The Political Impact of the Economic Crisis on China

Minxin Pei Article May 29, 2009
Summary
Fears that the global financial crisis will generate political turmoil or cause the CCP to lose its grip on power are overblown.
Related Media and Tools
 
  • Email

The decline in China’s economic growth since the onset of the global financial crisis has raised the question of whether the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), which depends on delivering satisfactory economic performance as a source of political legitimacy, can manage the rising social tensions caused by a significant increase in unemployment.  As of the end of 2008, more than 20 million migrant laborers had lost their jobs.  In addition, approximately 25 percent of China’s 6.1 million new college graduates in 2009 will be unable to find employment.

The economic crisis occurred at a time when several key indicators of social instability—riots, demonstrations, strikes, and labor disputes—were already rising.  In anticipation of greater unrest, the Chinese government has mobilized its local party organizations and law enforcement agencies.  On the order of the Politburo Standing Committee (PSC), the CCP’s top policy-making body, the party launched a short-term training program in November 2008 for more than 2,000 county party chiefs from the provinces, with a special focus on tactics for maintaining local stability and responding to emergencies.  In an unprecedented move in February 2009, the Ministry of Public Security started to rotate all the local police chiefs, 3,000 strong, through a ten-day course to prepare them for the expected increase in local disturbances.

Even so, fears that the crisis will generate political turmoil or cause the CCP to lose its grip on power are overblown, for two reasons.  First, the CCP, which controls the Chinese state, possesses a strong repressive capacity—comprising 1.9 million policemen and a 660,000-member specialized internal security force—that has proved capable of containing large-scale local disturbances in the past. Second, incidents of social protest, such as riots and demonstrations, are usually sparked by specific economic grievances and are far less troubling to the state than organized movements inspired by political or religious ideas. Protestors typically have no leaders or political objectives. The demonstrations they stage may be violent, but seldom sustainable beyond a few hours.  These disturbances are localized and their effects isolated.  Of the tens of thousands of violent protest incidents reported each year, none has spilled over into a neighboring jurisdiction.

The real test for the CCP is to maintain elite unity and manage a complex process of leadership succession in a period of economic adversity.

To be sure, China’s ruling elites are more unified, and their political succession is more peaceful and rule-based, than during the Mao years. Nevertheless, succession arrangements are far from ironclad, and their outcomes are often unpredictable. The pending departure of both President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao means that a succession process is effectively underway. On the surface, the Chinese leadership appears to have settled on two candidates, Messrs. Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang, who will succeed Hu and Wen respectively in 2012. However, the CCP’s succession process has many moving parts. Most important, the make-up of the next PSC will be a subject of intense bargaining and maneuvering among various factions and interests within the CCP.  Departing senior leaders ensure the protection of their legacy and continuation of their policies by appointing their loyalists or protégés to this committee. In 2012, as many as seven vacancies on the PSC will need to be filled. Accordingly, President Hu’s highest priority for the remainder of his term is to build up the political capital required to manage this intricate and uncertain process.

For those high-level officials aspiring to top leadership positions in the next administration, the economic crisis actually presents a rare opportunity to gain support, both by building coalitions within the party and burnishing their public image as capable and decisive leaders. Such ambitious individuals need to differentiate themselves from the rest of the pack. They may be tempted to make populist appeals to demonstrate that they empathize with ordinary people. They may even become bold enough to challenge some of the current leadership’s policies.  Powerful regional party chiefs may defy policies of the central government that threaten their regional interests (and hurt their performance record). 

Such power jockeying would complicate the succession process and, should the perception of elite disunity take hold, create a negative feedback loop, thereby fueling further instability. The CCP’s rule would not be in jeopardy, but intensified political maneuvering will likely make the current leadership even more insecure, risk-averse, and focused on the short term.

Thus, the international community should anticipate a high potential price of maintaining the current political order.  China’s human rights record is likely to deteriorate as local officials and security forces suppress protests and demonstrations by citizens with legitimate grievances. The interplay between economic difficulties, social tensions, and succession dynamics will make Chinese leaders more inward-looking and obsessively focused on their domestic political priorities.  Recent reports suggest that China is adopting many protectionist measures at home even as it decries protectionism abroad, so disputes with major trading partners could escalate.  Wariness about their political vulnerability will make Chinese leaders less receptive to calls from the international community to assume greater global responsibility—at a time when their country’s contribution is critical.  Securing concessions or cooperation from China on critical global challenges, from macroeconomic imbalances to climate change, is likely to prove particularly difficult.

Source: http://carnegieendowment.org/2009/05/29/political-impact-of-economic-crisis-on-china/yge

More from The Global Think Tank

In Fact

 

70%

of oil consumed in the United States

is for the transportation sector.

20%

of Chechnya’s pre-1994 population

has fled to different parts of the world.

58%

of oil consumed in China

was from foreign sources in 2012.

32

million cases pending

in India’s judicial system.

20

million people killed

in Cold War conflicts.

18%

of the U.S. economy

is consumed by healthcare.

$536

billion in goods and services

traded between the United States and China in 2012.

$100

billion in foreign investment and oil revenue

have been lost by Iran because of its nuclear program.

4700%

increase in China’s GDP per capita

between 1972 and today.

$11

billion have been spent

to complete the Bushehr nuclear reactor in Iran.

2%

of Iran’s electricity needs

is all the Bushehr nuclear reactor provides.

82

new airports

are set to be built in China by 2015.

78

journalists

were imprisoned in Turkey as of August 2012 according to the OSCE.

67%

of the world's population

will reside in cities by 2050.

16

million Russian citizens

are considered “ethnic Muslims.”

Stay in the Know

Enter your email address in the field below to receive the latest Carnegie analysis in your inbox!

Personal Information
 
 
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
 
1779 Massachusetts Avenue NW Washington, DC 20036-2103 Phone: 202 483 7600 Fax: 202 483 1840
Please note...

You are leaving the website for the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center for Global Policy and entering a website for another of Carnegie's global centers.

请注意...

你将离开清华—卡内基中心网站,进入卡内基其他全球中心的网站。