Hi all, Something that I’m curious about with regards to China and the CPC are the different ideological factions that exist in the present day, particularly with regards to economic strategy, at home and abroad.
Going off of @xiaohongshu@hexbear.net’s many useful comments in the news mega regarding Chinese trade policy, its commitment to dollarization, and continuing the export-led growth model that it has benefited from, I am curious to know what kind of discussions are taking place within the CPC between what I assume to be various liberal and left factions related to these topics. I know the party is lock-step when it comes time to make decisions, but surely there are many CPC members within the national congress who have differing views about how they should navigate the evolving international situation with a belligerent US and a global south that desperately wants more sovereignty and an end to Western unilateralism.
Is there any way a Westerner can be privvy to these kind of conversations within the Chinese government? Thanks!
I can’t adequately answer the positive side of this question, but on the negative side it’s worth noting that a lot of western economic policy, especially in the US, is notoriously bad and out of step with Keynesianism and its relatives, with the whole thing being steered by financiers who don’t actually care about the generally economy running well.
On the positive side, I am way less qualified than our Mandarin-speaking friend, but I think a lot of what China gets right is either similar to what you also see the more rational capitalist states get right, or it is politically capable of doing things those other states can’t because of the necessity of the state maintaining a degree of control over private power for national sovereignty reasons. I don’t think it has much to do with Mao other than China being sovereign in the first place. It’s really more of a nationalist thing than anything.