class of
urban industrial workers.
The October Revolution of 1917 was launched on the slogan: “All Power
to the Soviets” through which the minority Bolsheviks won political
leadership in the Soviets, which were workers councils that constituted
the power behind the new socialist state. Bourgeois liberal democracy
was not an objective of the October Revolution, but rather a target for
elimination in order to establish the dictatorship of the proletariat
in the context of socialist revolution through class struggle.
This was because in feudal Russia in 1917, the proletariat as a
dominant class was an abstraction yet to be created as a reality by
industrialization. The proletariat in its infancy, small in number,
could not possibly command a majority under universal suffrage in a
feudal agricultural society. Therefore dictatorship of a minority
proletariat is the only revolutionary path towards socialism.
In pre-industrial societies, liberal representative democracy is by
definition reactionary in the absence of a dominant working class.
Lenin considered the revolution in Russia as a fortuitous beginning of
an emerging socialist world order that required and justified a
dictatorship of the proletariat to sustain revolutionary progress.
Leninists work for the acceleration of socio-economic dialectics by the
violent overthrow of capitalism just as capitalism had been the violent
slayer of feudalism. Evolutionary Marxists, such as social democrats,
believe in scientific dialectic materialism which predicts the
inevitability of the replacement of capitalism by socialism as a
natural outcome of capitalism’s internal contradiction.
But the evolutionary process requires the emergence of capitalism as a
natural outcome of feudalism’s internal contradiction. Marx saw the
process of evolution toward socialism as taking place in the most
advanced segment of the world, in capitalistic societies of
industrialized Western Europe when the ruling bourgeoisie had replaced
the aristocracy as a result of the French Revolution. The Russian
Revolution showed that geopolitical conditions have opened up
opportunities for revolutions in pre-industrialized nations and it is
in these pre-industrial societies that radical revolution is needed to
bring about instant socialism by short-circuiting the long evolutionary
process from feudalism to capitalism to socialism.
In Germany, the most industrialized country in the second half of the
19th century, Social Democrat icons such as Karl Kautsky and Eduard
Bernstein, titans of Marxist exegesis, favored gradual, non-violent and
parliamentary processes to effectuate inevitable dialectic evolution
towards socialism because of the existence in Germany of a large
working class. These Marxists subscribed to the doctrine of
evolutionary Marxism which renders revolution unnecessary as socialism
would arrive naturally from capitalism as an evolutionary process of
dialectic materialism.
On the other end of the spectrum were radical revolutionaries such as
Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, leaders of the Spartacists, founded
in the summer of 1915 when they withdrew from the German
Social-Democrat Party (SDP) because of SDP support for Germany’s
participation in the First World War. The Spartacists staged an
abortive coup to overthrow the young social democratic government in
Germany. For communists, revolution is necessary in order to short
circuit the long stage of capitalism during which the evolutionary
process can be halted by unionism and the introduction of a mixed
economy through the injection of socialist dimension in the capitalist
system. This is particularly true for pre-industrial feudal societies
when a capitalist system with socialist dimension can be employed to
ward off any revolutionary pressure.
The call by radical Leninists for worldwide coalition of the browbeaten
proletariat majority in the industrial societies in the West, who were
still deprived of political power beyond the structural dialectical
process, and the agitating proletariat minority in the agricultural
societies in whose name radical Leninists had gained state power in
Russia, was most threatening to the rulers of the capitalist order in
the advanced imperialist countries.
Reaction to this threat gave rise to insidious anti-communism in the
imperialist West to prevent the arrival of socialism in the strongholds
of industrial capitalism ahead of its evolutionary schedule. In the
advanced economies, state-sponsored capitalist propaganda was
conditioning workers into an active anti-communist force through
industrial unionism and the addictive appeal of individualistic
bourgeois freedom to neutralize collective working class solidarity.
Still, all Marxists share the belief that the structural antagonism
between a capitalist bourgeoisie class and a proletariat class in
advanced economies was a necessary precondition for creating socialism.
It required the resolution of the contradiction between the efficient
productivity of capitalism and the economic dysfunctionality of the
mal-distribution of wealth inherent in capitalism. The good of
capitalism is its efficiency in creating wealth; the bad is that the
way wealth is created in capitalism requires wealth to go to the wrong
places, to those who need it least, namely the rich rather than the
poor who need it most. Also, awareness was increasing that capital in
the modern financial system comes increasingly from the pension funds
of workers in capitalist society with socialist dimensions - the
welfare state.
Wealth is Good
Wealth is good; it is the mal-distribution of it that is bad and
creates socio-economic conflicts. And if that mal-distribution is
carried out through class lines, then class struggle must be part of a
socialist revolution.
The internal contradiction of capitalism is that it creates wealth by
widening the gap between rich and poor. Wealth disparity is a polluting
socio-economic by-product of capitalist wealth creation, like nuclear
waste in nuclear energy production.
While capital cannot create wealth without labor, the proletariat in
advanced economies, oppressed by a pro-capital legal-political regime,
never managed to gain control of ownership of the means of production
financed by their own wealth, stored in worker pension funds. Thus
oppressed workers remained silently, docile victims of capitalist
exploitation by capitalists using workers’ own retirement money as
capital.
Apologists for capitalism then create the myth of capital being needed
to create employment, ignoring the fact that it is the saved income
from employed workers that creates capital. In other words, employment
creates capital, not the other way around. Chinese reformers have yet
to understand this truism when they accept low wages in order to
attract capital for investment.
The global financial crisis that began in 2007 in New York is a live
demonstration of the self-destructive potential of finance capitalism
when not supported by full employment with rising wages, which then
forces needed consumption to be financed by consumer debt which
inevitably will become unsustainable.
The current financial crisis of unsustainable debt around the world has
ignited populist demand for socio-political changes in all countries.
These populist changes will transform the existing socio-economic world
order, even though it is too early to predict what shape this new world
order will take. Suffice to observe that changes in government toward
progressive populism are now taking place in every nation, except
perhaps in China where a one-party government led by a communist party
which wants to stop being a revoltutionary party to become a ruling
party. Many Western-trained Chinese neoliberal economists
continue to argue for more free markets that uses market forces to keep
wages low.
The agraraian socio-eonomic conditions in czarist Russia and dynastic
China, while not congruent to each other, were fundamentally different
from the industrial conditions in Europe where the Industrial
Revolution had taken place to bring into existence a large working
class of factory workers that was supposed to be ripe for the
revolutionary class struggle as envisioned by Marx at the start of the
1848 Democratic Revolutions.
Tragically, the socialist movements were crushed and their revolutonary
leaders murdered by reactionary forces in both Germany and France. The
capitalist democratic regimes that followed inherited and embraced with
renewed vigor Western imperialism and its colonies around the world.
Russia and China, both great nations with glorious histories that had
fallen socio-economically and technologiaclly backward, were not
touched by Industrial Revolution to bring forth a class of industrial
workers. The oppressed classes in these two agrarian societies were
rural peasants which constitued over 80% of the population.
However, in semi-colonial China, a powerful domestic comprador class
had emerged to serve advancing Western imperialism. Compradors in China
were Chinese managers or senior local employees that worked for large
transnational foreign commercial enterprises active in China. These
compradors, becoming rich and powerful serving foreign economic and
political interests against China's national interest, had close
symbiotic connection with Western imperialism and its exploitative
foreign capital and businesses. This comprador class flourished in
Western colonies in China such as Hong Kong and the five Open Port
Cities established by unfair terms of the unequaled treaties forced on
China by Western imperialist powers after China repeatedly lost the
Opium Wars of 1839-42.
Under the current market economy in present-day China, a large new
comprador class has re-emerged to again serve foreign corporate
interest backed by US global geopolitical strategy to defuse
revolutionary pressure while transferring wealth from China to the West
in the name of free trade denominated in paper fiat dollars. Even
Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have become leading compradors
for foreign commercial and financial enterprises in China's
increasingly open markets since the introduction of the "reform and
open" policy in 1978. The full implementation of WTO rules will
strengthen the comprador role of Chinese state-owned banking
institutions.
These SOEs having been tutored by experienced Chinese compradors from
Hong Kong which had became a British colony in 1841 and not returned to
Chinese sovereignty until 1997. Even after Hong Kong's return to
Chinese sovereignty, its compradors have continue to provide traitorous
advice to Chinese leaders who did not know better, having been
involuntarily isolated from the economic process of the modern world
through decades of US anti-communist total embargo. These Hong Kong
compradors have profited obscenely from bridging the gap in the
different levels of development between China and the advanced Westion
nations while locking China by policy into another century of
semi-colonial fate.
The two most grevious errors made by China's "reform and open" policy
of 1978 by following poisonous advice of Hong Kong compradors are:
1) China by policy tries to modernize and develop its economy through
the exploitation of low-wage labor for export, leading Chinese society
to structural faults of low income and wealth disparity as well as
uneven locational development. China has now developed not regions
where China needs most, but regions where Western markets find most
convenient from which to exploit the Chinese economy.
2) China by policy volntarily opens its market to domination by Western
capital, and returns its national economy to semi-colonial status while
being idiotically pleased with comprador earnings from commission while
massive amount of wealth are leaking into foreign pockets.
This kind of bad addvice naturally came from Hong Kong compradors to
reflect the limit of their own slave mentality. It was like asking a
house slave for advice on liberation by armed uprising. The answer is
always: "Don't even think about it."
These are the structural reasons why the Chinese economy built on the
"reform and open" policy is plighted with inequality and unevenness,
not to mention corruption. While "reform and open" can be good policy
for all nations in the modern interconnected world, the strategy and
implementation of China's "reform and open" policy needs to be
reconsidered to correct its foundation of prenacious new compradorism
and to prevent this unsavory practice from siphoning more wealth into
foreign pockets in a zero sum game.
Mao Zedong wrote the following words in Analysis of the Classes in
Chinese Society (March 1926) to combat two deviations then found in the
Party:
The exponents of the first deviation, represented by Chen Duxiu, were
concerned only with cooperation with the ruling Kuomindang and
neglecting the peasants.
This was Right opportunism.
The exponents of the second deviation, represented by Zhang Guotao,
were concerned only with China's [non-existent] industrial labor
movement, also neglecting the peasants. This was Left opportunism.
Both were aware that they were lacking in mass support, but neither
knew where to seek reinforcements or to generate popular support on a
mass scale.
Mao pointed out that the Chinese peasantry was the most oppressed and
numerically the largest force of the Chinese proletariat (无产阶级),
defined in Chinese political nomenclature as property-less class, not
just factory workers, and placed class struggle in the Chinese
revolution as one between the peasant proletariat class and the
comprador class as local agents of Western imperialism.
Moreover, Mao saw that the national bourgeoisie is actually a
vacillating class, while being antagonistic to stronger foreign
competition and being quick studies of imperialist modes of operation
to in turn oppress a small but growing new working class of factory
workers in the home market. Mao predicted that the national bourgeoisie
as a class would disintegrate in an upsurge of popular revolution, with
its right-wing going over to the side of Western imperialism. This
prediction had been borne out a year later by political events
surrounding Jiang Jieshi's counter-revolutionary coup d'état in
1927.
Today, the national bourgeoisie in China contitutes what General
Secretary Xi Jinping calls "special interest groups" (特殊利益群体) which
present themselves as formidable organized obstacles to true reform.
Many of them are modern-day compradors.
Mao asks: "Who are our enemies? Who are our friends? This is a question
of the first importance for the revolution."
It is a question that needs to be asked today by all Chinese patriots.
"The landlord class and the comprador class are our enemies," Mao
answers.
In China today, a new landlord class is emerging as real estate
developers and speculator, and a new comprador class is firmly in
charge of the Chinese economy to serve the benefit of foreign
institutions of neo-liberalism, the new face of Western imperialism
around the world.
In the first general study meeting of the Politburo of the 18th Party
Congress, General Secretary Xi Jinping talked emphatically about
"firmly upholding the socialist road (坚持社会主义道路), firmly upholding the
people's democratic dictatorship (坚持人民民主专政), firmly upholding
leadership of the Communist Party of China (坚持中国共产党的领导) and firmly
upholding Marxism-Leninism and Mao Zedong Thought (坚持马列主义、毛泽东思想).
Echoing Deng Xiaoping's famous 1992 Southern Tour (南巡) 20 years ago to
reaffirm the policy of "reform and open", Xi Jinping as new leader,
conducted his own new Southern Tour to Shenzhen shortly after assuming
office as Party General Secretary to reaffirm the continuation of
China's policy of "reform and open".
Large in Xi Jinping's reform policy are new emphases on anti-corruption
(反腐) and attack on special interest groups (打击特殊利益群体), adjustment in
income disparity and aggressive improvement in the living standard of
the people by promoting common prosperity (共同富裕). The compromise of
"letting some people get rich first" which the comprador and national
bourgeoisie classes have conveniently dropped the word "first" in
practice appears to be ending under the new leadership of Xi Jingping.
Mao said that in economically backward and semi-colonial China, the
landlord class and the comprador class were appendages of the
international bourgeoisie, depending on imperialism for survival,
prosperity and growth. These classes represented the most backward and
most reactionary relations of production in China and hindered the
development of her own productive forces. Their existence is utterly
incompatible with the aims of the Chinese revolution, Mao emphasized.
He went on to crushed them as enemy classes early after gaining state
power.
The big landlord and big comprador classes in particular always sided
with imperialism and constituted an extreme counterrevolutionary group.
They made counter-revolutionary careers for themselves by opposing the
Communist Party and received subsidies from various groups of
reactionaries in power, from imperialists and the right-wing of the
Kuomindang, Mao added.
Under the "reform and open" policies since 1978, a new landlord class
has re-emerged made up of real estate developers and speculators, and a
new comprador class has re-emerged in the commercial and financial
markets in China. The nation's best young talents after having been
educated in top Chinese universities and foreign graduate schools have
mostly been co-opted by Western companies to act as compradors in all
sectors in the Chinese economy: industry, commerce, technology,
journalism, and even national security analysis. China's "reform and
open" policy has legalized foreign infiltration into every aspect of
its economy and society, allow Hong Kong, now officially under Chinese
sovereignty, to continue to be an anti-China foreign base and a hot-bed
safe haven for corruption on the mainland.
The greatness of Mao Zedong lies in his revolutionary insight that
socialist revolution in China must come from liberating the peasants
and that the purpose of revolution is to rid China of Western
imperialistic oppression to revive China's historcal greatness as an
prosperous, independent great power. Mao understood clearly that such
pupose can only be fulfilled with the support of all Chinese people
around the world who have not sold out mentally or financially to
foreign enemies.
The task of the Chinese Communst Party is to galvanize the power of the
masses for a victorious revolution, to unite all who can be united and
to crush traitorous special interest gorups, the new compradors. A
harmonious society has no room for comprador traitors and other enemies
of the people. The revolution cannot be won by catering to the
democratic politics of special interest groups acting as agents of a
new global imperialism.
Mao understood that the path of reviving China to its historical
greatness as a nation lies in creating a harmonious society of equality
within China before China can gain equaility among nations of the
world. Harmony and inequality are not compatible conditions in any
society. Harmony cannot be achieved by appeasing new compradors who are
bad elements that create disharmony and inequality by helping foreign
interest exploit the Chinese people. A harmonious organism cannot
tolerate a growing cancer in its body.
Mao saw Marxism as the most appropriate and effective ideology to
implement the national goal of harmonious revival. Mao was the first
Chinese revolutionary to advocate an approach which later came to be
known as "socialism with Chinese characteristics". To Mao,
Marxist-Leninist ideology must be adjusted to Chinese situations to
serve the revitalization of China's historical greatness, not the other
way around. The Chinese characterisitcs Mao had in mind is not the same
of Chinese charateristics of the "reform and open" policy since 1978.
Mao never entertained the fantasy that letting enemies of the
revolution into the Party Central Committee is the path to
revolutionary victory. Victory by Surrenderism is merely
self-deception. The Party must purge such self-deception from the
highest level of its leadership for the Party to continue to derserve
the support of the people.
Mao's post as a librarian assistant in Beijing University in 1918 gave
him the opportunity to discovering firsthand newly-translated socialist
writings in Chinese, further expanding his understanding and commitment
to the revolutionary socialist cause. He read Chinese translation of
Thomas Kirkup's A History of
Socialism, Karl Kautsky's Karl
Marx's Ökonomische Lehren
(translated from German) and most importantly,
Marx and Engels' political pamphlet, The
Communist Manifesto.
Mao also read widely beyond Marxist works. He read the translated works
of Western classical liberalism such as Adam Smith's The Wealth of
Nations which deals with the necessary role of government to
restrict
monopolitic international trade, ideas that influenced Alexander
Hamilton's protectionist, nationalist industrial policies, modeled
after Colbert's dirigism in France under Louis XIV to resist British
monopolisitc dominance over New World commerce in the United States
during its infancy. For the first hundred years in US history of two
centuries, the young nation resisted British and French domination to
build its own prosperity through protecionism and nationalist
industrial policies of support for national industries.
Mao also read Montesquieu's The
Spirit of the Laws, which identifies
environmental influence as a material condition of national
socio-political culture. He read John Stuart Mill's On Liberty, in
which Mill addresses the nature and limits of the power that can be
legitimately exercised by society through government over the political
rights of individuals, and that individuals need to be restrained by
government from doing lasting and serious harm to themselves and to the
community by the "no harm" principle. Because no individual can exist
in isolation, harm done to oneself or one's own property or well-being
also harm others and the ccommunity as a socio-economic organism. The
destruction of even one's own property deprives as well the community
of its communal interest in that very property.
Mill also holds the opinion that dictaorship is an acceptable form of
government for those societies that are still developing, as long as
the dictator serves the best interests of the people, because existing
barriers to spontaneous socio-economic progress can only be overcome by
strong and effective political leadership. Mill argues aganst the
danger of "tyrany of the majority" in democratic systems. Mao's
view on political rights runs parallel to Mill's view on the necessity
of strong leadership for a good cause. All revolutionary governments
are dictatorial governments by definition. They turn democratic only
after the revolution has been solidly won. On economic development,
democracy is a product, not a cause of prosperity, US neoliberal
propaganda notwithstanding.
Without Mao's heroic leadership in the historic Zunyi Meeting (遵义会议 on
January 15-17, 1935) in the midst of the most critical low point in
Long March when the Chinese revolution faced imminent danger of total
military defeat, in which Mao regained military leadership of the
guerrilla war against Jiang Jieshi's regular army in the face of
overwhelming odds, and Mao's military strategy from an established
revolutionary base to provide an living example of a working socialist
society to produce the resource necessary to carry on the revolution,
the Communist Party of China would have been annihilated by vastly
superior Guomindang forces as only a matter of time.
The popular slogan: "Without Mao Zedong, there would be no New China"
is a historical fact. By extension, without Mao Zedong Thought, there
will be no New China. Those who seek the removal of reference to Mao
Zedong Thought in Party and State documents should reexamine their own
thinking. Even in the US, no self-respecting citizen dares challenge
the central place of Jeffersonian ideals in its national psyche.
A leader like Mao Zedong is a fortuitous gift from Heaven to the
Chinese nation. Such a leader appears only once in a millennium. For
the foreseeable future, Mao Zedong will be a political icon that will
hold the Chinese people together and Mao Zedong Thought will live as an
indispensable classic on which to rebuild the Chinese nation into a
socialist society.
Mao also read Jean-Jacques Rousseau on the political philosophy of
basic human nature which influenced the political discourse in the
French Revolution. Mao read Charles Darwin on biological evolution and
even Herbert Spencer on Social Darvinism of survival of the fittest as
a self-renewing evolutionary process in Anarcho-Capitalism.
While often misinterpreted as ultra-conservative, Spencer opposed
private ownerhip of land, claiming that each person has an inherent
claim to participate in the use of the earth. He was sympathetic to
Georgism, a US economic philosophical ideology advocated by Henry
George, that people can own what they create, but have no right to own
things found in nature, most specifically, land, which belong equally
to all. Spencer advocated the organization of voluntary labor unions as
a bulwark against "exploitation by bosses", and favored an economy
organized primarily in free worker co-operatives as a replacement for
wage-labor in a labor market in which worker have no market power. Such
Spencerean progressive ideas have been selectively purged by modern-day
capitalist propoaganda.
As China mounts an urbanization program as a dynamo for economic
development, Gerogist ideas can serve as a guide to avoid allowing
urbanization be captured by special interest groups for private gain at
the expense of the community.
There is no record of Mao having read Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)
Scottish philosopher who advocated benevolent authocratic govenment and
showed how a heroic leader can forge a strong state, and help create a
new moral culture for a nation. Yet Mao came to the same conclusion on
his own about China led by the Chinese Communist Party on behalf of the
people.
Mao understood that Confucianism (儒家) had permeated Chinese society
perniciously and hindered its advancement in modern times. On another
front, capitalist revisionists will attempt to subvert the socialist
revolution with the false notion that capitalist exploitation and
inequality are the necessary ingredients of private wealth creation.
Mao tried to combat both by launching mass movements, culminating in
the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in 1966.
But even after a decade of enormous social upheaval, tragic personal
sufferings, fundamental economic dislocation and unparalleled
diplomatic isolation, Confucianism stood its ground in Chinese societal
mentality. The Cultural Revolution failed to achieve its spiritual goal
and degenerated into factional power struggle, with serious damage to
the nation’s physical and socio-economic infrastructure and to the
prestige of the Communist Party of China (CPC), not to mention the
decline of popular support and near total bankruptcy of revolutionary
zeal among even loyal party cadres. The fault is not with the spirit of
the Cultural Revolution, but in allowing it to fall into the trap of
factional power struggle that lost sight of the revolutionary purpose.
The lesson for future cultural revolutions is not that they are no
longer needed, but that they should never again be allowed to mutate
into a factional power struggle.
Confucianism will have to wait for many more future cultural
revolutions before it will be restrained in its negative influence on
the Chinese civilization and to have its positive elements revived. A
culture that took two millennia to develop cannot be modernized in just
one century.
Realistically, nostalgia aside, the feudal system under imperial
monarchy cannot be restored in modern China. Once a political
institution is overthrown, all the king’s men cannot put it back
together again. Nor would that be desirable. Yet the modern political
system in China, despite its revolutionary clothing and radical
rhetoric, is still fundamentally feudal, both in the manner in which
power is distributed and in its administrative structure. This is why
more cultural revolutions are necessary and will be necessary to move
Chinese civilization forward in the modern world.
Mao Zedong understood this need and that until China succeeds in a
thorough cultural revolution, it cannot revive itself to restore its
historical greatness,
However, violent revolutions cannot be regular events without
destroying the very purpose that justifies them. China needs a
continuous non-violent cultural revolution to ensure that its
revolutionary path toward national revival through socialism is not
reversed. Future cultural revolutions must be insulated from factional
power struggle instigated by political opportunists in the name of
ideology correctness.
Cultural revolutions do not need destructive factional political
violence in the name of ideological vaccination that ends up disrupting
the national purpose. Mao Zedong never condoned political violence
among the people as he clearly stated in On Pracice (August 1937) and
again in On the Correct Handling of Contradictions Among the People
(February 27, 1957).
In Chinese Confucianism (儒家) politics, loyalty is traditionally
preferred over competence. The ideal is to have both in a minister.
Failing that, loyalty without competence is preferred as being less
dangerous than competence without loyalty - the stuff of which
successful insurrection and revolts are made. Therein lies the seed of
systemic corruption in Chinese Confucianism (儒家) politics.
For socialist China, loyalty by definition is to the socialist cause,
not personal relations. It is imperative that leaders remain loyal to
socialist ideals. Yet loyalty to socialist ideals alone is not enough.
It must be augmented by competence and virtuousness.
Confucianism (儒家), by placing blind faith in a causal connection
between virtue and power, has remained the main cultural obstacle to
modern China’s attempt to evolve from a society governed by men into a
society governed by socialist legalism (法家) which should not be
confused with the Western bourgeois concept of Rule of Law. The danger
of Confucianism (儒家) lies not in its aim to endow the virtuous with
power, but in its tendency to label the powerful as virtuous.
In order to change Chinese feudal society toward a communist social
order, which is understood by all communists as a necessary goal of
human development, Mao Zedong developed out of abstract Leninist
concepts specific operational methods that took on special Chinese
characteristics necessary for Chinese civilization and
historical-cultural conditions, its strengths and also shortcomings.
These methods, above all the system of organized mass movements to
achieve the advancement of the mass interest, stress the change of
socio-political consciousness, i.e., the creation of new men for a new
cooperative society, as the basis for changing reality, i.e., the
replacement of private ownership of the mode of production by
collective ownership. The concept of mass politics, relevant in Chinese
political thought from ancient time, is implemented by an elite cadre
corps within the party which is the political instrument of the people.
Deng Xiao is right when he said that to get rich is glorious, The fault
in his declaration lies in that he should have said that to get
everybody rich equally is even more glorious.
The means of production must always belong to the people. This is true
also in finance. At the present time, the complex working of modern
finance is kept as secret knowledge of the comprador elite in today's
China. Modern finance, being an indispensable wealth creation
process in the modern world, should be introduced to the people as a
mass line, and not kept as exclusive intellectual property of the elite
as it is in the West.
Modern finance is the most important means of production in the modern
economic order; it is needed not only in capitalist markets, but also
in socialist markets. The distinction between the two types of markets
is to whom the created wealth belongs and to whom this created wealth
should flow. In a capitalist market, the wealth flows to the privileged
elite while in a socialist market, the wealth should flow to the people
and distributed equally. In that sense, China is still not a socialist
market economy by far.
Mao’s mass line
Mass movement as an instrument of political communication from above to
below is unique to Chinese communist organization. This phenomenon,
developed by Mao, is of utmost importance in understanding the nature
and dynamics of the governance structure of the CPC as the ruling
Party.
The theoretical foundation of mass movement as a means of mediation
between the leadership and the will of the people pre-supposes that
nothing is impossible for the masses, quantitatively understood as a
collective unit, if their power is concentrated in and represented by a
political party of correct thought and ideology and responsible
actions.
This concept comes out of Mao’s romantic yet well-placed faith in the
great strength of the masses who are capable of developing the nation
in the interest of their own well-being and future destiny. So the
“will of the masses” has to be articulated with the help of the Party
but by the masses and within the masses, which the CPC calls the “mass
line”.
Mao’s mass-line theory requires that the leadership elite be close to
the people, that it is continuously informed about the people’s will
and that it transforms this will into concrete actions by the masses.
“From the masses back to the masses” is more than just a slogan. It
means: take the scattered and unorganized ideas of the masses and,
through study and intellectual guidance, turn them into focused and
systemic programs, then go back to the masses and propagate and explain
these ideals until the masses embrace them as their own and give them
full support.
Thus mass movements are initiated at the highest level – the Politburo,
announced to party cadres at central and regional work conferences,
subject to cadre criticism and modification, after which starts the
first phase of mass movement. Mass organizations are held to provoke
the “people’s will”, through readers’ letters to newspapers and rallies
at which these letters are read and debated. In the digital age,
expressions on the Internet have augmented the role of the print media.
The results are then officially discussed by the staff of leading
organs of the State and the Party, after which the systematized
“people's will” is clarified into acts of law or resolutions and policy
and programs, and then a mass movement spreads to the whole nation.
The history of Chinese socialist politics is a history of mass
movements. Mass movements successfully implemented Land Reform
(1950-53); Marriage Reform (1950-52); Collectivization (1953) - the
General Line of Socialist Transformation (from national bourgeois
democratic revolution to proletarian socialist revolution); and
Nationalization (1955 - from private ownership of industrial means of
production into state ownership).
The method used against opposition was thought reform through
“brainwashing” (without derogatory connotation since given in the
anticommunist West), which is a principle of preferring the changing of
the political consciousness of political opponents instead of
physically liquidating them. The impressive opening ceremony of the
Beijing Olympics that television audiences saw around the world was a
manifestation of Chinese socialist mass movement. It had the legacy of
Mao Zedong Thought written all over it.
Before 1949, the Chinese peasant had been deprived of basic health
services for over a millennium. One of the Party's first steps in
medical reform called for mass campaigns against endemic infectious
diseases. Tens of thousands of health workers were trained with basic
hygienic and medical skills and sent out into the countryside to
examine peasants and treat patients, and organize sanitation campaigns
with mass movement techniques.
Health teams examined 2.8 million peasants in 1958, the first year of
the schistosomiasis program. One team examined 1,200 patients in a
single day. Some 67 million latrines were built or repaired, and over
the next few years, hundreds of thousands of peasants were set to work
day and night, drying out swamps and building drainage ditches to get
rid of the infectious snail's habitat. Party workers claimed
schistosomiasis cure rates of 85 to 95 percent in some areas, and that
the disease had been wiped out in more than half of previously endemic
areas along the Yangtze River.
Mao's Mass Movements Succeeded until 1957
The Hundred Flower Movement of 1957 was launched on February 27 by Mao
with his famous four-hour speech, “On the Correct Handling of
Contradictions among the People”, before 1,800 leading cadres. In it,
Mao distinguished “contradiction between the enemy and ourselves” from
“contradiction among the people”, which should not be resolved by
dictatorship, i.e., not by force, but by open discussion with criticism
and counter-criticism. Up until 1957, the mass-movement policies of Mao
achieved spectacular success in both social and economic construction.
Land reform was completed, the struggle for women’s emancipation was
progressing well, and collectivization and nationalization were leading
the nation towards socialism. Health services were a model of socialist
construction in both cities and the countryside. The party’s
revolutionary leadership was accepted enthusiastically by society
generally and the peasants specifically. By 1958, agricultural
production almost doubled from 1949 (108 million tons to 185 million
tons), coal production quadrupled to 123 million tons, and steel
production grew from 100,000 tons to 5.3 million tons.
The only problem came from bourgeois intellectual rebellion. On May 25,
1957, Mao expressed his anxiety at a session of the Standing Committee
of the Politburo, and gave his approval to those who warned against too
much reactionary bourgeois liberty. That afternoon, Mao told cadres at
a Conference of Communist Youth League that “all words and deeds which
deviate from socialism are basically wrong.”
At the opening session of the People’s Congress on June 26, Zhou Enlai
initiated the “counter criticism” against the critics. Mao’s call for
open criticism was serious and genuine, but the discussion he had
conceived as a safety valve reached a degree of intensity he had not
anticipated. Mao overestimated the stability of the political climate
and underestimated the residual influence of Confucianism (儒家) and that
of Western liberalism.
At the Crossroads: Soviet model or independent path
Against this background, the CPC stood at the crossroads of choosing
the Soviet model of development or an independent path. Economy
development was based on three elements:
• Build up heavy industry before mechanization of agriculture.
• Establish an extensive system of individual incentives by means of
which productive forces could be developed from a conviction that the
superiority of socialist modes of production would be vindicated by a
visible rise in living standards.
• The acceleration of the socialist transformation of society in order
to create the precondition required by the CPC for establishing a
socialist order.
Two paths were opened to the CPC leadership in 1958:
Consolidation or,
Pushing forward toward permanent revolution
Mao was forced by geopolitical conditions (the abrupt withdrawal of
Soviet aid in 1960 and the US Cold War embargo from 1951 to 1973) to
overcome the lack of capital and technology through mobilization of
China’s vast labor reservoir. The strategy was to connect political
campaigns to production campaigns. Under pressure from orthodox
Leninists within the party apparatus, with the surprise failure of the
“Hundred Flower Movement”, Mao concluded it was impossible to create a
socialist consciousness through a gradual improvement of material
living conditions; that consciousness and reality had to be changed
concurrently and in conjunction through gigantic new efforts at
mobilization. There was no real alternative open if new socialist China
was to survive.
This conclusion has been proven correct in the past 30 years. As living
standard of the people improved, inequality widened and corruption
became rampant, generating intense discontent among the masses. In the
nation, a blanket of spiritual decay and cynicism permeate all of
society with a visible loss of revolutionary and national pride. Such
loss of national spirit is harder to restore than environmental
corrosion.
All of Mao's strategies and programs were designed to ensure the
survival of the independence of the Chinese nation through confidence
building in the people's faith in socialism. They were necessary
decisions of accepting high degree of hardship and sacrifice to refuse
surrender to an extremely hostile geopolitical adversary. It was a test
of national will of a garrison state to survive, not an egotistic
ideological experiment.
Under different geopolitical conditions, Mao would have adopted very
different policies. The proof of this is the fact that it was Mao
who invited US President Nixon to China as soon as Nixon realized that
US national interest would be better served with an opening to China.
It was a view that Mao had repeatedly made to the US all through the
Cold War but were repeated rejected by the anti-communist fixation of
Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy. It was Mao who rehabilitated the purged
Deng Xiaoping to run the Chinese economy when China no longer needed to
behave like a garrison state with the end of US hostility.
The garrison state mentality (警备状态心态) led to the Anti-Rightist Campaign
of 1957-58, followed by "Three Red Banners" in the spring of 1958,
initiating simultaneous development of industry and agriculture through
the use of both modern and traditional methods of production under the
“General Line of Building Socialism” through Self Reliance (自力更生) which
had been the only option under US total embargo. The strategy was to be
implemented through a labor-intensive development policy by a “Great
Leap Forward” and by establishing a comprehensive collectivization with
the establishment of “People's Communes”. The real purpose of the Great
Leap Forward program was a defiant collective show of self confidence.
That implement errors were made does not detract from its spiritual
necessity.
While Mao headed the CPC, leadership was based on mass support; and it
is still, the chairmanship of the CPC is analogous to the position of
Pope in the Roman Catholic Church, powerful in moral authority but
highly circumscribed in operational power. The Great Leap Forward was
the product of mass movement, not of a single person. Mao’s leadership
extended to the organization of the party and its policy-formulation
procedures, not the dictation of particular programs.
Without Mao’s leadership, the Communist Party of China would not have
survived the extermination campaign by the well-equipped Nationalist
army under Jiang Jieshi. It was Mao who recognized the invincible
potential of the Chinese peasant masses as the fountainhead of
revolution. It is proper that the fourth-generation leaders of the PRC
are again focusing on priority promotion of the welfare of the rural
peasants farmers.
In Europe, the failure of the democratic revolutions of 1848 led
eventually to World War I, which destroyed all the competing monarchal
regimes that had collaborated to successfully suppress the democratic
revolutions six decades earlier. The full impact of Mao’s revolutionary
spirit is yet to be released on Chinese society. A century from now,
Mao’s high-minded principles of mass politics will outshine all his
anti-communist and neo-liberal critics.
The People’s Republic of China, established in 1949 under the
leadership of the Communist Party of China headed by Mao Zedong, is
today a rapidly developing nation of over 1.3 billion people with the
world’s highest growth rate. The Chinese economy is on track to be the
largest in the world. Yet until China moves expeditiously toward
policies that put equality and high wages as a national goal in an
independent economy, rather than one controlled by export sector
special interest groups who are at the mercy of foreign consumer
markets, China’s road toward achieving the highest per capita income
for its economy will be agonizingly long. Without a rapid increase in
Chinese wages, there will not be a vigorous domestic market to replace
China's excessive dependence on export. The Chinese exporting economy
will continue to be the kitchen serving the other economies as dining
rooms.
The dissolution of the USSR in 1991 led to a precipitous socio-economic
decline for Russia since 1990 as it went through shock treatment to
rush headlong into market capitalism as advised by US neo-liberal
economists. In contrast, China’s economic reform since 1978 has
produced spectacular growth, albeit along with a host of unsustainable
socio-economic penalties and problems. This is primarily because China
has not yet totally refuted Mao Zedong Thought as Khrushchev did with
de-Stalinization.
In comparison with the poor results in Russia, the question inevitably
arises on why reform towards a socialist market economy by world’s
largest remaining socialist state has produced comparatively positive
results. What are the “Chinese characteristics” that Deng Xiaoping had
identified that led to the impressive economic growth of the past three
decades since 1979?
The answer leads directly to the revolutionary policies launched by Mao
Zedong during the three decades between 1949 and 1979 acting as a
principle that had provided a potent spiritual platform, without which
Deng’s "reform and open" policy would not and could not have succeeded.
Still the attempt to deemphasize Mao Zedong Thought has weaken Deng's
"reform and open" policy to allow the nation to be infested with a
level of corruption and inequality that even the current and coming
leadership are forced to admit as dangerous for the survival of the
Party.
Without the strong and broad basis for China’s revolutionary
socio-economic development laid in the three decades before 1979, as
part of Mao’s strategy of building essential institutional
prerequisites based on a revolutionary collective awareness of the
power of an organized masses and carried out through mass movement
programs such as comprehensive land reforms followed by the formation
of agricultural co-operatives and later people's communes, the reform
policies after 1979 could not be implemented successfully.
Despite all the neo-liberal hyperboles about efficient resource
allocation through the market mechanism and all the capitalist
ideological anathema against egalitarianism, the solid and rational
contribution by “Mao Zedong Thought” on China’s national collective
consciousness of confidence in the people and self reliance remains the
light source in the dark and strenuous path of the historic revival of
the four-millennia-old Chinese civilization.
It was Mao who taught a thoroughly discouraged China, despite having
been reduced to abject poverty materially, hopeless bankruptcy
spiritually and total deprivation of confidence, to not be intimidated
by temporary foreign imperialist dominance and to struggle for national
revival through self-reliance by placing faith in the invincible power
of the Chinese masses.
Yet despite Mao’s indispensable contribution to the Chinese collective
consciousness of the dormant prowess of the masses and to the
methodology of achieving economic and social development through mass
movements that had enabled the economic miracle of new China, his
contributions continues to be insufficiently appreciated by many
Chinese revisionists and neoliberal social scientists, particularly
foreign trained and supported free-market economists, who once again
are falling into the heinous propaganda spell of Western cultural
imperialism in the name of neo-liberal market fundamentalism.
For example, an important element of innovation in Mao’s revolutionary
strategy is the capturing of the full economic advantages of abundant
labor in the Chinese economy for nation-wide socialist construction on
a scale never attempted in modern history in the context of hostile
foreign embargo. Mao aimed to make full use of surplus labor in the
Chinese socialist economy by banishing unemployment deemed necessary in
Western capitalist doctrine as a required evil for combating inflation.
Unfortunately, Mao's strategy of full employment has been distorted
since 1979 to turn into a policy of bringing into existence a new
laboring class of exploited, poorly paid migrant workers from rural
regions to overcrowded urban export sectors that depend on foreign
capital to finance overblown export enterprises whose task is to ship
real wealth created by low-wage Chinese labor to foreign countries in
exchange for paper money in the form of fiat US dollars, leaving rural
regions underdeveloped for lack of domestic capital despite, or because
of, a national trade surplus denominated in fiat dollars that cannot be
used domestically in China, a new imperialist monetary US strategy I
call dollar hegemony.
Inequality of income and wealth has deterred China from its effort to
increase the rate of domestic capital formation without undue
restriction on the rate of rise in mass consumption. China today is
faced with a serious unemployment and underemployment problem. This
most serious underemployment comes in the form of low wages on all
levels.
Many great advances, and in some sectors of the Chinese economy
continued to outperform the West. The foundation of this progress can
be traced to the platform built during the Cultural Revolution period.
During the Cultural Revolution, China successfully test-exploded its
fully functional, full-scale, three-stage hydrogen bomb (June 17,
1967), launched the Dong Fang Hong satellite (January 30, 1970) and 8
satellites more by 1978, commissioned its first nuclear submarines in
1967 which was completed in 1974, and made various other advances in
science and technology. There was also progress in lasers,
semiconductors, electronics, and computing technology. Even in
theoretical research there was the breakthrough of synthesizing the
world’s first biologically active protein, crystalline pig insulin,
using the method of X-ray diffraction. This development laid the
groundwork for Shanghai becoming the cradle for biotechnology in China.
Jon Sigurdson, cultural attaché in the Swedish Embassy in
Beijing (1964-67), expert on rural industrialization in China at Lund
University and Director of the East Asia Science & Technology and
Culture Programme, at the European Institute of Japanese Studies at the
Stockholm School of Economics, pointed out in 1980, this biotech work
had been initiated in the late 1950s, during the Great Leap Forward
(1958–61). The discovery represented “man’s great effort to unveil the
secrets of life and provides powerful new evidence for the
materialist-dialectical theory on the origin of life.” The report in
Beijing Review accurately described it as the “first crystalline
protein” and “the largest biologically active natural organic compound
ever to be synthesized” (Peking Review 1967a). In an article published
on December 25, 1970, the Peking Review reported another achievement:
the trial production of a Shanghai electron microscope capable of
400,000-times magnification. Although the Shanghai Electronics and
Optics Research Institute had been working on such microscopes since
1958, this latest, most advanced model was presented as a result of the
Cultural Revolution. The Peking Review adds that such a precision
instrument is a culmination of science and technology in “radio
electronics, electron optics, high electric voltage, high vacuum and
precision mechanical engineering” (1970)
The Post-Mao leadership typically tried to paint the Cultural
Revolution as an unmitigated catastrophe for China. Sigrid Schmalzer of
the University of Massachusetts at Amherst cautions that “there are
compelling reasons why we should not entirely abandon the earlier,
positive accounts and follow the post-Mao narrative too slavishly.”
The Peking Review reports reveal scientific innovation during the
Cultural Revolution as not fully interrupted. Universities shut down
and academic research came to a halt, but state-protected science
related to defense and national prestige continued. Innovation
continued, but it was primarily related to production in an Edison
manner of tinkering, rather than broad based theoretical exploration,
due to insufficient resources and substandard facilities.
Inquiry into the physics of relativity and the science of genetics took
major hits from interruption of funding and ignorant harassment, but
the mass line proved to have benefits in areas where millions of field
assistants could be mobilized, such as seismology and weather
monitoring.
Future decades would witness a gap between science and talent among
professionals, due to the “dead weight” of the poorly prepared Cultural
Revolution generation; however, the truly talented overcame the loss of
time to become productive after the years of turmoil.
On the positive side millions of rural peasants gained access to
science and technology for the first time. Despite the general disaster
of the Cultural Revolution, it may be argued that, in some ways,
Chairman Mao’s science policy did have benefits to scientific
innovation and that the mass line emerged better prepared to meet a
technological future in the final decades of the twentieth century.
Havard China scholar Roderick MacFarquhar opined: "What Mao
accomplished between 1949 and 1956 was in fact the fastest, most
extensive, and least damaging socialist revolution carried out in any
communist state."
Mao's writings on military strategy continue to commnd influence among
insurgency leaders and anti-insurgency experts, particularly on
guerrilla warfare, at which Mao is popularly regarded as a genius on
the level of Sunzi (孙子).
After 30 years of reform, the Chinese economy is visibly infested with
glaring inequality in income and wealth, and the means of production
have been increasingly privatized under the control of a minority
financial elite for its own benefit. The CPC now officially represents
all the peoples, including capitalists, rather than the dictatorship of
the proletariat. All this is officially accepted in the name of
modernization and following global neoliberal trends.
Yet in 1919, the anti-imperialist socialist revolutionary movement in
China had been launched to reverse global imperialist trends, not to
follow them. At any rate, these global trends of capitalist free market
fundamentalism had been halted abruptly since 2007 with the global
collapse of finance capitalism, the recovery of which is by no means
certain in the foreseeable future. The options available to the world
now are whether state capitalism or socialism will end up as the
legitimate replacement of finance capitalism.
The revolutionary momentum of the Communist Party of China (CPC) has
been put on hold since 1978 as socialist market economy was promoted by
the Party leadership as a deliberate policy of ideological compromise,
presumably to allow evolutionary dialectics towards socialism to work
itself out in due time.
There is a rising danger that even the normal pace of dialectic
evolution from capitalism toward socialism has been deliberately slowed
down by this compromised policy. Deng’s famous dictum of letting some
people get rich first along the path to national prosperity had
gradually been changed by quietly dropping the word “first”. China is
now a country in which some people can get super rich before others
permanently. Forbes Magazine annually publishes a list of China’s
richest.
Ironically, the socialist revolution that had been started by the 1911
May Fourth student movement had been torpedoed by a misguided
counterrevolutionary interpretation of the student demonstration of
1989, both having taken place at Tiananmen but 78 years apart. Since
1987, under intense international pressure in reaction to the Chinese
government's handling the of Tiananmen incidence, Deng’s "open and
reform" policy has been forced by geopolitics to take shift from a
NEP-type transitional economic strategy to kick-start modernization, to
a permanent policy contaminated with dubious neoliberal dimensions to
appease geopolitical pressure from the US whose markets were deemed
indispensable for an overgrown Chinese export sector financed mostly by
foreign capital and benefited mostly foreign investors, at the expense
of Chinese workers who will be condemned to low wages unnecessarily
longer.
Yet with the outbreak of the global financial crisis of 2007, ample
evidence now exists to show that the economic achievements in China
came not from unregulated markets opened to neo-imperialism, but from
the fact that Communist Party of China has wisely and fortunately
retained essential control of its socialist market economy by limiting
the actual opening up of the economy to foreign capital and by slowing
the privatization of state-owned enterprises, in contrast to what
Russia had done following US shock treatment advice. Most importantly,
China has managed to insulate its financial sector from the wild
turmoil of global markets since 2007 because it resisted both internal
and external pressure to fully open and deregulate its own financial
sector and to make its currency free floating and fully convertible.
In the final analysis, Chinese Communist Party leaders would do well if
they would follow the advice urged on their predecessors in 1944 by Mao
Zedong: Serve the People (为人民服务).
Written for The First Annual Conference on Mao Zedong - January 1, 2013.
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