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OpEdNews Op Eds    H4'ed 3/31/16

China Is Already Living in 2020

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Reprinted from Strategic Culture

The fourth session of the 12th National People's Congress opens at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 5, 2016.
The fourth session of the 12th National People's Congress opens at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 5, 2016.
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Consumed by myriad manifestations of its existential crisis, as usual the West neglected or underestimated the biggest show in Chinese politics: the famous two sessions -- of the People's Political Consultative Conference and the National People's Congress, the top legislative body -- which ended up approving China's 13th Five-Year Plan.

The key takeaway was Premier Li Keqiang stating Beijing boldly aims at an average growth from 2016 to 2020 above 6.5 percent a year -- based on innovation. If successful, by 2020 no less than 60 percent of China's economic growth would come from improvements in technology and science.

President Xi Jinping was even bolder, promising to double China's GDP by 2020 from 2010, along with the incomes of both urban and rural residents. That's the practical meaning of the Chinese Dream, Xi's immensely ambitious official policy, and the contemporary translation of a fairly comfortable life for all -- what Little Helmsman Deng Xiaoping promised almost half a century ago.

Economically, Beijing's road map ahead includes liberalizing interest rates; keeping the yuan stable (as in no spectacular devaluations); and controlling abnormal flow of cross-border capital effectively. For this massive collective effort to bear fruit, Premier Li went straight to the point, hard work is essential. And that will translate into zero tolerance for messing it all up, and room for correction for those who made mistakes. Innovators will be handsomely rewarded.

Xi's Chinese Dream is now hitting high-speed rail velocity. The 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), in 2021, is practically tomorrow; thus the rush towards the avowed goal of building a modern socialist country. And yet doubling up GDP is a larger than life endeavor when you have a rapidly ageing population, massive property overhang (and that's a euphemism) and rising debt.

Everything will have to be perfectly calibrated. For instance, China used more cement between 2011 and 2013 than the US used in the entire 20th century; and a lot of it was just for nothing. As Jia Kang, a Political Consultative Committee member stressed, the 6.5 percent is an iron bottom that should never be broken... if growth slows to approach the bottom, there will be pro-growth policies.

Enter Xiconomics

Even with the economy slowing to 6.5 percent a year, Chinese GDP is forecast to reach 25 trillion yuan ($3.8 trillion) more in 2020 than in 2014; to put it in perspective, this excess roughly matches Germany's entire GDP.

Premier Li, in a very Chinese way, commented that in 2016, the Year of the Monkey, he's bound to wield the mythical monkey's gold-banded cudgel to smash all obstacles that may prevent Beijing from reaching its ambitious economic targets.

Enter, thus, Xiconomics. Xiconomics is the successor of Likonomics -- which implies that Xi, and not Li, is the real driver of China's economic reforms, although it is Li who holds a doctorate in economics from Peking University.

Everyone in China is talking about Xiconomics since the People's Daily ran a series extolling Xi Jinping's economic thought. In practice, this amounts to Xi heading the Central Leading Group for Comprehensive Deepening Reform and the Central Leading Group of Finance and Economics Affairs. In China, these two bodies are usually presided by the Prime Minister.

The 13th Five-Year Plan is heavily imprinted by Xiconomics. It's crucial to note that before the final version was drafted, Liu He, Xi's top aide, had been on the phone a lot with US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew; they extensively discussed China's exchange-rate policies.

One of the key aspects of Xiconomics is Beijing preferring mergers and acquisitions of state-owned enterprises instead of privatization. Economists interpret it as Xi bolstering state capitalism to tap plenty of overseas markets -- many of them virgin -- to make up for slowing domestic growth.

And that leads to the crucial importance of the New Silk Roads -- or One Belt, One Road (OBOR), according to the official Chinese terminology. State-owned enterprises will play a key role in OBOR -- which will be essentially creating Eurasia integration via an immense trans-Eurasian emporium.

OBOR happens to be the only global economic integration plan in play (there are no Plan Bs), implying almost $1 trillion in future investments already announced. Last June, China Development Bank announced it would invest an astonishing $890 billion in over 900 OBOR projects across 60 countries. And that will include a crucial, 2,000-mile long high-speed railway from Xinjiang to Tehran, an essential part of the growing energy/trade/commerce China-Iran strategic partnership.

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Pepe Escobar is an independent geopolitical analyst. He writes for RT, Sputnik and TomDispatch, and is a frequent contributor to websites and radio and TV shows ranging from the US to East Asia. He is the former roving correspondent for Asia (more...)
 

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