- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
A long article in "Asia Times" which lays out the dangers of Xi Jinping's personality cult unravelling if there is too much turbulence in the economic future. (This article could equally be in the political forum under trade). While the downside of unravelling the personality cult under a "one man" rule is pretty devastating, I suspect there will be enough resilience in the "Red Dynasty" (as Edward so eloquently described it) to maintain "The Mandate of Heaven" and quietly (or not so quietly) pushing Xi aside.
China's economic Archilles heel has been its export economy, and President Trump has certainly zeroed in open that with his tariffs, one can wonder how carefully the US team has calibrated their push, given the real uncertainty surrounding Chinese economic numbers.
http://www.atimes.com/chinas-new-woes-unravel-xis-personality-cult/
Read the full article at the link
China's economic Archilles heel has been its export economy, and President Trump has certainly zeroed in open that with his tariffs, one can wonder how carefully the US team has calibrated their push, given the real uncertainty surrounding Chinese economic numbers.
http://www.atimes.com/chinas-new-woes-unravel-xis-personality-cult/
China’s new woes unravel Xi’s personality cult
Xuan Loc DoanBy XUAN LOC DOAN AUGUST 5, 2018 12:02 PM (UTC+8)
249 10
China’s – or, perhaps, more correctly, Xi Jinping’s – propagandists hail him as an exceptional leader. Yet with the country faced with several serious and rising problems, notably a deepening and damaging trade war with the United States, people may now realize that the Chinese ruler isn’t as great as they trumpet.
-snip-
After a meeting on July 31, the Politburo, a top decision-making body comprising China’s 25 most senior leaders, issued a statement saying China’s economy maintained steady growth with good momentum in the first half of 2018. However, it now “faces some new problems and challenges,” the body acknowledged.
More precisely, according to Xinhua, which carried the statement, the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth stayed within the range of 6.7 to 6.9% for 12 straight quarters. “But a slight weakening was spotted in June in industrial output and investment, and worries have been on the rise that escalating trade tensions could bite into the economy in the future.”
While the state news agency didn’t specify, it was America’s rising tariffs against the Asian giant that caused the “escalating trade tensions” and led to China’s “new problems and challenges.”
In a piece on July 29, Li Hong, an editor with the Global Times, a party-backed nationalistic paper, said: “Under constant pressure from the Trump administration’s escalating tariffs and coercion, Chinese stocks have tumbled, shedding some 20 percent from their highs last year” and “partially affected by the trade tension, business activity in China has eased since April.”
Li also observed that “the world’s second-largest economy is due for a bumpy ride in the second half, as the [Trump] administration has increased the pressure by threatening to impose 10 percent tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports at the end of August.”
-snip-
But, with America’s economy doing well, its stock market faring better than China’s since the trade dispute began and with Trump making peace with the European Union, the US’s biggest trading partner and one of Washington’s closest and strongest allies, America is gaining the upper hand over China and thus is likely to ratchet up its trade war on China.
Beijing is thus faced with a big dilemma. If the trade war escalates, then it will certainly greatly damage China’s economy and Xi’s ambition. The fundamental factor behind the country’s emergence as a major power is its impressive economic growth over the past four decades.
Such an economic performance is also the ultimate reason behind Xi’s overt ambition of transforming it into a global power and leader. His failure to maintain high economic growth and to achieve the “Chinese dream” that he has ardently championed will make many within the Party and wider society question his unalloyed power and indefinite rule.
Read the full article at the link