NY Times
A Sharp Debate Erupts in
By JOSEPH KAHN
BEIJING,
March 11 — For the first time in perhaps a decade, the National People's
Congress, the Communist Party-run legislature now convened in its annual
two-week session, is consumed with an ideological debate over socialism and
capitalism that many assumed had been buried by China's long streak of fast
economic growth.
The
controversy has forced the government to shelve a draft law to protect property
rights that had been expected to win pro forma passage and highlighted the
resurgent influence of a small but vocal group of socialist-leaning scholars
and policy advisers. These old-style leftist thinkers have used
The
roots of the current debate can be traced to a biting critique of the property
rights law that circulated on the Internet last summer. The critique's author,
Gong Xiantian, a professor at
Those
who dismissed his attack as a throwback to an earlier era underestimated the
continued appeal of socialist ideas in a country where glaring disparities
between rich and poor, rampant corruption, labor abuses and land seizures offer
daily reminders of how far
"Our
government only moves forward when it feels there is a strong consensus,"
said Mao Shoulong, a public policy specialist at
People's University in
The
divide does not appear likely to derail
Legislative
officials insist that the proposed law, which has taken eight years to prepare
and is intended to codify a more expansive notion of property rights added to
the Constitution in 2003, will sooner or later be enacted, though possibly with
some significant modifications.
But
Mr. Hu and Mr. Wen
wittingly or unwittingly invited the debate when they made tackling growing
inequality a center of their propaganda efforts, political analysts say. The
state-run news media are abuzz with calls to make "social equity" the
focus of economic policy, replacing the earlier leadership's emphasis on rapid
growth and wealth creation.
Since
his rise to power in 2002, Mr. Hu has also tried to
establish his leftist credentials, extolling Marxism, praising Mao and
bankrolling research to make the country's official but often ignored socialist
ideology more relevant to the current era.
He
told party leaders in 2004 to study how
"Hu is himself a centrist who is not really pursuing one
agenda or the other," observed a party official who said he could be
punished for talking about leadership politics if he were quoted by name.
"But he did pull us to the left to restore balance, and that gave the old
guard an opportunity it has not had in years."
As
a result, analysts say, the leadership may find it harder to pursue
market-oriented solutions to some pressing problems, like providing health care
to rural residents, grappling with rampant corruption in the state sector,
expanding access to education and overhauling banks, insurance and securities
companies.
"My
impression is that allowing an expanded role for the market in education and
health care is off the table," said Mr. Mao, the People's University
policy expert. "Rural land ownership is also too sensitive to consider
now."
The
tensions reflect rising concern that breakneck growth averaging nearly 10
percent annually over 20 years has left
Corruption,
pollution, land seizures and arbitrary fees and taxes are among the leading
causes of a surge in social unrest. Riots have become a fixture of rural life
in
Many
Western and some Chinese experts have argued that these problems stem from
One
measurement of inequality, the gap between the average incomes of urban and
rural residents, has risen to about 3.3 to 1, according to the United Nations
Development Program, higher than similar measures in the
Such
political fears seemed to give an opening to critics who felt economic policies
had strayed too far toward capitalism. The strength of leftist opposition had
faded throughout the 1990's after Deng Xiaoping, who called
economic development "hard truth," and later Mr. Jiang
tolerated little ideological discussion of the direction of changes.
Liu
Guoguang, a Marxist economist and a former vice
director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, stimulated an outpouring of
opinions about inequality last summer when he gave a private talk that was
transcribed and posted on the Internet. His talk supported the emphasis on
growth and development but called for a much larger role for the government in
managing economic affairs.
In
a subsequent interview with Business Watch, a state-run magazine, Mr. Liu said,
"If you establish a market economy in a place like
He
has been joined by other scholars, including Mr. Gong, whose incendiary polemic
on the property law prompted a succession of sympathetic essays and study
sessions.
Also
contributing to the response is the Hong Kong-based economist Lang Xianping, who has used a television show to pillory what he
describes as raids on state assets by managers and foreign investors.
One
top official who has come under scrutiny is Zhou Xiaochuan,
the central bank governor and a promoter of market initiatives. Mr. Zhou
attracted foreign investment to the financial sector, partly delinked
Mr.
Zhou was attacked directly in a widely circulated
Ji Baocheng, president of
People's University in
Mr.
Ji said the government priced shares in the bank too
low, given the fresh infusion of capital, and he accused officials of
"blindly sacrificing the interests of
The
government defends the overseas listings as a necessary step to raise capital,
attract foreign experts to the boards and executive offices of the troubled
banks and put the financial system on sounder footing.
Some
pro-market economists, who seemed ascendant in the 1990's and early in this
decade and now often sound defensive, have denounced the leftist revival as
dangerous. Many also criticize the Hu-Wen
administration for micromanaging investment and bank loans, tinkering with
property and stock markets and declining to extend market-oriented policies to
the countryside.
Zhou
Ruijing, a retired newspaper editor associated with
the pro-market camp, captured the sentiment in a January magazine essay.
"A
widening gap between rich and poor is not the fault of market reforms," he
wrote. "It's the natural result of them, which is neither good nor bad,
but quite predictable."