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Capital Investors Sway China's Leaders; Clamor for Political Reform Growing

web master  2004.11.15 10:52:31

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> "China's Capitalist Transition": see

> for more

> information

> on this new East-West Center project.

>

>

> CAPITAL INVESTORS SWAY CHINA'S LEADERS

> Clamor for Political Reform Growing

>

> HONOLULU (Aug. 24) -- China's immense and rapid transition to a

> free-market economy is giving unprecedented influence to domestic and

> international capital investors, a China specialist at the East-West

> Center said.

>

> "This is changing the political equilibrium by making the Chinese

> party-state, which relies to a considerable extent on economic growth for

> its legitimacy, more dependent on the decisions of capital holders, both

> foreign and domestic," said Chris McNally, who just returned from six

> weeks in China.

>

> China's leaders have become more dependent on international trade and

> investment flows, creating incentives to maintain a peaceful international

> environment conducive to China's socio-economic development. "This in turn

> is pushing China to become akin to a status-quo power in the Asia

> Pacific," McNally said.

>

> McNally is a coordinator for the East-West Center project, "China's

> Capitalist Transition." A recent conference brought together 20

> distinguished scholars from China, Hong Kong, Singapore and the United

> States to look at where this monumental transition is leading China.

>

> China's rapid development has "set free new productive forces," giving the

> country a competitive advantage in the international capitalist system,

> McNally said. Sustaining this advantage will require changes in the

> country's internal political structure and external orientation.

>

> The East-West Center project aims to foster "a realistic and unclouded

> analysis of China's economic rise," McNally said, by analyzing the facets

> of China's transition to capitalism, which is far from complete. "There

> are many stumbling blocks in the way, a possible conflict with Taiwan

> being foremost."

>

> To show how strongly the country has burst onto the world economic stage

> over the past three years, growth in trade with China accounted for 62

> percent of overall trade growth in the United States in 2002. The number

> is even more staggering for Japan, where increased trade with China that

> year accounted for 11 times the overall trade growth.

>

> With thriving entrepreneurs, more property owners, and the massive inflow

> of global capital, pressure for political reform in China is increasing

> rapidly. "There is a strong undercurrent clamoring for institutional

> predictability that the present political system cannot deliver," McNally

> said. "People feel a degree of insecurity that stems from the very nature

> of the political system."

>

> This desired predictability, McNally said, can "only be reached by a

> greater degree of transparency and accountability. Part of the central

> leadership is willing to make changes but so far we have seen quite

> little. Clearly, the rule of law is not well established, allowing local

> leaders to circumvent rules and undermine private property rights."

>

> Chris McNally can be reached at (808) 944-7239 or

> mcnallyc@eastwestcenter.org