For over a decade, China's industrial and military strength has expanded with breathtaking speed. As one economist succinctly noted, China's economic growth "is losing its capacity to shock . . . however astonishing it would be elsewhere."[1]
Despite China's signal disinterest in human rights (either for its own people or anywhere else), its equanimity toward nuclear proliferation, its insouciance about environmental degradation, and its border harassment of neighbors -- from Japan to India, from the South China Sea to tiny Bhutan, and (of course) Taiwan -- for many policymakers, China is increasingly considered too big to challenge.
This is not good. Managing China's rise requires a quiet, coherent, multi-dimensional, and disciplined strategy that must be coordinated with allies and friendly democracies. Crucial to achieving America's strategic policy goals is consensus among the world's democracies to "balance" China's rise. The key obstacle to consensus is China's sheer economic weight and its willingness to use that weight to punish its adversaries and reward its friends. Unless the United States is able to focus our own friends on the magnitude of the task at hand and lead them in addressing it, the world's democracies will ultimately acquiesce in the undemocratic and irredentist nature of Beijing's worldview.
America has confronted assertive authoritarian dictatorships with absolute authority over large economies in the past. But, false perceptions of the Soviet economic strength aside, in the past century the United States has never had to deal with a competitor of such economic, industrial, political, and -- soon -- military weight.
Some U.S. politicians hope to wish the problem away and "look to China" to do the right thing. President George W. Bush is "optimistic about China's future" because, he believes "young people who grow up with the freedom to trade goods will ultimately demand the freedom to trade ideas."[2] A soothing thought, but history suggests that "freedom to trade goods" never, of itself, leads to democracy, which is why the Chinese Communist Party is comfortable with it.
Wealthy State, Strong Army
The swift pace of China's economic and military growth is undeniable, and China's ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leverages this new power to legitimize its rule.
Since 2004, China's gross domestic product (GDP) has doubled in U.S. dollar terms. Its industrial sector is growing even faster.[3] And the Chinese government officially acknowledges military spending growth of 17–18 percent annually -- about $59 billion in 2008[4] -- while U.S. intelligence agencies suggest China's total military outlays are between double and triple Beijing's announced figures.[5] Chinese military industries claim average annual revenue growth of 21 percent for the past three years.[6]
Even if Americans do not yet understand what is happening to their nation's global economic leadership, the Chinese do. China's leaders see economic might as an essential prerequisite to military power, which is, in turn, essential to the perpetuation of its economic expansion. This is the "Wealthy State, Strong Army" (fu guo qiang bing) doctrine of the Qin emperor, which animated the creation of the first great Chinese empire 2,200 years ago. "Wealthy State, Powerful Army" has been restored to China's ideological lexicon, placing the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) at the center of the country's development strategy.[7]
Because military armaments research, development, manufacture, and service are grounded in the industrial sector, the fact that China now possesses the world's second largest industrial sector should be cause for concern. China's industry is nearly 70 percent the size of the U.S. industrial sector and is growing at 13 percent a year, while U.S. industrial growth was 0.5 percent in 2007. These trends mean China's industrial sector will indeed overtake that of the United States -- a scenario most recent estimates predict will occur by 2017,[8] although some estimates see it happening within a year.[9]
As China's People's Liberation Army continues to field new classes of super-quiet nuclear submarines with heavy loads of advanced ICBMs, top line jet fighters, and a dazzling array of new space systems, the strategic importance of China's industrial and manufacturing sectors will eventually become apparent to America's political leaders and national security officials. But such a revelation has yet to occur.
A Powerful Party Controls the "Middle Class"
Of course, there are those who believe that China will mellow in its own way and in its own time. Those believers point to the mechanism of a growing "middle class" that will demand peace and stability from the regime and will exert adequate restraint on state power. About 5 percent of the population consists of CCP members.[10] About the same number are "middle class."[11]
As it turns out, nine out of 10 of China's wealthiest people are CCP members.[12] A confidential survey of Chinese incomes conducted by the Central Party School Research Office in March 2006 reflects that, under the heading "private ownership of property (foreign property not included)," some 27,310 Chinese own property valued in excess of 50 million yuan (about US $15 million). And 3,220 people own in excess of 100 million. Of this latter figure, 2,932 people -- 91 percent -- were identified as "children of senior cadres" -- and those 2,932 people held "assets valued at 2.045 trillion yuan."[13] The same report also claimed "in the cities, income of middle and high-ranking bureaucrats already exceed the income of civil servants and mid-income people in developed countries in Western Europe and the United States." This statement could not possibly be true -- unless, perhaps, it includes institutionalized corruption.
The above-cited statistics make one fact clear: The CCP is quite adept at using its full panoply of economic and internal security instruments -- as well as its newly rising "middle class" -- to undergird its legitimacy.[14] With its new industrial primacy in Asia, China is now building military power capable of enforcing its external goal of strategic political, military, and economic preeminence in Asia -- the outward manifestation of the CCP's continued "Mandate of Heaven."
A Necessary Skepticism
China's external behavior provides no solace to those hoping to see the rulers in Beijing turn into "responsible stakeholders" in the international community. For example, the new Chinese superpower still aids and abets regimes that engage in:
- Genocide in Sudan,
- Repression and political terror in Zimbabwe
- Unremitting oppression in Burma, and
- Nuclear proliferation in North Korea and Iran.
These are but pieces of a long-term pattern indicating China has little prospect at this point of becoming a responsible global power.
Unless the next President of the United States adopts greater skepticism toward China's future intentions; reaffirms America's commitment to like-minded economic, political, and security allies around the world; and seeks aggressive enforcement of the global economic rules it has done more than any other nation to establish, there will be precious little to prevent China from changing the geo-political rules to suit its own interests. The United States certainly needs to balance China's rise, but it also needs to create and nurture a balance of forces in favor of economic and political freedom.
John J. Tkacik, Jr., is Senior Research Fellow in China, Taiwan, and Mongolia Policy in the Asian Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation.