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Socialist Action / July
1998
BOOK REVIEW: Which Way for
China?
Maurice Meisner, ''The Deng Xiaoping Era: An Inquiry Into
the Fate of Chinese Socialism, 1978-1994." New York: Hill
and Wang, 1996. 544 pp. $30.
By PAUL SIEGEL
The year 1996 witnessed the publication of two books that
sought to give a Marxist analysis of Chinese society today,
Robert Weil's "Red Cat, White Cat," which was reviewed in
the April 1998 Socialist Action, and Maurice Meisner's "The
Deng Xiaoping Era." Weil is a Maoist sympathizer; Meisner
may be characterized as a left social democrat.
Both basically agree in their perception of the great
accomplishments of the Chinese revolution, their recognition
of the disasters that accompanied these accomplishments
under Mao (although Weil is much more defensive concerning
them), and their presentation of the Deng era as one of
rapid industrial growth occurring in the midst of widespread
popular dissatisfaction and social instability.
The two books complement each other, each offering
valuable information not given in the other. Their
analytical accounts in good part are consonant with each
other despite the political differences between the two
authors.
Each has its own strengths and weaknesses. Meisner's
book, which is almost twice as long as Weil's, has greater
depth of scholarship, having a wider range of sources.
Unlike Weil, Meisner, who is the author of many books on
Chinese history and politics, is able to read Chinese.
Meisner's chief weakness is that he does not perceive the
Chinese revolution as part of an uneven process of world
socialist revolution. He does not recognize how revolution
in one country can stimulate the revolutionary movement
elsewhere, and the failure of revolution in capitalist
countries stimulate the growth of counterrevolution in
postrevolutionary societies -- with the final victory of
socialism possible only after a socialist revolution in a
number of advanced capitalist countries.
Meisner has a rigidly deterministic view of socialist
revolution, in which it can only come about after a country
has experienced a prolonged period of capitalism.
It is as if an obstetrician at a childbirth were to say,
"Stop! This baby is premature. Premature babies face grave
dangers. Let us wait until it is more fully developed."
Meisner would have benefited from a reading of Michael
Lowy's "The Politics of Combined and Uneven Development,"
which analyzes recent world history, including the Chinese
revolution, in accordance with Trotsky's theory of permanent
revolution. Neither Lowy nor Trotsky are listed in his
nine-page bibliography.
Stalinist program of "stages"
Meisner approves of Mao's early concept of "New
Democracy," during which there would be a prolonged period
of "national capitalism" after a revolution in China, and is
puzzled as to why Mao abandoned it after the revolution
indeed took place. This concept of necessary stages is a
Stalinist one but is derived from the social democrat
Kautsky, who regarded the Bolshevik revolution as premature.
Lowy, however, cites an article written by Ernest Mandel
in 1950 in which he stated: "The [Communist Party]
... wanted a pause before the stage of struggle against the
'national' bourgeoisie, but the launching of land reform in
the south made this struggle an immediate priority. ... The
whole logic of the situation imposed the conclusions of the
Trotskyist theory of permanent revolution."
In addition to the impulsion of the class struggle by the
poor peasants, the threat of American capitalism represented
by MacArthur's "march to the Yalu" during the Korean War was
no doubt also an important factor in the speeding up the
process.
Another error of Meisner is his deriving the bureaucratic
authoritarianism of the Chinese Communist party from Lenin's
concept of a centralized party and from what he calls the
"Leninist single-party system." In reality, Lenin's
Bolshevik party was characterized by an extremely vigorous
internal democracy, and the idea of a one-party system was
foreign to Lenin's thought despite its identification with
Lenin as a result of Stalinist falsification eagerly seized
upon by capitalist propaganda.
He formed a coalition government with the Left Social
Revolutionaries after the October Revolution and hailed the
Hungarian revolutionists in 1919 for uniting all socialist
parties in the government. It was only when the revolution
was in dire peril during the civil war that the Bolshevik
government outlawed other parties, but Lenin regarded this
as a temporary, necessary evil, not a desirable system.
The bureaucratic authoritarianism of the Chinese
Communist party was the product of its acceptance of
Stalinist doctrine. Contributing factors were its
militarization in commanding a peasant army and China's
situation as a beleagured backward country.
The great value of Meisner's book is his refutation of
the notion, presented as axiomatic in the capitalist media,
that capitalism will bring democracy to China.
Meisner regards China as already having an "essentially
capitalist mode of production," although, he says, it is a
capitalism of a "peculiarly bureaucratic kind" and is "not
fully developed." But Meisner demonstrates that since, as he
says, "the coercion of the market is enforced by a
repressive state apparatus," the market needs this apparatus
and will not free society from it.
Yet Meisner's analysis is incomplete. It does not take
into account the fact that China's nationalized property and
its state monopoly of foreign trade, although eroded, still
remain for now as a bulwark against the full restoration of
capitalism.
The Democracy Movement
The best part of Meisner's book is the more than 70 pages
in which he describes in vivid detail the Democracy Movement
of 1989 and the Tianenmen Square repression.
The Democracy Movement is generally portrayed as one of
idealistic young students yearning for American-style
democracy. But Meisner, using numerous eyewitness accounts,
shows how incomplete and superficial this depiction is.
At its height the Democracy Movement, which had begun as
a student movement, became a huge mass outpouring in which
at least one million and perhaps more than two million
people rallied in defiance of the regime, most of them
marching with their work units, each work unit carrying its
own banner. All occupations were represented, but
outstanding were the hundreds of thousands of workers from
the factories.
The students wanted only freedom from Communist Party
controls. As one American observer, Orville Schell, said,
"They just wanted the government to acknowledge" that they
had "something to contribute." They had many criticisms but
did not have "inappeasable resentments toward the
leadership."
For workers democracy meant freedom from the tightening
work rules under the control of an officialdom whose market
policy was bringing inflation and job insecurity.
Illegal labor unions, newly organized, protested against
the bureaucratic use of power to gain wealth. As one of
their declarations stated, naming specifically Deng and the
other leading figures of the party: "These 'people's public
servants' have used the blood and sweat of the people to
build palatial retreats; ... to buy foreign luxury vehicles;
and to go abroad on pleasure trips."
Although the populace of Beijing was inspired by the
heroism and self- sacrifice of the students occupying
Tianenmen Square and came out in their defense in a
tremendous show of unity, "democracy" was an amorphous term
whose meaning was not always exactly the same.
Less mentioned in foreign new stories than the famous
"Goddess of Liberty" figure modelled on the Statue of
Liberty constructed by the students is the fact that at the
meeting at which it was displayed, the huge crowd, 100,000
strong, joined in singing "The Internationale," mightily
proclaiming that justice was thundering condemnation of the
system.
A Chinese participant, quoting a line from "The
Internationale" from the French version not known to
Americans, contrasted this rally with that in Tianenmen
Square during the Cultural Revolution: "Two decades ago it
was all about 'the great liberator, Chairman Mao'; today it
is 't'Jo Saviour from on high elivers!" The working class
was announcing that only the working class itself can bring
about its own emancipation.
It was the popular participation in the demonstrations
that caused the party leaders to conclude that the movement
had to be crushed by the army.
The casualties were not so much in the Square, where the
crowd had been greatly depleted in the face of the
threatened attack, as in the outlying working-class
neighborhoods through which the army had to pass to reach
the Square: "It was in these residential areas, far from the
cameras and minds of foreign news correspondents, that the
greatest slaughters took place."
Following the Beijing Massacre, angry demonstrations were
held in dozens of cities across China. It is estimated that
over 40,000 people were arrested, thousands jailed, many of
them beaten and tortured, and hundreds executed. "Most of
those arrested, and virtually all who were executed, were
workers."
In the years since, rapid industrial growth has been
accompanied by unevenness of income gains, loss of job
security, and the erosion of welfare provisions. Worker
resistance was growing as of 1994, as indicated by numerous
reports of showdowns, demonstrations, and other such
"incidents."
"It is likely," Meisner concludes, "that movements of
resistance to the Chinese Communist dictatorship will assume
both a socialist and a democratic character. Any viable
movement for democratic socialist change must ultimately be
rooted in the proletariat. For China is now an
industrialized country, no longer a predominantly agrarian
land."
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