Dan S. Wang on Fri, 28 Mar 2008 23:48:25 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Brits in hock--or, Atlas shrugged again |
Hi Brian and Felix, This thread is fascinating, the issues alarming. Thanks for the excuse to post the following loose thoughts. Fallows leaves his analysis just where it gets most interesting, I think. And, maybe, where it becomes the most hopeful. Though, I must say, I'm with Brian--the 'most' hopeful scenarios compare favorably only to those we are hoping against. Fallows likens the currency reserve / import-export / loaner-borrower imbalance to something like the Cold War nuclear détente of Mutual Assured Destruction. The US and China are locked into something like that, except in this case what trigger does the US have to pull? We may have to give up our upscale consumption, but Americans aren't going to stop buying the cheap goods made in China anytime soon. Who knows, until the real depression rolls around a little extra price sensitivity may even increase that imbalance. Seems like the only trigger is on the Chinese side, and they won't pull it until they can be sure that the barrel of the gun is not pointing back at the Communist Party leadership. But the part that Fallows leaves out is the factor of domestic pressure, on both sides. The closest he gets on the American side is mentioning the media demogoguery of a Lou Dobbs. But there are pressures of all kind, befitting America's diversity. A crystalline example, if you will: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi conspicuously rushing off to Dharmsala a week ago to meet with the Tibetans in exile and denounce the Chinese government. The Speaker's district includes the largest chunk of San Francisco, a city made up of equal parts Chinese Americans with strong anti-CCP tendencies and overeducated white Buddhists who dream of Tibet--tiny or non-existent minorities in most of the rest of the country. She *had* to make the trip. On the China side, the situation is fractured in a different way. The reform era could also be called the Era of Devolution, meaning, while the central government maintains controls over national economic levers, the on-the-ground autonomy of the provincial, prefectural, and municipal governments has never been greater. It is not really a surprise that the greatest explosion of industry and commerce happened in the south, faraway from the oversight and political baggage of Beijing, where local layers of government can act with independence. Though the usual political machinations figured into his ascension, it is also not suprising that the period of great acceleration corresponded with the rise of Jiang Zemin, the former mayor of Shanghai, a man who learned to govern a city by always looking out for its own local interests. One result of the free for all, the so-called China Price, is really the China Prices. Whether it's the trinket hawkers competing against each other in a street market in Beijing or the many different sock makers in Zhejiang province that Ted Fishman writes about in China, Inc. who annually produce 16 billion socks for the world, all who do business in China work in a hypercompetitive domestic environment. Forget about the factories in India or Vietnam--a socks factory in China is first and foremost competing against the fifteen other mega-sock factories operating in the surrounding counties. Same for the toy makers, the makers of pet food ingredients, the cheap electronics, etc. The pressure to cut corners is huge, and sometimes it's coming from the factory right across the street. The devolution also corresponds to the rise in corruption and unfair local governance. The problem for the central government is how to reinstall some sense of moral purpose in those layers of government to which it ceded control in exchange for economic development. It was a lot easier for the CCP to maintain some moral purpose in the early Fifties, when a charismatic Mao wielded a then-unquestioned moral authority along with a whole toolbox of coercive techniques. After forty years of squandered moral authority, a different kind of materialism reigns. Now, the local functionaries are wined, dined, and laid. They have interests in the business they facilitate. And, as in the business world, they view the local governments in neighboring counties as their competitors. Devolution in exchange for development-- this is another side to the bargain China has made. One that has political consequences far from fully felt. The current arrangement between the US and China hinges greatly on how each domestic populace pressures its own government. In China, this is a huge a question, not simply having to do with the age-old challenge of how a people moves an undemocratic system, but even more specifically, how to move a system which is authoritarian in nature, but super-localized? The central government doesn't have much direct control over why this or that village is being razed for a factory expansion or new luxury townhomes. The occasional execution of an egregiously corrupt local official doesn't do much to deter or rectify, but that and editorials in the People's Daily is about all they can do. Grassroots initiatives are emerging, but they are miniscule in effect, and haven't achieved any sort of secure position of visibility. Democratic experiments are happening at a very local level, too, but so far have not been allowed to be implemented at any level of real authority. There may be things going on, there probably are, that a foreigner like me cannot recognize, but my Chinese friends in China aren't seeing much, either. The art projects of the kind Brian wrote about in his blog post hint at a different kind of discourse and action, one that may skirt the officialdom of the Chinese political sphere, but with who knows what kind of effect (if any). The unrest in Tibet is a real test, not just for the central government, but also for all who share the discontent. Will the struggle be re-articulated as one against the forces of neoliberal reform, or will enough prominent voices, no doubt helped along by politically-correct Western backers, continue to frame the struggle primarily in ethno-nationalist terms? How is the migration to Tibet of the Han Chinese (and lesser known, but also contributing to the dilution of Tibetan culture and the flooding of the local labor markets, the Hui Muslims) being driven by the neoliberal imperatives--on the one hand, the expansion into new spaces, for markets, natural resources, etc, and, on the other, the huge reserves that now need to be invested somehow? In other words, how can the Tibetan struggle be related to the discontent and desperation experienced by others in China? Economics have trumped identity, and have done so in a familiar sphere of struggle. Maybe they always have. But how long will it take for the fine Buddhist city folk of my town, Madison, Wisconsin, as near a recession-proof American locale as can be, to see it? The long-awaited bifurcation to which Brian alludes does indeed seem imminent, more so now than at any time in my almost forty-year life, that is for sure. But how those massive fissures begin, and what we are left to work with after the cataclysmic fallout, I want to believe (right: minimally hopeful!) that they do depend somehow on the small-scale, specific and/or local struggles we engage in, how they do or do not translate themselves, and how they do or not get locked into discursive traps. For the hippie Buddhists of Madison to first address how the China Investment Corporation, for one, is linked to our own force-feeding of the dollar on the rest of the world, and, second, the threats to the Tibetan language (which, ironically, is being taught in the schools of Dharmsala mostly by teachers who were trained in China), and third, how the two are related, would be a huge step forward, in the direction of recognizing what it is that really unites all of us in this moment. Dan w. -- http://prop-press.vox.com/ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org