Chinese Communist Party (CCP) members have completed their 20th National Congress. Now, all know for sure what was apparent even before the conference convened. Xi Jinping is firmly in control and has placed loyalists in every position of power.
From this easily anticipated outcome, it is possible to draw three conclusions about China’s future. First, the economy will become less market-oriented and operate increasingly according to centralized plans. Second, China will take an increasingly adversarial approach toward trade and economics (probably militarily and diplomatically as well, but these are separate matters). Third, as a consequence of these directions, China’s economy will grow at a much slower pace than previously and than it otherwise could.
Since becoming China’s leader almost 10 years ago, Xi has moved the country increasingly away from the flexible, market-oriented approach first adopted by Deng Xiaoping in the late 1970s, an approach that is widely credited with having fostered China’s stupendous growth in previous decades. Xi claims that Deng always meant for the market-oriented approach to last only so long—only as a way to develop economically. Now that the development has occurred, Xi wants to return China to its communist roots. It is noteworthy in this regard that Xi’s final speech to the Party Congress mentioned markets only three times but referenced Karl Marx 15 times.
If the new administration in Beijing does not mean to stymie Chinese economic progress, their program nonetheless will. To be sure, China’s growth was bound to fall short of its historic pace. Developed economies seldom grow as rapidly as newly developing economies, and China has reached such a point of development. That fact aside, replacing market dynamics with centralized planning will further restrain economic progress.
There is yet more evidence of the harm China’s policy directions have done and will do. The centralizing and belligerent attitudes in Beijing have raised doubts in the minds of foreign businesses. Foreign investment has long been a critical source of Chinese development and innovation. Now, these investors have begun to focus less and less on China for new ventures and more on other Asian economies, such as Vietnam, Thailand, and India. World Bank estimates capture the result. They expect China’s economy to grow at a paltry 2.8 percent this year compared to 5.3 percent for all of Asia.
With Xi loyalists in every position of power, there is little chance that any reform movement will redirect this unfortunate economic path. Xi actually seems like a true communist believer. Even if he is not, he seems determined to act like one, which is all that matters from a practical standpoint. As for his chief subordinates, they seem to have less than an adequate background to offer any check to the centralizing drive. The new premier, Li Qiang, was previously the Shanghai party boss, hardly a background that would question the dictates of Karl Marx. The economics portfolio has gone to Ding Xuexiang, who boasts little or no business experience. China’s economic direction is set. It is too bad for China.