Title: China
1China
- Anna Shults
- Dan Manning
- Jasmin Willis
- Kady Yeomans
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3Geography
- Peoples Republic of China is made of
- 22 provinces
- 5 autonomous regions
- 4 centrally administered cities
- 2 Special Administrative Regions
- Hong Kong
- Macao (near Hong Kong, tip of Guangdong)
- Population of about 1.3 billion
- 5 times as many as U.S.
- 60 live in rural areas
4Geography
- Geography sea to the east
- Mountains to north, south, and west
- Deserts, grasslands, dense forest in various
north - Tropical rain forest to the south
5Geography
- Middle Kingdom
- Comes from the isolation these geographic
barriers once created - In Chinese means another word for China itself
zhongguo political, cultural center of world - Sparsely populated western part, mainly deserts,
mountains, high plateaus
6Geography
- Northeast
- Like US plains
- Wheat growing area and industrial heartland
- Southern
- more tropical
- Year-round agriculture and intensive rice
cultivation
7Geography
- 60 of Chinas people work and live in rural
areas though concentrated along eastern seaboard
and 3 rivers - Yellow (north)
- Yangtze (central)
- Pearl (south)
- 20 worlds population
- 10 worlds arable land
- 4th largest country in the world
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9Important Chinese Political History
- 1911- Revolution led by Sun Yat-sen overthrows
imperial system and establishes Republic of China - 1912- Nationalist Party formed to oppose warlords
that have seized power - 1921- CCP founded
- 1927- Civil war between Nationalists (now led by
Chiang Kai-shek) and Communists begins - 1934- Mao Zedong becomes leader of CCP
10Important Chinese Political History
- 1949- Chinese Communists win civil war and
establish the Peoples Republic of China. - 1958-1960- Great Leap Forward
- Utopian effort to accelerate economy relying on
labor power and launching China into an
egalitarian effort of true communism - Was wildly unsuccessful, resulting in famine,
wasted resources, etc., and a setback in economic
development
11Important Chinese Political History
- 1966-1976- Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
- Ideological crusade to revert back to the vision
of socialism - Red Guards to fight revisionism
- 1976- Mao Zedong dies
- 1978- Deng Xiaoping becomes Chinas paramount
leader
12Important Chinese Political History
- 1989- Tiananmen Square Massacre
- 1997- Deng Xiaoping dies
- Jiang Zemin becomes Chinas most powerful leader
- 2002-2003- Hu Jintao succeeds Jiang as head of
the CCP and the president of the Peoples
Republic of China
13Tiananmen Square
14Tiananmen Square
- Labor activists, students, and intellectuals of
the PRC protesting against the policies of the
CCP. - In Beijing, military retaliation left civilians
dead or injured. - PRC 200-300
- New York Times 400-800
- Chinese Red Cross 2,000-3,000
15Political Institutions
- Complete Domination by the Chinese Communist
Party (CCP)
16Levels of Government
- Chinese Communist Party leads
- Subnational levels include the provinces,
autonomous regions, and centrally administered
cities, but they do not have policymaking
autonomy - Operate under under the unified leadership of
central authorities
17Executive
- Dual
- Contain premier and president although all
government officials are under direct or indirect
control by the CCP and all high ranking officials
are in the CCP. The government of the PRC
essentially acts as the administrative agency for
carrying out and enforcing policies made by the
party
18Executive
- Chief of State President Hu Jintao (since 15
March 2003) - Vice President Zeng Qinghong (since 15 March
2003) - Premier Wen Jiabao (since 16 March 2003)
- Vice Premier Wu Yi (17 March 2003)
- Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan (since 17 March 2003)
- Vice Premier Hui Liangyu (since 17 March 2003)
19Executive
- President
- National Peoples Congress elects president and
vice president although there is only one
candidate chosen by the CCP for each office - 5 year term, 2 term limit
- Mainly a ceremonial office, but senior party
leader has always held it - Meets and negotiates with other world leaders
20Executive
- Prime Minister aka Premier
- Head of government
- Authority over bureaucracy and policy
implementation - Formally appointed by president with National
Peoples Congress approval but CCP decides who
will serve as Premier - 2 5 year terms allowed - Wen Jiabao chosen as
premier in March 2003 - Always a high ranking member of CCP on standing
committee
21Legislature
- Unicameral
- Organization
- National Peoples Congress highest organ of
state power seriously controlled by the CCP like
everything else though - Officially has a hierarchy of other congresses
that move down through provincial peoples
congresses to municipal peoples congresses to
rural township and on. They are in charge of
overseeing the executive branch or peoples
governments at various levels but are actually
subject to party leadership
22Representation
- CCP has a National Party Congress that meets for
1 week every 5 years with 2100 delegates - More symbolic than decision making although 1 of
2 highest leading bodies of CCP specified in
Constitution of CCP - Mainly approves decisions of leadership in the
party.
23Representation
- Central Committee is the other of the highest
leading bodies - 198 full members and 158 alternate
- Is the 2nd most important and consist of CCP
leaders all over the country meet annually for
nearly a week - 5 year term and elected by secret ballot (with
limited choices) by National Party Congress - These elections are mainly controlled by party
leadership to ensure compliance with their
decisions
24Membership
- Political Bureau (or Politburo) has 24 members, 9
of which go to the Standing Committee. The
Standing Committee is the highest power of the
CCP. Members are elected by the Central
Committee. These discussions are mainly held in
secret monthly and are in true command of the CCP
and therefore the PRC. Chairman was replaced as a
the name for head of the state to General
Secretary in order to break with the ideology of
Mao and be more progressive economically.
25Membership
- Central Commission for Discipline
- In charge of discipline and keeping down
political corruption - Secretariat
- Organization of keeping all party members
connected - Wields some authority
- Manages day-to-day work of Politburo and Standing
Committee
26Parliamentary and Presidential Systems
- Executive/Legislative Relations
- CCP dominates
- Separation/Fusion of Power
- Beneath central government provinces, cities,
counties, rural towns - Centrally administered cities Beijing, Shanghai,
Tianjin, Chongqing - 5 autonomous regions w/ large minority
populations - Each of these contains a Representative Peoples
Congress meeting infrequently - Plays limited role in managing affairs or
jurisdiction
27Parliamentary and Presidential Systems
- Sub nationals gov. organizations have 2
supervisors next higher level of gov. and the
Communist Party at that level - Ex education in Chinese Province must listen to
both the CCP committee for education in that
province and the Ministry of Education in Beijing
- Creates conflict in authority emphasizes
centralization and party domination - Below provinces 700,000 rural villages
majority of population lives here - Village leaders have recently been democratically
and competitively elected, not formally
responsible to higher state authority
28Presidential and Parliamentary Systems
- Representative assemblies in villages are more
active in local affairs - Somewhat grass-roots democracy movement
- However, most important village leaders is CCP
leader (Village Party Secretary) and most
powerful organization is CCP Village Committee
29Party Discipline
- Very disciplined within the CCP
- Used to be absolute power under Mao. While still
having extreme authority, now the CCP must deal
more with politics
30Divided Government
- Government has become more decentralized since
the end of Mao. More power has been given to
local and provincial authorities, especially in
terms of economics. CCP still maintains
incredible power over military, police, energy
sources, resources and infrastructure
construction projects.
31Elections
- Policy making
- Fragmented authoritarianism- fundamentally
authoritarian, far from democratic, accounts for
fragmentation since Mao-in-command system, more
bargaining among political leaders in different
levels - Ultimately under CCP, top 2 dozen or so of party
leaders wield nearly unchecked power - Use a nomenklatura system lists of millions of
positions that must be approved by a CCP
organization in order to exist even if the person
is not a member of CCP, attempting to maintain
control - Emphasis again on guanxi, aka networking, except
deeper with more familial obligations rooted in
Confucian ideology
32Elections
- Presidential
- Indirectly elected by NPC
- Parliamentary
- Indirect NPCs are elected not by all in the
province but by deputies already serving in
provincial-level Peoples Congress who were
indirectly elected by county-level Peoples
Congresses in the province
33Elections
- Non-competitive
- Fear increasing direct elections because it might
serve as a forum for dissent - Used to have only 1 candidate but are now
increasing some cases where independently
nominated candidates have defeated official
nominees although independent candidates are
still basically approved by CCP anyway - Elections, aka not-elections mechanisms to give
the communist party-state greater legitimacy by
allowing large numbers of citizens to participate
in the political process under very controlled
circumstances - Most significant democratization occurs at rural
levels - Most are indirect government bodies decide who
serves at higher levels
34Political Parties
- There are elections, legislative bodies, and
organizations like labor unions although all are
under CCP control - Technically 8 parties, although considered a 1
party system due to CCP domination
35CCP
- 70 million members, growth since 1949
- Dropped in numbers during Cultural Revolution
(but many welcomed back after Maos death if
they lived) - Largest political party in the world, but 5 of
PRCs populations - Mid 1950s 70 peasants only 45 were industrial
workers, laborers blue collar in 2002 although
the CCP apparently supports them the most - Most are government officials, making efforts to
gain economic entrepreneurs to join the party - Women are less than 20/ 2.5 of Central
Committee 1 female on Politburo and none on
standing Committee - About 70 million in Communist Youth League
Party membership training ground although many
believe that communist ideology is irrelevant to
their lives and the nations future CCP recruits
2 million new members each year for access to
power and advancement
36Democratic Parties
- Lend credibility to idea of democracy (theyre
not fooling us though) - China Democratic League intellectuals
- Chinese Party for the Public Interest returned
overseas Chinese - Fewer than 500,000 members
- Insignificant, loyal non-opposition
37Democratic Parties
- CPPCC Chinese Peoples Political Consultative
Conference main forum of expression for these
parties and is an advisory body that meets for 2
weeks once a year along with NPC (CPPCCers are
nonvoting delegates to represent
noncommunists) all are supervised by CCP - CCP party leader actually leads/supervises the
CPPCC - No serious dissent 1998 severe prison
sentences to activists continue to discourage
real dissenters
38Interest Groups
- Much use of guanxi kinship, friendship ties to
cut red tape etc - Patron-client politics at local levels
- Organized interest groups and social movements
that are truly independent of party-state
authority are not permitted to influence
political process in any significant way
39Interest Groups
- CCP creates mass organizations to preempt
formation of actual interest groups - Hundreds of millions in membership
- Ex. All-China Womens Federation
40Interest Groups
- All-China Federation of Trade Unions ACFTU (about
90 million workers) - Top-down party controlled organizations
- Neither are independent political voices for
those they represent but sometimes effectively
lobby for rights (have strongly advocated against
domestic violence for women and workweek from six
to five days respectively) - Ex Wal-Mart does not allow American union
members or unions to form in its USA stores
because these unions actually work for worker
benefits. Wal-Mart allows ACFTU because it works
for employer gains and is controlled by the CCP
41Interest Groups
- Increase in NGOs non governmental
organizations- not as subordinate to CCP - Ex China Green Earth Volunteers, China
Foundation for the Preventions of STDs and AIDs,
China Children and Teenagers Fund - Must register with the government have more room
to maneuver without party interference if they do
not challenge official policies and only try to
help in the areas they are concerned with as they
can.
42Bureaucracy
- Premier directs the State Council which is the
highest body of state administration - Membership determined by party leadership and
formally appointed by the National Peoples
Congress - Acts like cabinet in parliamentary system
- Size varies
43Bureaucracy
- Each minister controls a specific
ministry/department - Support staffs beneath the State Council can be
issue-specific task force called leadership
small groups - Bring various ministries and commissions together
to coordinate policy and implementation - Example of permanent group Central Leading Group
on Foreign Affairs with mainly permanent members
44Bureaucracy
- Immense in size
- Reaches throughout the country aka huge
- Cadres people in positions of authority who are
paid by government/party - Equal to 40 million
- Some work directly with CCP while many work with
economic enterprises like schools, science,
factory directors, etc.
45Bureaucracy
- Substantive moves towards merit-based tests as
opposed to appointment from above, as well as
decrease in size by 10 (announced 2001) - Reform forced retirement between 60-70 and 2
term limit on top cadre positions, although some
exceptions made for top leaders
46Judiciary
- Supreme Peoples Court to Supreme Peoples
Procuratorate to Local level Peoples
Procuratorates to High Courts (provinces) to
Intermediate Courts (cities) to Grassroots Court
(counties and townships) - Based on civil law system derived from Soviet
and continental civil code legal principles
legislature retains power to interpret statutes
constitution ambiguous on judicial review of
legislation has not accepted compulsory ICJ
jurisdiction
47Political Culture
- Currently going through a massive change
- Populace becoming skeptical of communist
ideologies - Socialist goals
- Revolutionary virtues
- As a result the Party is now reaching out in new
ways - Increasingly more patriotic
- Portraying itself as the guardians of Chinas
best interests - Using the media to stress the message that it is
time for China to return as a dominant world
power
48Socialization
- Very family oriented
- Schools
- Highly censored and controlled by the government
- Estimated 130 million children from age 7 to 14
are a part of the Young Pioneers - Promote good social behavior, patriotism, and
loyalty to the party - Media
- Highly censored
- Many internet sites blocked or altered
- Controls what the News reports and only permits
things positive to the party - Government
- Has influence in most things
49Socialization
- Younger generations moving farther away from
communist ideology - Popular culture
- Country folk and peasants moving back towards
roots - Replacing figurines of party heroes with statues
of folk gods and religious tablets - Influence of family clans becoming more dominant
than local authority
50Cleavages
- Ethnic/Race
- 8.5 of Chinas people do not associate
themselves with the Han - Class
- Very large gap between the wealthy and the poor,
not the egalitarian society Mao had envisioned - Religion
- Officially atheist
- Daoist, Buddhist, Muslim- 1-2
- Christian- 3-4
51Media
- Tightly controlled
- Told what to report
- Positive to the party and to the state of the
republic - Internet is strictly monitored and controlled
- Many foreign sites blocked
- Other sites are modified to block certain
material from being accessible
52Political Participation and Protest
- Indirect Elections
- People vote for the person directly above them
- Formerly only one person for each office ran
- Villages taking steps towards direct elections
- Open nominations
- Any party with ten or more voters can nominate a
candidate - Still very closely monitored by the local CCP
- Most well known protest Tiananmen Square
- Number of grass root organizations emerged during
the protest - No recent protest demonstrations
- Protest groups gone underground
53Citizenship
- 8.5 of population do not associate themselves
with the Han - Gunagxi, Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Tibet, and
Xinjiang - Take up 60 of the total land area of China
- There is a large Muslim population in China,
estimated at 20 million - Muslims are repressed and the CCP has used the
September 11th attacks in America as an excuse to
crack down on the Islamic Movements in China
54Public Policy
- Economic growth
- Slight decentralization of power
- Local governments have more sway in the larger
body of the CCP - Public opinion and media criticism have no effect
on policy making - All personnel decisions must be approved by the
party, even if the personnel in question has
nothing to do with the party itself - Everything is tied into guanxi (connections)
- Personal relationships and mutual obligations
55Supranational and International Influences
- WTO, IMF, UN, and UN security council
- Permanent member of the UN security council
- IAEA
- International Atomic Energy Agency
- Interpol
- International police force
56Policy Issues
- Economic Performance
- Moving towards a capitalist economy
- Unemployment rate
- 6.1 in the urban areas
- In rural areas there is substantial unemployment
and underemployment - Civil Liberties
- Concern from CCP that increase in market economy
will move the nation away from a communist party - Moving towards more open elections
- Media is still tightly controlled
57Policy Issues
- Social Welfare
- Rapidly aging population
- 71.7 of population is middle aged
- 91 literacy rate
- 95 of males and 86 of females
- Population and Migration
- 1.32 billion people
- 92 Han Chinese
- Very little migration of foreigners into China
except in large cities
58Policy Issues
- Environment
- Terrible condition
- 750,000 premature deaths caused yearly by air and
water pollution - Result of rapid development in cities
- Reform
- Cleaner Production Promotion Law
- Reform motivated by upcoming Olympics (not ideal
conditions for athletic competition)
59Process of Democratization
- Components
- Direct elections at village level
- Nomination process more open
- CCP restricts citizens from effecting real power
60Process of Democratization
- Factors
- State control of economy reduced(promote)
- Market forces play important role in aspects of
production(promote) - Private enterprises encouraged(promote)
- Economy opened for foreign investments(promote)
61Process of Democratization
- Deng Xiaoping Era brought about much more
economic, social, and cultural freedom, but the
CCP is suppressing the democratic idea to keep
power. - Consequences
- Economy increasing(positive)
- Tiananmen Massacre(negative)
62Relationship Between Economic and Political Reform
- Influence on degrees of inequality
- Effect of degrees of corruption
- Kai-shek's mismanagement of economy leads to
increased corruption, poverty and economic
inequality - CCP still represses individuality
63Economy
- Initially a command economy under Mao.
- First Five Year Plan (1953-1957)
- Yielded results, but created huge bureaucracies
and inequalities between cities and rural areas - The Great Leap Forward and the Cultural
Revolution, while both embodying Maos economic
philosophies, were less than successful. - However, Mao did create a substantial industrial
and technological base.
64Economy
- Pre-Tiananmen Square Deng Xiaoping made some key
changes from the Maoist policies. - State Control of the economy was significantly
reduced, market forces were allowed to play a
role in production - Private enterprise encouraged
- Economy was open to foreign investment
65Economy
- Post-Tiananmen Square Zhao Ziyang (formal head
of CCP) replaced by Jiang Zemin. When Deng died
in 1997, Jiang secured top leadership. Under
Jiang, China continued economic reform and
growth. Overall, the country was politically and
economically stable under Jiang. Economic growth
continues under Hu Jintao. This economy is
referred to as a socialist market economy. China
is dominating the global economy.
66Economy
- GDP annual growth rate
- 1983-1993- 9.5
- 1993-2003- 8.6
- 2002- 8.3
- 2003- 9.1
67Globalization
- China admitted to WTO in 2001
- Direct Elections in villages
- Legitimacy questionable
- 2008 Olympics to be held in Beijing
- Recognition of economic modernization and
emergence as a global power - An influential member of the UN
- Holds 1 of the 5 permanent seats on the Security
Council
68THE END