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« Nature abhors a vacuum, and black hole North Korea is just that | Main | American idols »
7:25AM

The taming of China proceeds on many fronts ...

ARTICLE: "Retail's One-China Problem: Immense, Fragmented Market Poses Problems for Wal-Mart, Other Chains Seeking to Expand," by Mei Fong, Kate Linebaught and Gordon Fairclough, Wall Street Journal, 28 October 2006, p. B1.

OP-ED: "Chinese checks: A protectionist backlash in Beijing," by Harry Harding, Wall Street Journal, 24 October 2006, p. A18.


POLITICS & ECONOMICS: "EU to Get Tougher on China Trade: Strategy Shift Aims to Quell Protectionist Sentiment, Strengthen Hand at Table," by John W. Miller, Wall Street Journal, 24 October 2006, p. A8.


WEEK IN REVIEW: "The Chinese Go After Corruption, Corruptly," by Jim Yardley, New York Times, 22 October 2006, p. WK3.

China is huge population-wise, but crammed into a country the size of the United States (continental). It is hugely fragmented. Six major dialects of language which are more different from one another than French and English (so why do we still call them "dialects"?). You've got tropics and sub-artic. And you don't have an integrated nationwide logistics network, so tastes are incredibly local.


No wonder you need to bribe everybody and their brother to get anything done in China.


Also, no surprise that as China opens up to globalization, the protectionist backlash there will be both local and national, with Beijing incredibly desirous of making sure it's Chinese companies that ultimately unify the nation economically the way the party unified it politically.


But smart Harry Hardin puts it right: "China's economic nationalism is a marginal adjustment to, rather than a fundamental repudiation of, Beijing's broader embrace of globalization."


Simply put, the force overcomes the friction here. Rarely pretty, but good enough to deepen its status in the Core.


Naturally, the Old Core will constantly push China on this point, and the EU's role here is indicative of the sort of "regulatory superpower" role I see Europe assuming in coming years.


Internally, we can expect the CCP to continue to treat anti-corruption campaigns as more political sport than serious economic reform. The phrase, "some accounts [of corruption] seem out of Dickens" is very telling. That's exactly where China's political system stands in relation to its economic development, which is why "Deadwood" is the best American media presentation of capitalism in China today.


What will drive serious Chinese government reform will be a serious economic shock. When that shock inevitably comes, the question will be, Does the CCP strike outward politically in order to deflect its own guilt or does it move the pile forward internally?


For us, the question will already be decided by then--as in, Did we do enough to deny China that enemy image that we forced that fear inward toward productive change?


Either way, the tipping point is coming. China's slide on corruption cannot continue indefinitely. Eventually, the cost will simply outweigh the pain.

Reader Comments (2)

Disocver HD just had a two hour program about China, I've thankfully recorded on my DVR. It the program, they say that actually has 7 different types of languages with 80 different dialects.

I think it's amazing that only 10% of the land is setup for it's agriculture and how Americanized it's becoming in it's growning cities.

They say that in another 30 years, that we will need a planet to sastisfy China's enegy's needs.

Here's the link.

http://www.discoverytv.com/atlas/china/index.shtml

October 29, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterTy Stallard

I love your analogy to Deadwood as I often explain instituting the rule of law to my 9 year old by analogizing it to Westerns she has seen. One of the best for this is "Who Shot Liberty Valance," with John Wayne and Jimmy Stewart. Very useful for explaining Afghanistan.

October 29, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterChina Law Blog

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