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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, March 1, 2018
Xi Jinping’s China: Better to Worse
How Xi Jinping’s ‘lifetime presidency’ could change China – for better or worse
( February 28, 2018, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) Thanks to surprising new constitutional amendments –
curiously, first announced in English – the path is clear for Xi
Jinping and his chosen vice-president to rule China beyond the ten-year
two-term limit.
Pragmatically, most analysts expected Xi to retain power to some extent
after 2023 by retaining his posts as Chairman of the Central Military
Commission and General-Secretary of the Communist Party. But now, it
seems he is going nowhere and the full implications of this will busy
China watchers for many years.
What does a (potentially) life-term president in Beijing mean for China’s Asian neighbours? For starters, Asian countries worried about
China’s increasing assertiveness can no longer pin their hopes on a
more benign and mild leader arising in the future. Strategically, they
would have to meet a more robust China as a geopolitical fact for
decades to come. This would mean, possibly, more countries pivoting
towards China as a hugely unpredictable US continues to send mixed signals to Asia.
Next, as a historically weak institution, we can expect to see growing confidence from the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
its diplomats. Xi has already shown he’s prepared to rely on the
ministry as he consolidates power even further, and now, its stock will
continue to rise.
China is now also ready to recalibrate its “soft power” efforts along
more Xi-centric lines. China Xinhua News may have laid it on rather
thickly by claiming that
the “personal charisma of President #XiJinping fosters a love of China
in countries all around the world #Xiplomacy”, but the rest of the world
can nonetheless expect more efforts to control and promote Xi the man
as a regional and global leader.
The role of vice-president will also be closely watched. Traditionally,
the vice-presidency is largely ceremonial and devoid of real power or in
a suppliant position for the president-elect to observe and be
observed. But with Xi’s changes in place, a future vice-president will
wield considerable influence and power – even if Xi decides to appoint
one who currently sits outside the Politburo (the party’s political bureau) or its smaller standing committee.
The widely rumoured frontrunner for the job is Xi’s trusted ally Wang Qishan. Wang not long ago retired from
the seven-member Politburo, which some saw as a sign that Xi still felt
bound by the so-called “seven up eight down” norm in which officials
must retire from the Politburo Standing Committee if they are 68 or
older at the time of a Party Congress.
But given Xi has now sidestepped both party and state convention to
further entrench his power base, his new prerogatives quite probably
override conventions over who can be appointed to what and when.
The perks of a lifetime president
However unpalatable it may sound, having a strong, long-serving leader
may be a good thing for China. Predictability and stability will earn Xi
the political capital he needs to instigate urgently needed financial
and social reforms – fixing the banking system, allocating and
reallocating capital, reworking regulatory structures, tackling
inequality. This can only bode well for the Chinese economy, and as an
upshot, the regional and global economy.
On another front, the prospect of a lifelong Xi presidency will
disappoint many corrupt and potentially corrupt Chinese officials who
originally thought they could simply stick it out till 2023. Xi’s
anti-corruption campaign (even if we consider it a political pruning
exercise) has undoubtedly delivered real benefits to
the economy and its people. Having shown no signs of slowing down his
campaign, Xi seems intent on not just rooting out corrupt individuals,
but forcing the sort of cultural shift that inevitably takes a long
time. If he succeeds, this may be his most important legacy.
Additionally, if Xi indeed stays on for more than ten years, it prevents
alternative leaders from undoing his work. This gives him all the more
freedom and resources to achieve the “Chinese Dream” and the twin goals known as the “Two Centenaries” – a “moderately well-off society” by 2021 and a “democratic, civilised, harmonious, and modern socialist country” by 2049.
While it may seem too early to consider life after Xi, China has to
start imagining what that life might look like – especially if Xi
successfully uses his long reign to refashion institutional and party
norms in his image.
A recent study by
Erica Frantz and Andrea Kendall-Taylor shows that institutionalised
authoritarian regimes tend to remain remarkably stable where they enjoy
strong party and military support. As they write:
22% of highly personalised dictatorships (those regimes lacking strong parties or a military) collapsed when the leader died – compared to 6% of institutionalised dictatorships. Although instability risk in highly personalised settings is comparatively higher, the actual prospects remain low.
If
we take their findings as read and assume that Xi gets his way, the
prospect that this president will eventually be succeeded by another
enduring and entrenched authoritarian is more than likely. That is a
worrying prognosis. Xi has eliminated his political rivals and
emasculated alternative power centres. Should a truly dangerous dictator
come to power, he would find a cowed elite, weak institutional
constraints, and a compliant public unused to political mobilisation.
Xi’s move, perhaps ironically and however unintended, lays the
groundwork for another Mao to emerge – presenting the biggest risk of
all in Xi’s gambit.
Dylan Loh Ming Hui, Graduate Research Fellow and PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.