The rise and rise of Xi Jinping
Xi who must be obeyed
The most powerful and popular leader
China has had for
decades must use these assets wisely
THE madness unleashed by the rule of a
charismatic despot,
Mao Zedong, left China so traumatised that the late chairman’s
successors vowed
never to let a single person hold such sway again. Deng Xiaoping, who
rose to
power in the late 1970s, extolled the notion of “collective
leadership”.
Responsibilities would be shared out among leaders by the Communist
Party’s
general secretary; big decisions would be made by consensus. This has
sometimes
been ignored: Deng himself acted the despot in times of crisis. But the
collective approach helped restore stability to China after Mao’s
turbulent
dictatorship.
Xi Jinping, China’s current leader, is
now dismantling it.
He has become the most powerful Chinese ruler certainly since Deng, and
possibly since Mao. Whether this is good or bad for China depends on
how Mr Xi
uses his power. Mao pushed China to the brink of social and economic
collapse,
and Deng steered it on the right economic path but squandered a chance
to
reform it politically. If Mr Xi used his power to reform the way power
works in
China, he could do his country great good. So far, the signs are mixed.
It may well be that the decision to
promote Mr Xi as a
single personality at the expense of the group was itself a collective
one.
Some in China have been hankering for a strongman; a politician who
would stamp
out corruption, reverse growing inequalities and make the country stand
tall
abroad (a task Mr Xi has been taking up with relish—see article). So
have many
foreign business folk, who want a leader who would smash the monopolies
of a
bloated state sector and end years of dithering over economic reforms.
However the decision came about, Mr Xi
has grabbed it and
run with it. He has taken charge of secretive committees responsible
for
reforming government, overhauling the armed forces, finance and
cyber-security.
His campaign against corruption is the most sweeping in decades. It has
snared
the former second-in-command of the People’s Liberation Army and
targeted the
retired chief of China’s massive security apparatus—the highest-ranking
official to be investigated for corruption since Mao came to power. The
generals, wisely, bow to him: earlier this year state newspapers
published
pages of expressions of loyalty to him by military commanders.
He is the first leader to employ a big
team to build his
public profile. But he also has a flair for it—thanks to his stature
(in a
height-obsessed country he would tower over all his predecessors except
Mao),
his toughness and his common touch. One moment he is dumpling-eating
with the
masses, the next riding in a minibus instead of the presidential
limousine. He
is now more popular than any leader since Mao (see article).
All of this helps Mr Xi in his twofold
mission. His first
aim is to keep the economy growing fast enough to stave off unrest,
while
weaning it off an over-dependence on investment in property and
infrastructure
that threatens to mire it in debt. Mr Xi made a promising start last
November,
when he declared that market forces would play a decisive role (not
even Deng
had the courage to say that). There have since been encouraging moves,
such as
giving private companies bigger stakes in sectors that were once the
exclusive
preserve of state-owned enterprises, and selling shares in firms owned
by local
governments to private investors. Mr Xi has also started to overhaul
the
household-registration system, a legacy of the Mao era that makes it
difficult
for migrants from the countryside to settle permanently in cities. He
has
relaxed the one-child-per-couple policy, a Deng-era legacy that has led
to
widespread abuses.
More muscle needed
It is still far from clear whether Mr
Xi’s economic policies
will succeed in preventing a sharp slowdown in growth. The latest data
suggest
the economy is cooling more rapidly than the government had hoped (see
article). Much will depend on how far he gets with the second, harder,
part of
his mission: establishing the rule of law. This will be a central theme
of the
annual meeting next month of the Communist Party’s Central Committee.
The
question is whether Mr Xi is prepared for the law to apply to everyone,
without
fear or favour.
His drive against corruption suggests
that the answer is a
qualified no. The campaign is characterised by a Maoist neglect of
institutions. It has succeeded in instilling fear among officials, but
has done
little to deal with the causes of graft: an investigative mechanism
that is
controlled entirely by the party itself, a secret system of
appointments to
official positions in which loyalty often trumps honesty and controls
on free
speech that allow the crooked to silence their critics.
Mr Xi needs to set up an independent
body to fight
corruption, instead of leaving the job to party investigators and the
feuding
factions they serve. He should also require officials to declare all
sources of
income, property and other assets. Instead, he has been rounding up
activists
calling for such changes almost as vigorously as he has been
confronting
corruption. In the absence of legal reform, he risks becoming a leader
of the
old stripe, who pursues vendettas in the name of fighting wrongdoers.
That will
have two consequences: there will be a new wave of corruption, and
resentments
among the party elite will, at some point, erupt.
Mr Xi is making some of the right
noises. He says he wants
courts to help him “lock power in a cage”. Reforms are being tinkered
with to
make local courts less beholden to local governments. But he needs to
go
further by abolishing the party’s shadowy “political-legal committees”,
which
decide sensitive cases. The party should stop meddling in the
appointment of
judges (and, indeed, of legislators).
The effect of such reforms would be
huge. They would signal
a willingness by the party to begin loosening its monopoly of power and
accepting checks and balances. Deng once said that economic reform
would fail
without political reform. Mr Xi last month urged foot-dragging
officials to
“dare to break through and try” reform. China’s leader should heed his
own words
and those of Deng. He should use his enormous power for the greatest
good, and
change the system.
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