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“No one can stop the wheel of history,” China’s president, Xi Jinping, said on the 75th anniversary of the day when the Chinese Communist Party proclaimed the creation of the People’s Republic of China. And the wheel is indeed still turning, but that may not be good news for the fourth-generation heirs of that revolution.
The 1950s was the time of peak communism, when people still feared or hoped that it would spread across the whole world. That was never likely, however, and apart from Cuba and Vietnam it never spread any farther. The Soviet Union itself finally evaporated peacefully in 1991 at the age of 74, taking the rest of the European Communist regimes down with it.
At that point China suddenly became the world’s oldest surviving communist state, which essentially had the same psychological impact on the Chinese Communist Party as losing one’s own parents does to those in the middle generation. Suddenly your own generation is on the frontline, with personal extinction waiting for you down the road.
The Chinese communist revolution was still only 42 years old in 1991, of course, but a chill wind began to blow as party members realized that Communist regimes can be mortal too. From that time on, avoiding the fate of the Soviet Union has become the unwritten subtext of almost every major policy decision the Chinese Communist Party regime has made.
Inevitably, there were competing prescriptions for the best way to avoid that fate. By the mid-1990s, two dominant strategies had emerged, espoused by two rival factions: the “princelings,” who were the children and grandchildren of the founding revolutionary heroes, and the “populists,” who had risen by merit.
Most populists had grown up poor somewhere in the country’s vast interior and were aware of the needs of vulnerable social groups like farmers, migrant workers and the urban poor. Their formula for outlasting the Soviet Union was a more generous welfare state, more open media and more democracy within the party.
The princelings, by contrast, were born to privilege and rose easily through the ranks of the ruling party as they matured. They generally took a more authoritarian and centralizing approach to politics, and they regularly pointed out that it was Mikhail Gorbachev’s attempt to “reform” the Soviet Communist Party that precipitated its downfall.
However, in the ‘90s and the 2000s the Chinese economy was still growing very fast, and a choice between the rival strategies could easily be postponed. For almost three decades, the two factions carefully shared power and never attacked each other in public. But then the economic miracle ran out of steam.
There was really nothing miraculous about China’s 30 years of high-speed growth (10 percent a year). Most industrializing economies get that one-time bonus growth while the rural population migrates to the cities and provides emerging industries with almost limitless cheap labor.
Britain had that in 1850-1880, the United States in 1870-1900, Russia in 1920-1940 (cut short by World War II) and Japan in 1950-1980. It never lasts, and China’s time was up by 2015.
Since then Beijing has been cooking the books to maintain the pretense of at least a 5 percent growth rate, but the real growth rate is 2-3 percent at best — and probably negative growth during the lockdown years. The glory days are past, and the question of how to avoid the Soviet Union’s fate must be faced squarely.
That’s why the truce between the princelings and the populists was broken in 2012-2015, as Xi, the ultimate princeling, took over all the major offices of state: president of the Chinese People’s Republic, general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and chair of the Central Military Commission. It is decided: the future is authoritarian.
We can’t really estimate the likely longevity of the kind of high-tech total surveillance state that Xi is building in China now, because it’s a new thing in history. It’s more ambitious than any previous experiment in controlling human behavior, and if it works then the regime could turn out to be immortal.
On the other hand, you just have to write that sentence down to realize how implausible it is. The Old Hundred Names have seen off a dozen other dynasties and countless invaders; they’re probably not finished yet.