Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama |
Food
Sovereignty Ghana calls on the Mahama Administration to reject the EPA as it
stands. We add our voices to the calls by civil society on the Mahama
Administration to reject the EPA. Strenuous negotiations by African nations at
the WTO gave African governments some minimum space, under the WTO Agreement,
to preserve our ability develop our domestic policies to suit our developmental
needs. The EPA is aimed at hijacking our sovereign rights to self-determination
well beyond what is allowed under the WTO Agreement. This places Ghana at a
permanent economic disadvantage. The EPA is being done at Ghana’s expense, and
to advantage our EU self proclaimed development partners, formerly known as
colonial masters. Their economic boat is sinking and they are desperate to lock
in Ghana and other African countries as a permanent source of raw materials to
continue to drive their economic engine. They also wish to preserve Ghana and
African countries as a place for below cost dumping of their excess.
The
message must be clear. If they forgot to steal enough resources during the
colonial period, they need to be told in no uncertain terms that it is too
late! The EU must leave us in peace. We have our own destinies to follow.
Signing onto the EPAs will trigger severe loss of jobs, and threaten the peace
of the continent. It will cause economic and political unrest. It will strangle
Africa’s freedom to evolve and pursue its own development agenda. And it will
facilitate current attempts to recolonize Africa.
We
acknowledge that the existing framework of the Cotonou Agreement is not
compatible with section 24 of the WTO Agreement, so it must be replaced. It is
not for nothing that the WTO Agreement calls for a regional trade agreement of
this nature, to have elements of liberalizing trade between the two parties.
The agreement is a one-way preferential arrangement. It has very little to do
with free trade and much to do with coercive economics.
The
only agreement you need for WTO compatibility is an agreement which covers
trade in goods. Far beyond trade in goods, the EPA that is on the table
contains a commitment to negotiate the liberalization of services, investment,
capital accounts. public procurement, removal of export taxes, and also,
intellectual property protections. Those are not required for WTO
compatibility. so if those things are taken out, we can still have an EPA or
trade agreement with the European Union that is compatible with the WTO. Those
things must be taken out. We do not need them. As it stands, like many trade
agreements these days, it is really about putting multinational corporations
above the laws of nations.
We
must protect our domestic policy space, by excluding trade, issues that are not
required under the WTO. It is instructive to note that in Cancún. in 2003
African countries blocked those same issues being proposed once again. It would
be foolish to give them away to the EU on a silver platter. Developing
countries have all along been trying to retain some policy space for themselves,
so that they can liberalize or close as they choose. This agreement drastically
undermines such efforts.
FSG
is in full agreement with Dr. Yao Graham, Executive Director of the Third World
Network that the control of these instruments are crucial to our sovereignty as
a people. “The more of the areas you put in an agreement, the more you lose
your control over your domestic policy space.” That is why we ask that those
sections incompatible with the WTO agreement be taken out. We must protect our
ability to pick and choose the terms we offer. We need to retain some control
of policy instruments.
On
the goods agreement, we highlight the scope of liberalization which has been a
subject of an earlier CSO petition to the President to which FSG is a signatory:
“In addition to all the negative provisions of Ghana’s IEPA with their
implications such as revenue loss, attack on domestic industry and domestic
value-addition, loss of policy space, constraints on South-South co-operation,
the new ECOWAS-EPA contains two fundamentally egregious threats to the
economies of Ghana and the region.
“Not
only does it explicitly target the essence of the light manufacturing sector,
the acknowledged catalyst for any transition of Ghana’s economy from a
small-holder agrarian economy to an industrialised economy; it also commits the
country to start, within six (6) months of the agreement being adopted,
negotiations for an extensive agenda of deregulation of a whole range of
areas–such as Services, Investment, Government Procurement, Intellectual
Property and including even areas that have never been part of the EPA
negotiating agenda, such as Capital Accounts, none of which are required by any
international rule or obligation undertaken by the government”.
It
has to be noted that the global economy is changing. Power is shifting to Asia
and Latin America. What are the opportunities there? How do we diversify our
trade? As Europe loses its competitive advantage, we are proposing to lock
ourselves in with Europe. We are limiting our own ability to take advantage of
the opportunities opening in the world. This must stop. The Mahama
Administration needs to know that it has a duty of care to Ghanaians, not to
the EU.
We
are completely at a loss as to the import of this announcement at a meeting
organized to provide avenue for stakeholders including religious leaders, civil
society organisations, non-governmental organisations as well as those in
academia to share their views and opinion which would inform governments
position moving forward: “Accra, April 17 GNA – Mr Haruna Iddrisu, Minister of
Trade and Industry, on Thursday said Ghana would be guided by the collective
position of the Economic Community of West African States on the Economic
Partnership Agreement (EPA).”
This
Minister is clearly confused and probably incompetent. The best way to advance
the “Better Ghana” agenda is to listen to Ghanaians, and to defend their
interests. The first duty of the Mahama Administration is to listen to
Ghanaians who put them there in the first place, and who are going to bear the
full brunt of their policies, rather than the ECOWAS colleagues of the
President. We expect the President to defend our interests at ECOWAS meetings
rather than seeking guidance from them. We add our voices to the call on the
Minister of Trade and Industries, Hon. Haruna Iddrisu, to be forthcoming with
his much-promised cost benefit analysis of the EPA and make them available for
discussion.
We
wish to remind the President of his Oath of Office, as we re-iterate the following
paragraph of an earlier petition:
“Your
Excellency, on the implications of other ECOWAS-EPA provisions not related to
goods, we take the example of government procurement. As you have explained on
a number of occasions, government procurement serves as a tool by which
government can create a stable market for local producers of most of the things
that government – from central to local level – purchases; including food
supplies for Korle Bu Hospital, pens and pencils for public schools, furniture
for government offices, taxi and transport services for government conferences.
Governments everywhere, and especially in the developing world, from South
Africa, Malaysia, Singapore, Korea, to Brazil, have used this to encourage
domestic businesses. In Ghana, this is crucial for fulfilling our local content
policy whether in the oil and gas, mining, timber or any other sectors. …”
Finally,
on the issue of alternatives, we insist firmly that civil society
organisations, the private sector, and many respectable bodies including the
United Nations have demonstrated conclusively that there are credible
alternatives to signing the EPAs, including Ghana’s own Interim EPA. If we do
not sign the EPA, Ghana will revert automatically to the standard Generalised
System (GSP) of trade preferences which will afford the country duty free and
quota free for about 72% of Ghanaian exports to the EU. The 28% of exports
which will be affected, mainly exporters of tuna, vegetables, fruits and cocoa
paste will have to pay extra duties of 52 million dollars in order to access
the EU market. However, Ghana will save revenue on import duties to the tune of
378 million dollars annually in case of no EPA. Therefore the savings from
revenue could be used to absorb the extra duties of the exporters in the mean
time whilst steps are taken to diversify their exports markets. This way, all
others jobs and exporters that depend on the domestic and regional markets will
be saved and the nation as a whole avoid the disastrous clauses that forfeit Ghanaian
sovereignty and threaten Ghanaian business and agriculture.
We
call on the good people of Ghana to stand up for Ghana, for Ghanaian business,
for Ghanaian agriculture, and for Ghanaian sovereignty. Reject the EPA!
For
Life, The Environment, and Social Justice!
Duke
Tagoe
Deputy Chairperson, FSG
Deputy Chairperson, FSG
China: Rise, Fall and Re-Emergence as a Global Power
Chinese President Xi Jinping |
The study of world power has been
blighted by Eurocentric historians who have distorted and ignored the dominant
role China played in the world economy between 1100 and 1800. John
Hobson’s[1] brilliant historical survey of the world economy during this period
provides an abundance of empirical data making the case for China ’s economic
and technological superiority over Western civilization for the better part of
a millennium prior to its conquest and decline in the 19th century.
China
’s re-emergence as a world economic power raises important questions about what
we can learn from its previous rise and fall and about the external and
internal threats confronting this emerging economic superpower for the
immediate future.
First
we will outline the main contours of historical China ’s rise to global
economic superiority over West before the 19th century, following closely John
Hobson’s account in The Eastern Origins of Western Civilization. Since
the majority of western economic historians (liberal, conservative and Marxist)
have presented historical China as a stagnant, backward, parochial society, an
“oriental despotism”, some detailed correctives will be necessary. It is
especially important to emphasize how China , the world technological power
between 1100 and 1800, made the West’s emergence possible. It was only by
borrowing and assimilating Chinese innovations that the West was able to make
the transition to modern capitalist and imperialist economies.
In
part two we will analyze and discuss the factors and circumstances which led to
China ’s decline in the 19th century and its subsequent domination,
exploitation and pillage by Western imperial countries, first England and then
the rest of Europe, Japan and the United States .
In
part three, we will briefly outline the factors leading to China’s emancipation
from colonial and neo-colonial rule and analyze its recent rise to becoming the
second largest global economic power.
Finally
we will look at the past and present threats to China ’s rise to global
economic power, highlighting the similarities between British colonialism of
the 18 and 19th centuries and the current US imperial strategies and focusing
on the weaknesses and strengths of past and present Chinese responses.
China:
The Rise and Consolidation of Global Power 1100 – 1800
In
a systematic comparative format, John Hobson provides a wealth of empirical
indicators demonstrating China ’s global economic superiority over the West and
in particular England . These are some striking facts:
As
early as 1078, China was the world’s major producer of steel (125,000 tons);
whereas Britain in 1788 produced 76,000 tons.
China
was the world’s leader in technical innovations in textile manufacturing, seven
centuries before Britain ’s 18th century “textile revolution”.
China
was the leading trading nation, with long distance trade reaching most of
Southern Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Europe . China’s ‘agricultural
revolution’ and productivity surpassed the West down to the 18th century.
Its
innovations in the production of paper, book printing, firearms and tools led
to a manufacturing superpower whose goods were transported throughout the world
by the most advanced navigational system.
China
possessed the world’s largest commercial ships. In 1588 the largest
English ships displaced 400 tons, China ’s 3,000 tons. Even as late as
the end of the 18th century China ’s merchants employed 130,000 private
transport ships, several times that of Britain . China retained this
pre-eminent position in the world economy up until the early 19th century.
British
and Europeans manufacturers followed China ’s lead, assimilating and borrowing
its more advanced technology and were eager to penetrate China ’s advanced and
lucrative market.
Banking,
a stable paper money economy, manufacturing and high yields in agriculture
resulted in China ’s per capita income matching that of Great Britain as late
as 1750.
China
’s dominant global position was challenged by the rise of British imperialism,
which had adopted the advanced technological, navigational and market
innovations of China and other Asian countries in order to bypass earlier stages
in becoming a world power.
Western
Imperialism and the Decline of China
The British and Western imperial conquest of the East, was based on the militaristic nature of the imperial state, its non-reciprocal economic relations with overseas trading countries and the Western imperial ideology which motivated and justified overseas conquest.
The British and Western imperial conquest of the East, was based on the militaristic nature of the imperial state, its non-reciprocal economic relations with overseas trading countries and the Western imperial ideology which motivated and justified overseas conquest.
Unlike
China , Britain ’s industrial revolution and overseas expansion was driven by a
military policy. According to Hobson, during the period from 1688-1815
Great Britain was engaged in wars 52% of the time[3]. Whereas the Chinese
relied on their open markets and their superior production and sophisticated
commercial and banking skills, the British relied on tariff protection,
military conquest, the systematic destruction of competitive overseas
enterprises as well as the appropriation and plunder of local resources.
China ’s global predominance was based on ‘reciprocal benefits’ with its
trading partners, while Britain relied on mercenary armies of occupation, savage
repression and a ‘divide and conquer’ policy to foment local rivalries.
In the face of native resistance, the British (as well as other Western
imperial powers) did not hesitate to exterminate entire communities.
Unable
to take over the Chinese market through greater economic competitiveness,
Britain relied on brute military power. It mobilized, armed and led
mercenaries, drawn from its colonies in India and elsewhere to force its
exports on China and impose unequal treaties to lower tariffs. As a
result China was flooded with British opium produced on its plantations in
India – despite Chinese laws forbidding or regulating the importation and sale
of the narcotic. China ’s rulers, long accustomed to its trade and
manufacturing superiority, were unprepared for the ‘new imperial rules’ for
global power. The West’s willingness to use military power to win
colonies, pillage resources and recruit huge mercenary armies commanded by
European officers spelt the end for China as a world power.
China
had based its economic predominance on ‘non-interference in the internal
affairs of its trading partners’. In contrast, British imperialists
intervened violently in Asia , reorganizing local economies to suit the needs
of the empire (eliminating economic competitors including more efficient Indian
cotton manufacturers) and seized control of local political, economic and
administrative apparatus to establish the colonial state.
Britain
’s empire was built with resources seized from the colonies and through the
massive militarization of its economy[5]. It was thus able to secure
military supremacy over China . China ’s foreign policy was hampered by
its ruling elite’s excessive reliance on trade relations. Chinese
officials and merchant elites sought to appease the British and convinced the
emperor to grant devastating extra-territorial concessions opening markets to
the detriment of Chinese manufacturers while surrendering local
sovereignty. As always, the British precipitated internal rivalries and
revolts further destabilizing the country.
Western
and British penetration and colonization of China ’s market created an entire
new class: The wealthy Chinese ‘compradores’ imported British goods and
facilitated the takeover of local markets and resources. Imperialist pillage
forced greater exploitation and taxation of the great mass of Chinese peasants
and workers. China ’s rulers were obliged to pay the war debts and
finance trade deficits imposed by the Western imperial powers by squeezing its
peasantry. This drove the peasants to starvation and revolt.
By
the early 20th century (less than a century after the Opium Wars), China had
descended from world economic power to a broken semi-colonial country with a
huge destitute population. The principle ports were controlled by Western
imperial officials and the countryside was subject to the rule by corrupt and
brutal warlords. British opium enslaved millions.
British
Academics: Eloquent Apologists for Imperial Conquest
The
entire Western academic profession – first and foremost British imperial
historians – attributed British imperial dominance of Asia to English
‘technological superiority’ and China’s misery and colonial status to ‘oriental
backwardness’, omitting any mention of the millennium of Chinese commercial and
technical progress and superiority up to the dawn of the 19th century. By
the end of the 1920’s, with the Japanese imperial invasion, China ceased to
exist as a unified country. Under the aegis of imperial rule, hundreds of
millions of Chinese had starved or were dispossessed or slaughtered, as the
Western powers and Japan plundered its economy. The entire Chinese
‘collaborator’ comprador elite were discredited before the Chinese people.
What
did remain in the collective memory of the great mass of the Chinese people –
and what was totally absent in the accounts of prestigious US and British
academics – was the sense of China once having been a prosperous, dynamic and
leading world power. Western commentators dismissed this collective
memory of China ’s ascendancy as the foolish pretensions of nostalgic lords and
royalty – empty Han arrogance.
China
Rises from the Ashes of Imperial Plunder and Humiliation: The Chinese
Communist Revolution
The rise of modern China to become the second largest economy in the world was made possible only through the success of the Chinese communist revolution in the mid-20th century. The People’s Liberation ‘Red’ Army defeated first the invading Japanese imperial army and later the US imperialist-backed comprador led Kuomintang “Nationalist” army. This allowed the reunification of China as an independent sovereign state. The Communist government abolished the extra-territorial privileges of the Western imperialists, ended the territorial fiefdoms of the regional warlords and gangsters and drove out the millionaire owners of brothels, the traffickers of women and drugs as well as the other “service providers” to the Euro-American Empire.
The rise of modern China to become the second largest economy in the world was made possible only through the success of the Chinese communist revolution in the mid-20th century. The People’s Liberation ‘Red’ Army defeated first the invading Japanese imperial army and later the US imperialist-backed comprador led Kuomintang “Nationalist” army. This allowed the reunification of China as an independent sovereign state. The Communist government abolished the extra-territorial privileges of the Western imperialists, ended the territorial fiefdoms of the regional warlords and gangsters and drove out the millionaire owners of brothels, the traffickers of women and drugs as well as the other “service providers” to the Euro-American Empire.
In
every sense of the word, the Communist revolution forged the modern
Chinese state. The new leaders then proceeded to reconstruct an economy
ravaged by imperial wars and pillaged by Western and Japanese
capitalists. After over 150 years of infamy and humiliation the Chinese
people recovered their pride and national dignity. These socio-psychological
elements were essential in motivating the Chinese to defend their country from
the US attacks, sabotage, boycotts, and blockades mounted immediately after
liberation.
Contrary
to Western and neoliberal Chinese economists, China ’s dynamic growth did not
start in 1980. It began in 1950, when the agrarian reform provided land,
infrastructure, credits and technical assistance to hundreds of millions of
landless and destitute peasants and landless rural workers. Through what is now
called “human capital” and gigantic social mobilization, the Communists built
roads, airfields, bridges, canals and railroads as well as the basic
industries, like coal, iron and steel, to form the backbone of the modern
Chinese economy. Communist China’s vast free educational and health
systems created a healthy, literate and motivated work force. Its highly
professional military prevented the US from extending its military empire
throughout the Korean peninsula up to China ’s territorial frontiers. Just
as past Western scholars and propagandists fabricated a history of a “stagnant
and decadent” empire to justify their destructive conquest, so too their modern
counterparts have rewritten the first thirty years of Chinese Communist
history, denying the role of the revolution in developing all the essential
elements for a modern economy, state and society. It is clear that China
’s rapid economic growth was based on the development of its internal market,
its rapidly growing cadre of scientists, skilled technicians and workers and
the social safety net which protected and promoted working class and peasant
mobility were products of Communist planning and investments.
China
’s rise to global power began in 1949 with the removal of the entire parasitic
financial, compradore and speculative classes who had served as the
intermediaries for European, Japanese and US imperialists draining China of its
great wealth.
China’s Transition to Capitalism
Beginning
in 1980 the Chinese government initiated a dramatic shift in its economic
strategy: Over the next three decades, it opened the country to
large-scale foreign investment; it privatized thousands of industries and it
set in motion a process of income concentration based on a deliberate strategy
of re-creating a dominant economic class of billionaires linked to overseas
capitalists. China ’s ruling political class embraced the idea of
“borrowing” technical know-how and accessing overseas markets from foreign
firms in exchange for providing cheap, plentiful labor at the lowest cost.
The
Chinese state re-directed massive public subsidies to promote high capitalist
growth by dismantling its national system of free public education and health
care. They ended subsidized public housing for hundreds of millions of
peasants and urban factory workers and provided funds to real estate
speculators for the construction of private luxury apartments and office
skyscrapers. China ’s new capitalist strategy as well as its double digit
growth was based on the profound structural changes and massive public
investments made possible by the previous communist government. China ’s
private sector “take off” was based on the huge public outlays made since 1949.
The
triumphant new capitalist class and its Western collaborators claimed all the
credit for this “economic miracle” as China rose to become the world’s second
largest economy. This new Chinese elite have been less eager to announce
China ’s world-class status in terms of brutal class inequalities, rivaling
only the US .
China:
From Imperial Dependency to World Class Competitor
China ’s sustained growth in its manufacturing sector was a result of highly concentrated public investments, high profits, technological innovations and a protected domestic market. While foreign capital profited, it was always within the framework of the Chinese state’s priorities and regulations. The regime’s dynamic ‘export strategy’ led to huge trade surpluses, which eventually made China one of the world’s largest creditors especially for US debt. In order to maintain its dynamic industries, China has required huge influxes of raw materials, resulting in large-scale overseas investments and trade agreements with agro-mineral export countries in Africa and Latin America . By 2010 China displaced the US and Europe as the main trading partner in many countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America .
China ’s sustained growth in its manufacturing sector was a result of highly concentrated public investments, high profits, technological innovations and a protected domestic market. While foreign capital profited, it was always within the framework of the Chinese state’s priorities and regulations. The regime’s dynamic ‘export strategy’ led to huge trade surpluses, which eventually made China one of the world’s largest creditors especially for US debt. In order to maintain its dynamic industries, China has required huge influxes of raw materials, resulting in large-scale overseas investments and trade agreements with agro-mineral export countries in Africa and Latin America . By 2010 China displaced the US and Europe as the main trading partner in many countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America .
Modern
China ’s rise to world economic power, like its predecessor between 1100-1800,
is based on its gigantic productive capacity: Trade and investment was
governed by a policy of strict non-interference in the internal relations of
its trading partners. Unlike the US , China did initiate brutal wars for
oil; instead it signed lucrative contracts. And China does not fight wars
in the interest of overseas Chinese, as the US has done in the Middle East for
Israel .
The
seeming imbalance between Chinese economic and military power is in stark
contrast to the US where a bloated, parasitic military empire continues to
erode its own global economic presence.
US
military spending is twelve times that of China . Increasingly the US
military plays the key role shaping policy in Washington as it seeks to
undercut China ’s rise to global power.
China’s
Rise to World Power: Will History Repeat Itself?
China has been growing at about 9% per annum and its goods and services are rapidly rising in quality and value. In contrast, the US and Europe have wallowed around 0% growth from 2007-2012. China ’s innovative techno-scientific establishment routinely assimilates the latest inventions from the West (and Japan ) and improves them, thereby decreasing the cost of production. China has replaced the US and European controlled “international financial institutions” (the IMF, World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank) as the principle lender in Latin America . China continues to lead as the prime investor in African energy and mineral resources. China has replaced the US as the principle market for Saudi Arabian, Sudanese and Iranian petroleum and it will soon replace the US as the principle market for Venezuela petroleum products. Today China is the world’s biggest manufacturer and exporter, dominating even the US market, while playing the role of financial life line as it holds over $1.3 trillion in US Treasury notes.
China has been growing at about 9% per annum and its goods and services are rapidly rising in quality and value. In contrast, the US and Europe have wallowed around 0% growth from 2007-2012. China ’s innovative techno-scientific establishment routinely assimilates the latest inventions from the West (and Japan ) and improves them, thereby decreasing the cost of production. China has replaced the US and European controlled “international financial institutions” (the IMF, World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank) as the principle lender in Latin America . China continues to lead as the prime investor in African energy and mineral resources. China has replaced the US as the principle market for Saudi Arabian, Sudanese and Iranian petroleum and it will soon replace the US as the principle market for Venezuela petroleum products. Today China is the world’s biggest manufacturer and exporter, dominating even the US market, while playing the role of financial life line as it holds over $1.3 trillion in US Treasury notes.
Under
growing pressure from its workers, farmers and peasants, China ’s rulers have
been developing the domestic market by increasing wages and social spending to
rebalance the economy and avoid the specter of social instability. In
contrast, US wages, salaries and vital public services have sharply declined in
absolute and relative terms.
Given
the current historical trends it is clear that China will replace the US as the
leading world economic power, over the next decade, if the US empire does
not strike back and if China ’s profound class inequalities do not lead to a
major social upheaval.
Modern
China ’s rise to global power faces serious challenges. In contrast to
China ’s historical ascent on the world stage, modern Chinese global economic
power is not accompanied by any imperialist undertakings. China has
seriously lagged behind the US and Europe in aggressive war-making
capacity. This may have allowed China to direct public resources to
maximize economic growth, but it has left China vulnerable to US military
superiority in terms of its massive arsenal, its string of forward bases and
strategic geo-military positions right off the Chinese coast and in adjoining
territories.
In
the nineteenth century British imperialism demolished China ’s global position
with its military superiority, seizing China ’s ports – because of China ’s
reliance on ‘mercantile superiority’.
The
conquest of India , Burma and most of Asia allowed Britain to establish
colonial bases and recruit local mercenary armies. The British and its
mercenary allies encircled and isolated China , setting the stage for the
disruption of China ’s markets and the imposition of the brutal terms of
trade. The British Empire’s armed presence dictated what China imported
(with opium accounting for over 50% of British exports in the 1850s) while
undermining China ’s competitive advantages via tariff policies.
Today
the US is pursuing similar policies: US naval fleet patrols and
controls China ’s commercial shipping lanes and off-shore oil resources via its
overseas bases. The Obama-Clinton White House is in the process of
developing a rapid military response involving bases in Australia , Philippines
and elsewhere in Asia . The US is intensifying its efforts to
undermine Chinese overseas access to strategic resources while backing ‘grass
roots’ separatists and ‘insurgents’ in West China, Tibet, Sudan, Burma, Iran,
Libya, Syria and elsewhere. The US military agreements with India and
the installation of a pliable puppet regime in Pakistan have advanced its
strategy of isolating China . While China upholds its policy of
“harmonious development” and “non-interference in the internal affairs of other
countries”, it has stepped aside as US and European military imperialism have
attacked a host of China’s trading partners to essentially reverse
China’s peaceful commercial expansion.
China’s
lack of a political and ideological strategy capable of protecting its overseas
economic interests has been an invitation for the US and NATO to set-up regimes
hostile to China . The most striking example is Libya where US and NATO
intervened to overthrow an independent government led by President Gadhafi,
with whom China had signed multi-billion dollar trade and investments
agreements. The NATO bombardment of Libyan cities, ports and oil installation
forced the Chinese to withdraw 35,000 Chinese oil engineers and construction
workers in a matter of days. The same thing happened in Sudan where China
had invested billions to develop its oil industry. The US, Israel and
Europe armed the South Sudanese rebels to disrupt the flow of oil and attack
Chinese oil workers[6]. In both cases China passively allowed the US and
European military imperialists to attack its trade partners and undermine its
investments.
Under
Mao Tse Tung, China had an active policy countering imperial aggression:
It supported revolutionary movements and independent Third World
governments. Today’s capitalist China does not have an active policy of
supporting governments or movements capable of protecting China ’s bilateral
trade and investment agreements. China ’s inability to confront the
rising tide of US military aggression against its economic
interests, is due to deep structural problems. China’s foreign policy is
shaped by big commercial, financial and manufacturing interests who rely on
their ‘economic competitive edge’ to gain market shares and have no
understanding of the military and security underpinnings of global economic
power. China ’s political class is deeply influenced by a new class of
billionaires with strong ties to Western equity funds and who have uncritically
absorbed Western cultural values. This is illustrated by their preference for
sending their own children to elite universities in the US and Europe .
They seek “accommodation with the West” at any price.
This
lack of any strategic understanding of military empire-building has led them to
respond ineffectively and ad hoc to each imperialist action undermining their
access to resources and markets. While China ’s “business first” outlook
may have worked when it was a minor player in the world economy and US empire
builders saw the “capitalist opening” as a chance to easily takeover
China ’s public enterprises and pillage the economy. However, when China
(in contrast to the former USSR) decided to retain capital controls and develop
a carefully calibrated, state directed “industrial policy” directing
western capital and the transfer of technology to state enterprises, which
effectively penetrated the US domestic and overseas markets, Washington began
to complain and talked of retaliation.
China
’s huge trade surpluses with the US provoked a dual response in Washington
: It sold massive quantities of US Treasury bonds to the Chinese and
began to develop a global strategy to block China ’s advance. Since the US
lacked economic leverage to reverse its decline, it relied on its only
“comparative advantage” – its military superiority based on a world wide
system of attack bases, a network of overseas client regimes, military
proxies, NGO’ers, intellectuals and armed mercenaries. Washington turned
to its vast overt and clandestine security apparatus to undermine China ’s
trading partners. Washington depends on its long-standing ties with
corrupt rulers, dissidents, journalists and media moguls to provide the
powerful propaganda cover while advancing its military offensive against China
’s overseas interests.
China
has nothing to compare with the US overseas ‘security apparatus’ because it
practices a policy of “non-interference”. Given the advanced state of the
Western imperial offensive, China has taken only a few diplomatic initiatives,
such as financing English language media outlets to present its perspective,
using its veto power on the UN Security Council to oppose US efforts to
overthrow the independent Assad regime in Syria and opposing the imposition of
drastic sanctions against Iran . It sternly repudiated US Secretary of
State Hilary Clinton’s vitriolic questioning of the ‘legitimacy’ of the Chinese
state when it voted against the US-UN resolution preparing an
attack on Syria.
Chinese
military strategists are more aware and alarmed at the growing military threat
to China . They have successfully demanded a 19% annual increase in
military spending over the next five years (2011-2015)[8]. Even with this
increase, China’s military expenditures will still be less than one-fifth of
the US military budget and China has not one overseas military base in stark
contrast to the over 750 US installations abroad. Overseas Chinese
intelligence operations are minimal and ineffective. Its embassies are
run by and for narrow commercial interests who utterly failed to understand
NATO’s brutal policy of regime change in Libya and inform Beijing of its
significance to the Chinese state.
There
are two other structural weaknesses undermining China ’s rise as a world power.
This includes the highly ‘Westernized’ intelligentsia which has uncritically
swallowed US economic doctrine about free markets while ignoring its
militarized economy. These Chinese intellectuals parrot the US propaganda
about the ‘democratic virtues’ of billion-dollar Presidential campaigns, while
supporting financial deregulation which would have led to a Wall Street
takeover of Chinese banks and savings. Many Chinese business consultants
and academics have been educated in the US and influenced by their ties to US
academics and international financial institutions directly linked to Wall
Street and the City of London . They have prospered as highly-paid
consultants receiving prestigious positions in Chinese institutions. They
identify the ‘liberalization of financial markets’ with “advanced economies”
capable of deepening ties to global markets instead of as a major source of the
current global financial crisis. These “Westernized intellectuals” are
like their 19th century comprador counterparts who underestimated and dismissed
the long-term consequences of Western imperial penetration. They fail to
understand how financial deregulation in the US precipitated the current crisis
and how deregulation would lead to a Western takeover of China ’s financial
system- the consequences of which would reallocate China ’s domestic savings to
non-productive activities (real estate speculation), precipitate financial
crisis and ultimately undermine China ’s leading global position.
These
Chinese yuppies imitate the worst of Western consumerist life styles and their
political outlooks are driven by these life styles and Westernized identities
which preclude any sense of solidarity with their own working class.
There
is an economic basis for the pro-Western sentiments of China ’s
neo-compradors. They have transferred billions of dollars to foreign bank
accounts, purchased luxury homes and apartments in London , Toronto , Los
Angeles , Manhattan , Paris , Hong Kong and Singapore . They have one foot in
China (the source of their wealth) and the other in the West (where they
consume and hide their wealth).
Westernized
compradores are deeply embedded in China ’s economic system having family ties
with the political leadership in the party apparatus and the state. Their
connections are weakest in the military and in the growing social movements,
although some “dissident” students and academic activists in the “democracy
movements” are backed by Western imperial NGO’s. To the extent that the
compradors gain influence, they weaken the strong economic state institutions
which have directed China ’s ascent to global power, just as they did in the
19th century by acting as intermediaries for the British Empire .
Proclaiming 19th Century “liberalism” British opium addicted over 50 million
Chinese in less than a decade. Proclaiming “democracy and human rights”
US gunboats now patrol off China ’s coast. China ’s elite-directed rise
to global economic power has spawned monumental inequalities between the
thousands of new billionaires and multi-millionaires at the top and hundreds of
millions of impoverished workers, peasants and migrant workers at the bottom.
China
’s rapid accumulation of wealth and capital was made possible through the
intense exploitation of its workers who were stripped of their previous social
safety net and regulated work conditions guaranteed under Communism.
Millions of Chinese households are being dispossessed in order to promote real
estate developer/speculators who then build high rise offices and the luxury apartments
for the domestic and foreign elite. These brutal features of ascendant
Chinese capitalism have created a fusion of workplace and living space mass
struggle which is growing every year. The developer/speculators’
slogan “to get rich is wonderful” has lost its power to deceive the
people. In 2011 there were over 200,000 popular encompassing urban
coastal factories and rural villages. The next step, which is sure to
come, will be the unification of these struggles into new national social
movements with a class-based agenda demanding the restoration of health and
educational services enjoyed under the Communists as well as a greater share of
China’s wealth. Current demands for greater wages can turn to demands for
greater work place democracy. To answer these popular demands China ’s
new compradore-Westernized liberals cannot point to their ‘model’ in the US
empire where American workers are in the process of being stripped of the very
benefits Chinese workers are struggling to regain.
China
, torn by deepening class and political conflict, cannot sustain its drive
toward global economic leadership. China ’s elite cannot confront the
rising global imperial military threat from the US with its comprador allies
among the internal liberal elite while the country is a deeply divided
society with an increasingly hostile working class. The time of unbridled
exploitation of China ’s labor has to end in order to face the US military
encirclement of China and economic disruption of its overseas markets.
China possesses enormous resources. With over $1.5 trillion dollars in
reserves China can finance a comprehensive national health and educational
program throughout the country.
China
can afford to pursue an intensive ‘public housing program’ for the 250 million
migrant workers currently living in urban squalor. China can impose a
system of progressive income taxes on its new billionaires and millionaires and
finance small family farmer co-operatives and rural industries to rebalance the
economy. Their program of developing alternative energy sources, such as
solar panels and wind farms – are a promising start to addressing their serious
environmental pollution.
Degradation
of the environment and related health issues already engage the concern of tens
of millions. Ultimately China ’s best defense against imperial
encroachments is a stable regime based on social justice for the hundreds of
millions and a foreign policy of supporting overseas anti-imperialist movements
and regimes – whose independence are in China ’s vital interest. What is
needed is a pro-active policy based on mutually beneficial joint ventures
including military and diplomatic solidarity. Already a small, but
influential, group of Chinese intellectuals have raised the issue of the growing
US military threat and are “saying no to gunboat diplomacy”.
Modern
China has plenty of resources and opportunities, unavailable to China in the
19th century when it was subjugated by the British Empire . If the US continues
to escalate its aggressive militaristic policy against China , Beijing can set
off a serious fiscal crisis by dumping a few of its hundreds of billions of
dollars in US Treasury notes. China , a nuclear power should reach out to
its similarly armed and threatened neighbor, Russia , to confront and confound
the bellicose rantings of US Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton. Russian
President-to-be Putin vows to increase military spending from 3% to 6% of the
GDP over the next decade to counter Washington’s offensive missile bases on Russia’s
borders and thwart Obama’s ‘regime change’ programs against its allies, like
Syria.
China
has powerful trading, financial and investment networks covering the globe as
well as powerful economic partners .These links have become essential for the continued
growth of many of countries throughout the developing world. In taking on
China , the US will have to face the opposition of many powerful market-based
elites throughout the world. Few countries or elites see any future in
tying their fortunes to an economically unstable empire-based on militarism and
destructive colonial occupations.
In
other words, modern China , as a world power, is incomparably stronger than it
was in early 18th century. The US does not have the colonial leverage
that the ascendant British Empire possessed in the run-up to the Opium
Wars. Moreover, many Chinese intellectuals and the vast majority of its
citizens have no intention of letting its current “Westernized compradors” sell
out the country. Nothing would accelerate political polarization in
Chinese society and hasten the coming of a second Chinese social revolution
more than a timid leadership submitting to a new era of Western imperial
pillage.
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