AdChoices       
   
                                                                       The Coming Global Backlash against China 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world...SZB?li=BBnb7Kz
                                                     The Coming Global Backlash against China 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world...SZB?li=BBnb7Kz
The Chinese Communist Party’s leader, Xi  Jinping, is the most powerful leader in Communist China since Chairman  Mao. Yet, Xi’s outward strongman image is a veneer over his inner  insecurity. When he came into power in late 2012, China’s economy had  slowed down from double-digit growth to single-digit growth; the mass  working-age population, which had been the engine of China’s  economic growth, has begun to decline. The Center for Strategic and  International Studies (CSIS), a Washington, D.C.–based think tank, 
projects  that by 2030, “China will round out its thinning labor force by hiring  workers from abroad.” At the same time, according to Mark Haas, a  political-science professor at Duquesne University, “China alone in 2050  will have more than 329 million people over 65.” Consequently, China is  expected to be the first major economy that will grow older before it  achieves widespread prosperity.
   
  Without its demographic dividend and with an aging population,  China’s economic growth will further slow down at the time when the  government needs to keep its growing middle class from demanding a level  of political freedom matching their newfound wealth. An aging  population would also force the government to allocate more national  resources for elder care and social services, which means there will be  fewer resources to compete against the U.S. This is probably one of the  most important reasons why Xi feels that he has to abandon the so-called  strategic-patience guidance issued by Deng Xiaoping, the paramount  leader of China from 1978 to 1997, who instructed his comrades to bide  their time and avoid any confrontation with powerful external forces  until China was in a much stronger position both economically and  militarily.
Xi, however, believes that China can’t afford to bide its time any  longer. It must replace the liberal world order with a Sino-centric  world order before China’s population becomes too old and  the Chinese economy becomes too stagnant. However, rather than  furthering economic reform and opening up more sectors to foreign  investment and competition to strengthen its economy, Xi chose to hide  China’s weaknesses and exaggerate China’s economic strengths. He  emphasizes self-reliance and utilizing China’s resources to pump up  “national champions,” or state-owned enterprises that could compete  against global leaders in strategic sectors. Xi feels that nationalism  is his new trump card, something he can use to motivate, excite, and  unite a billion people all the while strengthening the CCP’s rule over  them. Others say that his inward-looking nationalist policies are  leading China to the very 
middle-income trap  — in which China’s level of development stalls out before reaching the  heights of other modern industrial nations — that Xi and his  predecessors tried very hard to avoid.
Yet the more the Chinese economy slows down, the more Xi feels the  need to project a strongman image both abroad and, especially, at home.  As Wang Gungwu and Zheng Yongnian, two Chinese scholars, wrote in 
China and the New International Order,  this dynamic has deep roots in Chinese history: “China’s internal order  was so closely related to her international order that one could not  long survive without the other; when the barbarians were not submissive  abroad, rebels might more easily arise within. Most dynasties collapsed  under the twin blows of inside disorder and outside calamity, 
nei luan wai huang, that is, domestic rebellion and foreign invasion.”
 Xi  is keenly aware that he is vulnerable to internal rebellion. He has  purged more than 1.5 million government officials, military leaders, and  party elites. His trade war with the U.S. is deeply unpopular inside  China because it has caused economic pains such as rising unemployment,  closing of factories, and the shifting of the global supply chain out of  China. Xi knows very well that if he shows any signs of weakness, he  may end up like his political rival, Bo Xilai — a princeling who is  currently languishing in a notorious Chinese prison for high-level party  officials.
 In addition, Xi saw former U.S. President Obama as a  “weak” leader who led a nation that was on its way to inevitable  decline, which opened up an unprecedented opportunity for China. Xi also  has certain milestones he wants to reach: In 2021, the 100th  anniversary of the founding of the Chinese Communist Party, and in 2049,  the 100th anniversary of the founding of Communist China. Xi wants to  do something big to cement his place in history when he reaches these  milestones. Therefore, in his mind, the era of hiding strength and  biding time is over. He wants to show the world a new set of policies,  actions, and attitudes that match China’s powerful status.
 For a  while, Xi was succeeding. Internally, he ruthlessly cracked down on  religious believers, political dissenters, party officials, and business  elites. He also built a mass surveillance state that turned the  dystopian nightmare imagined by George Orwell’s 
1984 into a  reality. Internationally, he imposed his strong will on businesses and  nations big and small through his signature project “One Belt and One  Road.” The way Xi sees it, the more other countries become economically  dependent on China, the more he can dominate them peacefully without  having to use force. One commentator 
has observed  that Xi “resembles a clenched fist. At home, he is clenching hard to  assert his control. To the outside world, he is a hard-thrusting force  determined to get his way.” Xi’s fist has conditioned many nations  including the Western democracies to believe that China is stronger than  it actually is and that China’s global dominance is inevitable.  Therefore, few are willing to challenge China’s human-rights violations  at home and its assertive behavior abroad.
 But even the most  powerful emperor can fly too close to the sun. The dissenting voices  inside China are getting louder, while global backlash against China  reached new heights in 2019. Then the 2020 coronavirus outbreak stripped  the facade of Xi’s powerful image, revealed deep flaws within the CCP’s  dictatorial political system, caused immense anger and frustration  among Chinese people, brought serious detriments to China’s prestigious  international image, and brought China’s seemingly unstoppable rise to a  halt. As the prominent Hong Kong entrepreneur Jimmy Lai has written,  “The more Mr. Xi pursues his authoritarian agenda, the more distrust he  will sow at home and abroad. Far from transforming Beijing into the  world’s leading superpower, his policies will instead keep China from  taking its rightful place of honor in a peaceful, modern and integrated  world.” Xi has misread the situation, overplayed his hand, and his  aggressive policies at home and abroad have backfired, proving the  saying: Those whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad.
or, perhaps - those whom 'teh' Gods would destroy , they first make Senile!!!
BTW - unlikely that mm-bluemeanie ever read the article - but what is the 'teh' count these days???
Hmmm???