|
China at the Crossroads: Can
the Communist Regime Break the Social Contract to Carry out
Reform? |
Xiaonong Cheng
[The Article is
published in Dilemmas of Reform in Jiang Zemin’s China
(Eds. By Andrew J. Nathan, Zhaohui, Hong and Steven R. Swith.
Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publisher, 1999) as Chapter 7 with
the title of “Breaking the Social Contract”]
At the 15th
Congress of Chinese Communist Party in September 1997, Jiang
Zemin consolidated his power and appeared to be the consensus
head of a collective leadership. Both inside and outside China,
this “third generation of leadership” is seen as weaker and less
authoritarian than its predecessor. The current conduct of the
leadership, however, seems more courageous and capable than that
of Deng Xiaoping, because it has dared to conduct “shock
therapy” reform. In the past two decades, under Deng’s
leadership, China has achieved striking economic progress in
reforming state socialism, but it carried out unbalanced reform,
i.e., partial marketization under communist political rule.
Since the death of Deng, the government has shown its intention
of altering the strategy. It has announced a radical
reconstruction of the state sector which will lead to the laying
off of more than thirty million workers, which even Deng, the
iron-fisted leader, declined to adopt. Why does the regime now
choose an obviously risky course of action that may immediately
lead to social tension and political instability? Has Jiang
really become stronger than Deng, or has he obtained new
instruments to control the social and political situations? Can
China’s economic progress under “shock therapy” help the regime
retain its power over the next decade?
Discussion of these
questions requires a comprehensive understanding of the reform
strategy. China’s reform over the past two decades is often
considered a good example of putting economic reform ahead of
political reform, in contrast to Gorbachev’s Soviet Union which
gave priority to political reforms. Supported by the Chinese
case, pro-authoritarian theory suggests that market reform can
be successfully introduced only under an authoritarian regime
and thus economic reform must precede political reform. The
argument is that an authoritarian state is less dependent on
popular support than a democratic state, enjoys a greater
capacity to implement unpopular policies, and can thus behave as
the universalistic agent to ensure efficient economic
performance.
This conventional
wisdom ignores the fact that the Chinese communist regime is
dependent performance legitimacy and, therefore, upon welfare
oriented state-society relationship to sustain it during the
period of economic reform. The Chinese strategy of reform is
restrained by the state-society relationship. That strategy has
not only reduced significantly the capacity of the regime to
implement unpopular policies for economic efficiency, but also
has exhausted almost all available financial resources and thus
has shaken the legitimacy and survival of the regime. The “shock
therapy” program is not a well-prepared project with a clear
goal for constructing a real market economy, but an urgent
response to the failures of Deng’s reform strategy.
This essay employs
the concept of a social contract that provides a clue to the
relationship between reform politics and the economic situation
in the past decades. Unlike an analysis based on power struggle
or factionalism at the top, which may help to explain some
events, this approach brings society into the analysis of reform
politics, focuses on how economic reform is restrained by
societal responses, and, therefore is able to offer a new
explanation of the Chinese road to reform. The discussion
focuses on urban reform and the interaction between state and
urban society, because the decisive part of the state-society
relationship in China’s polity is the one between those parties.
The essay begins
with a review of economic reform over the past two decades and
employs the concept of a social contract to explain how the
state-society relationship during this period has changed from
“command and obedience” to “feeding and cooperation.” Following
is an explanation of why this social contract sustains, as well
as restrains, economic reform. Relying on the social contract,
the more the authoritarian state “buys” societal support and
political stability, the weaker the state is. Consequently, the
social contract has exhausted its financial resources and
necessitates radical reform. The essay concludes with discussion
of the current reform efforts. Any further economic reform has
to break the social contract, and, in turn, may damage the
cooperation between urban people and the regime and undermine
political stability. Solving the puzzle seems difficult for the
third generation of communist leadership. Very probably, the
“honeymoon” between urban society and the regime under the
social contract may come to an end, and be replaced by rising
social tension. Under the pressure of such tension, it is
uncertain whether the government can continue economic reform of
the state sector and at the same time maintain political
stability.
Reform under a
Social Contract in China
Reform in a
socialist country is a process of institutional transformation,
which involves redefining the interests of, and the relation
between, state and society. To understand the transformation
process, social scientists have tried various methods. Applying
the state-centered approach, some annalists emphasize the
predominance of the party-state over society, and explain the
reform path mainly through the intentions and options of the
policy-making elite and negotiations among them. Other
annalists, adopting the society-centered approach, see the
emerging civil society as an important determinant for the
evolution of reform. The former may overlook the possible
societal alienation from the state and the influence of popular
responses on the direction of state policy, and thus
overestimate the state's capacity of realizing its policy goals.
Bu contrast, the latter often give little attention to the
structure of state power and decision-making, and may have
difficulty in explaining when, why and how reform will take
place.
The reform process
and the transormation of institutions are not simply manipulated
by state, they are also shaped by society. Success or failure of
a reform depends upon both the actions of state and responses of
social groups. One way to better understand the possible
evolution and result of the reform is to introduce interaction
of state and society into analysis of the reform. The concept of
a social contract borrowed from Soviet studies can be used to
describe the evolution of state-society relationship in China.
It is useful to explain how the political relationship between
state and society helped China achieve progress in the economic
reforms of the past two decades, and why the relationship
finally undermined the efforts to maintain economic and
political stability.
To understand the
state-society relationship in the reform era, it is necessary to
know how societal actors and the state related to each other
within the state socialist institutions before reform. The
state-society relations of Mao Zedong’s era were “Command and
Obedience.” Monopolizing all political power and economic
resources and building up the people's worship of Mao and his
revolutionary ideals, the Communist Party favored loyalists and
punished dissidents in continuous political campaigns; thereby
the regime secured the loyalty and obedience of much of the
populace. The socialist system with a “Command and Obedience”
relationship strangled independent thought and creativity and
allowed the rulers to act arbitrarily. Consequently it brought
great waste and low efficiency in the economy and a low standard
of living for the people. Since rulers could not satisfy the
people with a better life, they had to suppress the masses by
ideology. Maintaining such a state-society relationship, the
rulers relied heavily on spiritual instruments, and citizens
only came to expect the satisfaction of minimum interests. From
an economic view, the obedience seemed to be at a low cost for
rulers, since people's material demands were suppressed and the
rulers did not have to provide a higher standard of living for
ordinary people.
Great institutional
differences could be observed between Chinese urban and rural
societies. While peasants were deprived of almost every
opportunity to live and work in cities without security, urban
society was dominated by the public sector economy. That sector
inckuded hundreds of thousands of state-owned “unit (danwei),”
industrial enterprises, stores, schools, institutes of research
and scholarship, in a pyramidal structure of primary
sociopolitical and economic entities under strict state control.
These units not only produced goods and services, but also
distributed urban welfare benefits and shaped the political
attitudes and the behavior of state employees. They were
responsible for a wide range of “cradle-to-grave” welfare
services on which state employees and their families depended.
This system did not allow employees to obtain from outside the
system the essentials of life—jobs, food, housing, health care,
pensions. Their very survival would be in question were they to
reject or even attempt to alter substantially this state of
dependency. Through “organized dependency,” i.e., state
employees’ economic dependency on their “units” and political
dependency on party and management, the Communist party was able
to force them to maintain control.
The differences
between rural and urban areas have contributed much to the
patterns of reform and have led to different results in rural
and urban reform. Rural reform liberated peasants from the
“People's Communes,” giving economic freedom at no cost. In this
way, the government exchanged economic freedom for political
support of the rural reforms with little risk for either the
government or peasants.
Urban reform was
not so easy reconstruction project, not only because the “hard
core” of state socialism is located in the urban areas and the
majority of the urban population live in “organized dependency,”
but also because urban society is politically more sensitive.
The urban population receives more education and information and
is more influential politically than the rural population. Urban
people work in the modern sector, which sustains the daily
operations of the system, and are more easily organized and,
therefore, carry greater weight in determining political
stability. They have been prohibited from any unofficial
organized activities, but are usually treated well in terms of
welfare provisions. Among the urban population, those who live
in the largest cities often get special treatment because of
their larger potential influence.
Private businessmen
benefit when retail trade is freed from regulation and peasants
benefit from price and land reform, but neither group is
politically powerful enough to promote thorough reform of the
state sector. Urban reform must confront the vested interests of
urban state employees. More than eighty-five percent of the
urban population in the 1980s and the first half of the 1990s
worked for the state sector or affiliated organizations. These
are people eager to adopt a modern life style but also anxious
to protect the benefits they derive from state socialism.
Encouraged by the
success of early reforms, the government decided to reform the
urban economic system in 1984. The motivation was utilitarian;
the government wanted partial reform without undermining the
political infrastructure and power of the party. The regime
never intended a thorough reform of the socialist economic
system, nor an abandonment of the basic aspects of the system.
The main thrust of
reform was the transfer of management decisions from
governmental departments to factories, which was intended to
increase industrial efficiency as drastically as the rural
reform. Decentralization would improve efficiency, but
centralized management was only one of the reasons for low
efficiency. Without eliminating the “soft constraints” relations
between the government and state sector, efficiency might
improve slightly though decentralization, while severe inflation
might occur.
Government
protection of the state sector and the socialist welfare system
were considered the “soft constraints.” From the purely economic
point of view, these constraints should have abandoned, but for
the political reasons, the government refused to withdraw
protection and to reform the welfare system. Economic problems
between the regime and the state employees could become
political problems between the state and the people. Protection
of the state sector and the welfare system are an important
instrument for the government in controlling the populace and in
maintaining its legitimacy.
Though the
communist regime is an authoritarian one, the imbalance between
state and society appears to be favorable to society. The
ability of the state to control has been weakened, without the
personality cult and without terror or political mobilization.
The regime has had to shift its claims to rule from teleological
beliefs to an emphasis on economic benefits to the people, i.e.,
seeking performance legitimacy, just as the post Stalin Soviet
regime did. The shift first led to intensive utilization of
welfare measures to maintain political rule. These measures
turned out to be more and more important as an instrument to
control and influence the urban people, and political
intervention became a weapon in reserve, while political
repression was used only as a tool to suppress dissidents. The
shift also led people’s evaluation of the regime to focus on the
role of government in providing social and economic benefits for
its citizens, thus shifting unconditional societal obedience to
a conditional pattern.
While the reform
regime relied upon the performance legitimacy and, therefore,
carried out only partial reform, this reform strategy was
actually welcomed by the urban society. Urban residents are
mainly employees of the state sector and their families, and
they have a quite different motivation for reform from that of
peasants. Rural reform was stimulated chiefly by peasants’
pursuing economic freedom, whereas urban reform has been largely
motivated by materialism. Urban workers, however, had two
motives. On the one hand, they want to continue their vested
interests, i.e., relaxed work disciplines, frequent promotion to
redundant positions and unemployment-free life in the state
sector, which could only come from the old socialist system. On
the other hand, they are eager to embrace new interests, i.e.,
higher living standards and more opportunities to make extra
money, which are only available from the developing market
system.
These two
expectations are not compatible, such expectations are
politically useful to the regime. The government's intentions
and the people's expectations are related. While the people
worried about the risks in the reform, the regime worried about
how its legitimacy might be shaken by thorough reform and the
possibility of unrest when people lose their vested interests.
Wanting to exchange economic benefits for political support, the
government avoided talking about the losses and risks, and
promised more benefits to console the people, and, in this way,
encouraged their high expectations and gained their confidence.
Expecting reform benefits promised by the government, the urban
population kept a positive attitude toward economic reform, and
became accustomed to have benefits delivered by the government.
To carry out
economic reform, the regime needs not only people's obedience
and obedience, but also their cooperation. First of all, the
reform requires the creativeness of state employees in
implementing policies of the government, as decentralization
provided them more independence and power in decision making.
Second, when labor discipline is tightened and productivity
targets are increased, workers' cooperation is necessary. Third,
and most important, the government has to expect the forbearance
of state employees once the reform damages their vested
interests. Traditional psychological instruments such as worship
of the supreme leader and propaganda about the necessity of the
policies no longer work, and the goal of economic reform and
modernization could never produce enough incentives to make
people work harder or sacrifice for the ruling party and the
state. The regime has had to appeal to economic interest to
elicit people's enthusiasm for reform and to secure their
cooperation.
Since the end of
the 1970s, the state-society relationship of “Command and
Obedience” has been replaced by a new pattern of “Feeding and
Cooperation.” In the new pattern, the state must offer people
more and more economic benefits and has to compensate for any
losses produced by the reform. Thus the government seeks public
cooperation and confidence in the reform, instead of simply
showing severity and the people accept and support the economic
and political requests of the state through cooperation, in
return for obtaining economic favors from the state. The urban
reform path is constrained by the state-society relationship.
The state-society
relationship in “Feeding and Cooperation” may be defined by the
concept of a social contract as used in Soviet Studies. Early in
the 1970s, the concept was developed to explain the stability of
the Soviet political system, and the perspective has been
developed further recently. The basic idea is derived from a
distinctive feature of the state-society relationship in the
Soviet Union. The state-society relationship is based on
exchange: both the regime and the population contribute
something the other needs for its survival. Thus a social
contract relationship between the state and society is
maintained, when rulers provide benefits and security, and the
people agree to acknowledge the legitimacy of the government,
and to support, at least passively, the established political
order.
Application of the
social contract concept to China can aid in understanding not
only the recent state-society relationship, but also the reform
strategy. In pursuing economic modernization, post-Mao leaders
adopted new political and economic policies, and these policies
led to a reconstruction of state-society relations. A key
question for the social contract is how the populace in the
social contract can prevail upon the state to grant economic
interests in a non-democratic country. Obviously, the
state-society relationship can not be defined as a social
contract if the government bestows favors on the people, the
people can not influence decision-making. The Chinese have had
no opportunities to choose their leaders by democratic
elections. A strict vertical social control system still works,
and officials appointed by the party are both the supervisors of
the people and nominally the political representatives for the
people. In such a political system, people can not influence
decisions of the state by political participation. Only the
government's aversion to social disaffection restrains
decision-making.
In the 1980s, such
a state-society relationship had never been fully and officially
planned, promised, or claimed, but was actually
institutionalized as operating principles guiding not only
economic and social policy, but also political policy. After the
Tiananmen demonstration of 1989, the social contract was openly
admitted by the government. For example, in his meeting with the
mayor and other local officials in the early 1990s at Shanghai,
Jiang Zeming, the General Secretary of the Communist Party,
suggested that “buying political stability with money” was a key
policy that local officials should understand. After the early
1990s, one can also find the expression in the official mass
media about “loans for political stability (an ding tuan jie dai
kuan).” It implied that local governments ordered local branches
of the state banking system to make loans to state enterprises
as part of the social contract.
The usual manner of
making concessions to the people's economic demands may take two
forms. When decision-makers become aware of serious
dissatisfaction, those most eager to stem dissatisfaction can
prevail by making concessions, which generally means offering
people more benefits or taking fewer vested interests from them.
Alternatively, the central government may tacitly consent to the
local governments making concessions to the people by abandoning
some aspect of the reform policy, so that the policy loses its
efficacy. Almost every official, even a factory manager at the
lowest level, understands and plays the game of politics quite
well. In such a way public attitudes have gained greater
influence on decision-making than ever before.
In the post-Mao
era, a significant difference from before is the weakened state
capability to control social disaffection, while more and more
disaffection appears in the course of reform. From the beginning
of the 1980s, the ruling party has gradually changed its old
social control method, and the state's ability to satisfy
people's material needs has become a self-imposed standard of
the party's legitimacy. The nature of “organized dependence” has
seemingly changed from Andrew Walder's original definition to a
new type of dependence in the social contract. In the past,
employees were dependent on the workplace for lack of any
alternative; now they are dependent as a result of high
opportunity costs. When consumer markets appeared and control of
labor mobility was loosened, employees of the state sector were
able to get necessities and services outside of their workplace
and could shift to other workplaces. In the social contract,
however, almost every state-owned work unit delivers a great
deal of welfare benefits, from luxury goods to free travel,
which are not available from private firms. The high welfare
benefits have rapidly raised opportunity costs of shifting to
the non-public sector, and maintained the economic dependence of
state employees on the state sector.
This state-society
relation creates a self-reacting process for both the government
and the people. Though the “exchange relationship” of the
government offering economic interests and the people offering
cooperation has never been presented in any official document,
both parties to the “exchange” know their own obligations
clearly from the behaviors and responses of the other party.
Once the sociopolitical relationship, “Feeding and Cooperation,”
has been formed and stabilized, both parties are inclined not to
destroy it. Today many state employees firmly support the
official claim about keeping the current system stable because
this means to them a stabilization of their social-economic
status under the social contract. The longer the government
maintains authority in this way, the more difficult it is for
them to find another strategy which would be more effective in
preserving its political power and achieving its goal of
economic development as well.
The social contract
has limited the goals of reform. Under the social contract, the
very nature of urban economic reform strategy became an effort
to straddle two systems: a gradually developing market system
and a remaining core socialist system. Some aspects of reform,
such as trade reform and tax reform, are relatively easy, since
these reforms need an effective central authority and the
authority is well maintained in the social contract. Other
aspects such as price reform, can be handled as long as people's
real income keeps growing, as is required by the social
contract. But some aspects of reform, such as bankruptcy of the
state enterprises or reform of the state banking system, are
completely constrained by the social contract and have made
little progress because these reforms may undermine the
institutional foundation of the social contract.
The government
recognized the necessity and urgency of enterprise and
employment reforms, and made decisions in support of these
reforms several times, but each time it has silently withdrawn.
In 1986, when the Bankruptcy Law, pushed by some reformers, was
discussed in the National People's Congress and met resistance
from both local governments and the official labor unions, the
central government agreed to add some restrictions to the law so
that it would not operate over the next six to eight years,
except in a few designated cases. In 1991, Deputy Prime Minister
Zhu Rongji, who was in charge of economic policy, supported a
local reform experiment to lay-off redundant workers in the
state-owned mining enterprises of Jiangsu province and urged the
entire state sector to follow the model. His instructions were
implemented by some managers, but soon several managers were
threatened by angry workers and one was actually killed. Zhu,
frightened by the workers' responses, simply gave up.
Can the Social
Contract Continue?
Maintenance of the
social contract and partial reform has had both positive and
negative effects. Reform has created opportunities for the
non-public sector and has stabilized the polity and economy for
a certain period, permitting economic growth and foreign trade.
But, reform has protected the institutional legacies of the
past, blocked further reform, allowed corruption, and, most
importantly, exhausted resources for the social contract.
Diminishing resources, a result of the social contract, makes it
more and more difficult for the government to keep the social
contract working.
Reform usually
requires a strong state as well as societal support. In a
politically and economically centralized system, reform implies
reducing the original state capacity. If societal support or
cooperation with the state is not available, the state may have
to “buy” societal support with economic benefits. An
authoritarian Communist state is strong in promoting some
economic reforms within the state apparatus and strong in
implementing political control or repression over dissidents,
but is weak in carrying out thorough reform within the state
sector and is feeble as well in protecting its remaining
resources. A dilemma may then appear: the more the state “buys”
societal support, the weaker is the state capacity; the weaker
the state capacity, the more the state relies upon “buying”
societal support for reform. This is exactly the situation
today.
The country has
received advantages from partial urban reform protected by a
welfare-oriented social contract. The reform has been “sweet”
for most state employees, since all their losses due to the
reform were compensated by other welfare measures, and,
furthermore, their total real income and consumption level
maintained annual increases of more than 5 percent since 1985.
Their standard of living rose, not because of any rise in their
productivity or any rise in the profit rate of the state sector,
but because the state was able to pay the costs of welfare.
Reform convinced the government that the more benefits offered
in a reform program under a social contract, the more stable the
reform process would be. The social contract and partial reform
were coexisted and were mutually supportive.
The social contract
produced the effects of political and economic stability, which
in turn led to confidence among the domestic population and
foreign investors, and, therefore, encouraged more domestic
savings and foreign investment, which were critical to economic
growth. The social contract thus sustained not only the reform
effort, but also political and economic stability and a good
growth record. This may also explain why the transformational
recession, which Janos Kornai suggested would be inevitable in
any transition, has not been seen in China, even in the state
sector.
The institutions of
the dominant state sector experienced only gradual change as
following. First, workers were able to influence wage raises and
promotions, and the distribution of bonuses and welfare. Second,
decentralization gave firms greater control over their revenues
and incentive payments, and factories sought to increase their
services and benefits for employees, which actually increased
the employees' dependence on the state sector. Third, the state
budget continued to provide subsidies, not only serving old
welfare aims, but also compensating for losses due to reform.
Fourth, the goods and services in the new market economy were
much more expensive, raising the opportunity costs for state
employees to make the decision to switch from the state sector.
As the state in exchange for the citizens' cooperation with the
communist regime offered more benefits such as jobs, housing,
healthcare, consumer and durable goods, and free travel for
vacations, the social contract not only strengthened people's
dependence on the state, but also shaped people's expectations
and behavior. This social contract worked for performance
legitimacy, but was unfavorable for marketization and economic
efficiency.
With that social
contract, Deng appeared to have found a balance between
political stability and partial economic reform, but balance was
achieved at a cost to the state and the public sector. Providing
social benefits proved more expensive than the cost of ruling
before the reform. Once the government had complied with demands
for better living conditions, the government has no choice but
to offer more economic benefits to the people.
A welfare-oriented
social contract may buy stability, but can not buy efficiency or
productivity. The social contract leaves workers limited
incentives to work hard and has actually encouraged economic
inefficiency. Using material incentives in the social contract
is not an effective stimulation for working, but is the
government’s way of securing public support. Under the social
contract and in the reform effort, the government plays a dual
role; it is the “boss” of the state enterprises in managing
their business, and the “father” of state employees responsible
for their well being. The two roles are contradictory. To play
the role of the “father,” the government should guarantee people
shared wealth. At the same time, in its role as “boss,” it ought
to distribute income according to people's differing abilities.
As solving this
dilemma proved impossible, the government chose to emphasize its
role as “father,” distributing income relatively equally. People
usually thought of the new benefits they managed to obtain as
welfare or “free lunch” from the government, not as rewards for
hard work. So workers were not motivated to work harder. In most
situations, rising wages did not increase productivity, but
reduced wages would definitely decrease it; the “material
incentive,” therefore, had actually become a way to prevent
productivity from falling, rather than to improve it.
The social contract
ties political stability to the state’s capacity to deliver
welfare. Since the state sector has been unable to provide the
welfare alone, the high economic cost of maintaining the social
contract has to be covered by other resources. The ability of
the regime to finance the social contract is a precondition for
the maintenance of the social contract. Whether the social
contract can be maintained in the long term depends on the
balance between the available resources and the resources the
social contract consumes.
The first and the
easiest source of funds is the state budget. Before reform, the
government carried out most investment in the planned economy,
financed by transferring state enterprise revenues to the state
budget. The government therefore directly controlled about one
third of the Gross National Product (GNP). Reform has reduced
the share of the state budget of GNP by decreasing the
transferred revenues from state enterprises and leaving those
enterprises to deliver welfare provisions.
Another possible
source of funds is the banking system. All banks are state-owned
and centrally controlled by the party-state as a machine to
collect savings and distribute financial resources. Individuals
can only put their savings into the state banks, but usually
cannot borrow from the banks for their own businesses. The banks
operate on instructions from the government and make loans
primarily to the state sector. As all bank directors are
appointed by the Communist Party, the banking system is actually
an extension of the state, and the banks function as a “second
state budget”. In considering the state’s financial capacity,
one should never ignore the state capacity built on the banking
system. The financial resources from the banking system are
greater than that of the state budget.
Before 1988, the
government relied mainly on the state budget to cover the
expenses of the social contract. Economic reform changed this as
more financial control was given to enterprises. The state
reduced its expenditures in line with reductions in its
revenues. The state’s share of national income steadily declined
from 35% in 1978 to 20% in 1988. Since then the state budget has
been unable to finance the social contract and the government
has had to find an alternative way to cover the welfare
expenditures of the social contract.
Since financial
liberalization was excluded from the reform effort and the
banking system remained a government monopoly, it was quite easy
for the government to make the switch from budgetary resources
to banking resources to finance the social contract. As the
household share of national income increased from 10 to 15
percent in the 1980s, the ratio of household saving to national
income jumped from 4% in 1978 to 15% in 1990. The government is
able to use those bank savings to fund the state sector.
Performance of the
state sector has experienced little improvement since reform
started, but state enterprises, fulfilling the social contract,
have increased wages, bonuses and welfare provisions, even when
the enterprises could not afford these expenditures. As a
result, operating costs of the state industries have soared
while profit declined from 15 percent in 1985 to 2 percent in
1993 and have remained low. This sector employs 45 million
people, but half of its enterprises have been money losers since
1995. As these enterprises made little or no money but had to
provide more wages and welfare to “buy” political compliance,
they became increasingly dependent on bank loans. The state
banking system was thus under constant pressure from the state
enterprises backed by the government to provide a steady stream
of credit. The state sector now gets 79 percent of national
financial resources, while the percent of its output in GNP fell
to 43 in 1994.
Financing higher
wages and welfare benefits through borrowing, many managers of
the state sector recognized that their priority was to make
their employees happy rather than to make or keep their
enterprises profitable. As loans were necessary to maintain the
social contract, many managers had no plans for paying back
these loans. Some of the poorest state enterprises were even
unable to pay the interest and the loans became “donations” from
the state banks. The government used personal savings for
political purposes, and the state banking system was required to
play a role like a “cashier” for the government and the state
sector. Thus, the social contract reinforced the “soft budget
constraint,” a well-known feature of a socialist system defined
by Janos Kornai.
It has resulted
into two consequences after using the state banking system as
the financial resources of the social contract. First, the huge
loans the state sector owed have become a heavy debt burden that
led many state enterprises to bankruptcy. Formerly, the state
sector had very few external liabilities; in 1979, for instance,
the sector only owed banks a sum equal to 26 percent of their
book value (depreciated fixed capital plus the value of all
inventories). This ratio doubled during the period from 1980 to
1989, and rose to 83 percent by 1994. The rapidly increasing
equity rate indicates that if debts are subtracted from gross
assets, the total net assets of the sector shrank during the
reform period, and the heavy external liabilities have resulted
in risks of more bankruptcies.
Second, as two
thirds of the state enterprises were struggling to survive and
could not repay the loans, by 1994, about 60 percent of bank
loans had turned out to be bad or dead loans. In a market
economy, once a bank is found to have such a high dead loan
rate, the bank is considered bankrupt. According to
international standards, technically the Chinese banking system
is already bankrupt, but, as the only banking system in China
and protected by the government, the state banking system will
not be closed but may be shaken by possible financial crisis. To
support the social contract, the banking system has almost
depleted its financial resources. In this situation the state
sector can no longer depend upon the banking system to obtain
financial resources.
While political
stability is a significant outcome of the social contract, the
contract has created several economic problems. For example, as
the decentralization gave local governments incentives to build
more new factories, it reinforced the typical socialist
“investment thirst,” and led to a waste of funds.
Over-investment can be found in almost every industry, and many
new factories built in the past decade have been unprofitable
since the day they opened. This is why China’s industrial
structural distortion has worsened.
Another example is
the growing urban-rural income gap, which has had an unexpected
negative impact on the state sector. Since 1986 most financial
resources have been put into the state sector concentrated in
the cities. And the urban-rural income gap, after a temporary
reduction from 1979 to 1985, grew again after 1986. The
difference is now even larger than in the pre-reform era, though
the government promises almost every year to reverse it. While
low rural purchasing power reduces the potential rural demand
for the low quality products of the state sector, the fast
growing urban consumption level stimulates demand for imported
goods and reduces the demand for goods from the state sector.
The state sector has received most of the country’s financial
resources, but has seen diminished domestic demand for its
products as well, and therefore hurt itself.
Maintenance of the
social contract is expensive. The financial resources from the
state budget and banking system were available only in the early
decades of the reform period. While the government continuously
raised urban living standards, as promised by performance
legitimacy, the high costs of the social contract have resulted
in an imbalance between the available resources and the required
resources. Once the resources from the state budget and banking
system have been exhausted, maintenance of the welfare-oriented
social contract will become more difficult economically, and
then, the “feeding and cooperation” relationship may have to be
altered.
Will the
“Honeymoon” between State and Society End?
The social contract
has sustained political stability and a partial economic reform
for almost two decades. To maintain the social contract,
available financial resources have almost been exhausted, and
further economic reform now appears to be inevitable. Any
further economic reform will have to break the social contract,
and, in turn, may damage cooperation between the urban
population and the regime and undermine political stability.
Solving the puzzle will be very difficult for the third
generation of communist leadership. Very probably, the
“honeymoon” between the urban society and the regime under the
social contract may come to an end, to be replaced by rising
social tensions. Under pressure of possible social tension, it
is uncertain whether the government will be able to continue
economic reform of the state sector and to maintain political
stability as well.
Since the beginning
of the urban economic reform program, reform of the SOEs has
fallen far behind other reforms such as price reform and
liberalization, and little progress has been made in improving
the efficiency of the state sector. Some Chinese economists have
appealed to the government for a thorough reform of the state
sector and also have warned many times of the danger of the
exhausting the financial resources, but their voices have been
ignored while decision making was restrained by the social
contract. It was only when the dead loans of the state banks
exceeded the security line of the banking system in 1995 and a
looming financial crisis threatened economic and political
stability that the government finally took action to protect the
banking system from collapse. To reduce loans for wages and
welfare expenditures of those nearly bankrupted SOEs, the
government quietly changed its employment policy and allowed the
SOEs to lay-off some redundant workers. Recent statistics
indicate that from 1995 to 1997 about twelve million employees
were laid off, about seven million of whom are now still
unemployed.
A consensus was
reached in the 15th Party Congress held that in order to save
the banking system from bankruptcy, the state sector must be
reconstructed by laying off more workers and closing those SOEs
which are losing money. If this reform is implemented, there
will be at least twenty four million employees laid off in the
next few years, and about one-fourth state employees may lose
their jobs at almost same time. The government is acutally aware
of the political risks of this program. But it must exclude a
large portion of the population from the social contract in
order to reduce that cost of the contract and thus save the
banking system and stabilize the rule of the communist party.
According to an
estimate by a former deputy director of the State Commission on
Restructuring Economic Systems, to carry out the program, the
government needs at least 2,000 billion yuan to repay part of
the bad loans to the banks. And it needs another 730 billion
yuan to build a safety net for unemployed people, whereas only
about 40 to 50 billion yuan each year is available. Without
sufficient financial resources, the “shock therapy” may cause
more severe social consequences than have occurred in the former
Soviet bloc.
Politically, the
reconstruction program implies that the government intends to
rescue the banking system at the cost of breaking the social
contract. While this will reduce the risk of economic
instability, it may undermine political stability. If the
“feeding and cooperation” relationship ceases to work, the
state-society relationship will be destabilized, and the
performance legitimacy the regime relies upon will be shaken.
At the end of the
1970s, the bankrupt orthodox ideology and personality cult of
Mao had seriously damaged the traditional legitimacy and
authority of the communist regime. People's loyalty to the
regime was gradually transferred in a pragmatic direction, i.e.,
to expectations that the regime could solve various economic and
social problems. The regime gradually changed its social control
method, from political and ideological mobilization to a
loosened political control with material incentives. Since then,
both the state and urban society have experienced a “honeymoon”
period in their interaction. Both parties thought that the
social contract satisfied their own interests and preferred to
maintain it. Such a “honeymoon”, however, is conditional; it
depends on the degree of realization of popular expectations and
the promises the regime has made. Once the state is unable to
meet society’s rising expectations, the social contract is
broken and the “honeymoon” will be over.
During the
“honeymoon,” people were encouraged to turn their concern to the
improvements in their living standards and they became sensitive
to changes regarding their new or vested interests. As soon as
people find themselves worse off due to economic reform,
extensive social dissatisfaction may appear. The reconstruction
program of the SOEs will withdraw most welfare provisions from
millions of employees and leave them unemployed without economic
or political compensation. Although the program is justified by
the rationality of economic efficiency, SOE employees will find
that they are required to make sacrifices. In such a situation,
the regime can no longer expect political compliance of these
people, and must find an alternative for the social contract to
maintain political stability and regain people’s cooperation.
It could be argued
that under threat of repression and strict control, the Chinese
people are atomized and depoliticized, and are socially and
economically dependent on and manipulated by the state or work
units. Therefore, they are unable to organize effective
collective action in behalf of their own interests and are not a
party in the bargaining with the government. So far, workers'
protests against pay-cuts and possible unemployment have been
small-scale and not a social movement, though some strikes and
collective bargaining occurred in 1989. What makes the state
nervous is the structured homogeneity of individuals' opinions,
which means that a spark might produce an extensive societal
response. The state responds neither to public opinion nor
organized interest groups, but to a spontaneous societal
reaction, which is often initiated by those in an unfavorable
situation in the reform. Under Deng, almost every time the
leaders confronted significant social costs or negative
political responses to reform policies, they retreated.
Society under an
authoritarian regime lacks organized bargaining power, and has
no independent leadership; however, discontent shaped by the
structured dependence upon the state sector may produce massive
unorganized collective action, even without an organized power
emerging. State employees enjoying the socialist welfare system
share the same opinion, in opposing reductions in welfare
benefits or reforming the socialist employment system. On other
matters, such as wage system reform, workers in the public
sector, party officials and intellectuals may have different
opinions, but relatively homogenous ideas exist within each
group. Individual dissatisfactions can be transformed into
institutionalized homogenous public disaffection.
Expression of the
popular disaffection has four stages. First, complaints begin in
private among relatives, friends, and others, but not with
superiors. Second, as more and more express the same sense of
dissatisfaction, they dare to talk about it in public places and
criticism of the government easily arouses a sympathetic
response in the populace, so that the dissatisfaction spreads
rapidly. Third, if the regime fails to solve problems, social
discontent may accumulate, and people may begin work slowdowns
as a way of protesting. Fourth, when people's dissatisfaction is
ignored by the government for a long time, they may doubt the
regime's capability and there will be a “crisis of confidence”
in the regime, party and system. People may keep their distance
from authority and refuse to obey orders from the regime, and
finally may withdraw their loyalty to the regime if there is a
chance to do so. Anger may rise, leading to public protests.
This may take the form of non-political, unorganized collective
action, such as panic purchasing, withdrawal of bank deposits,
and even demonstrations for economic purposes.
To be sure, the
regime will find it difficult to deal with the disaffection.
First, institutional barriers to the transmission of pubic
opinion make it hard to discover and respond to social
disaffection in its early stages. Once information about social
disaffection reaches the central government, disaffection will
already have spread. Second, having relied on the social
contract for two decades, the regime has become almost unable to
control social disaffection by the old instruments such as
Maoist ideology or extensive political persecution. When
official propaganda convinces fewer people and political
mobilization no longer works, the government actually lacks its
instruments to deal with dissatisfaction effectively. Third, the
regime cannot simply employ despotic power to repress social
discontent. Seeking legitimacy, the government can hardly reject
the economic demands of the populace or respond with political
persecution. Severe political persecution may also seriously
damage the reform efforts.
Throughout the
reform era, decision-makers at various levels often have been
motivated to make economic concessions. In addition to the
reasons already cited, social unrest can be used as a weapon to
attack those in decision-making positions in the power struggle
within the party. Worrying about people's passive withdrawal of
support may also interfere with economic performance and, in
turn, produce more social dissatisfaction, Chinese politicians
usually try to evade responsibility for any social unrest or
economic instability, and compromise economically with those
most disaffected people.
Today’s leaders are
weaker than Deng and need more societal support to carry out
their policies. The critical financial situation, however,
forces them to carry out a radical reconstruction program of the
state sector, though they lack the necessary financial resources
and political instruments. More likely, they dare not break the
social contract completely, but reduce only the range of welfare
provisions and decrease the number of people the social contract
protects. Even so, the social foundation of the Communist Party
will rapidly shrink and social conflict intensify. Under social
pressure the regime may vacilate in implementing the
reconstruction program and economic growth may gradually slow
down. Yet hesitation in the reform program can only make the
financial situation worse and lead to more tension, which may,
in turn, call for political reform.
The social contract
has helped the communist regime keep itself away from the
pressure of democracy but will ultimately undermine the rule of
the regime. Radical reform can save China from a threatening
collapse of the banking system, but cannot help the regime
retain its power. The looming financial crisis probably
signifies a turning point on the road to reform. The gradual and
peaceful reform process under the social contract may come to an
end, and a swifter and more profound transition may occur,
propelled not only by the goodwill of policy designers, but also
the pressure of the conflicts in the current political and
economic system.
Notes:
------------------------------------------------------
1 Andrew J. Nathan,
“Even Our Caution must be Hedged,” Journal of Democracy 9
(January 1998): 62-63.
2 Jose Maria
Maravall, “The Myth of the Authoritarian Advantage,” in Economic
Reform and Democracy, eds., Larry Diamond and Marc F. Plattner
(Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995), pp.
13-14.
3 Victor Nee
and David Stark, “Toward an Institutional Analysis of State
Socialism,” in Remaking the Economic Institutions of Socialism:
China and Eastern Europe, eds., Nee and Stark (Stanford:
Stanford University Press, 1989), pp.1-31.
4 Janine
Ludlam, “Reform and the Redefinition of the Social Contract
under Gorbachev,” World Politics 43 (January 1991): 284-312;
Linda J. Cook, The Soviet Social Contract and Why It Failed:
Welfare Policy and Workers' Politics from Brezhnev to Yeltsin
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993).
5 Andrew
Walder, Communist Neo-Traditionalism: Work and Authority in
Chinese Industry (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1986); Kenneth Liberthal, Governing China: From Revolution
Through Reform (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., Inc., 1995).
6 Central
Committee of Chinese Communist Party, “Zhonggong zhongyang
guanyu jingji tizhi gaige de jueding” (“Decision of the Central
Committee of Chinese Communist Party on Reform of Economic
System”) Renmin ribao (People’s Daily), October 21, 1984.
7 Janos
Kornai, Economics of Shortage (Amsterdam: North-Holland Press,
1980).
8 Samuel P.
Huntington, The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late
Twentieth Century (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press,
1991), pp.50-51.
9 Stephen
White, “Economic Performance and Communist Legitimacy,” World
Politics 38 (April 1986): 462-82.
10 Ludiam,
“Reform and the Redefinition of the Social Contract under
Gorbachev,” pp. 284-312.
11 This
information is drawn from an interview the author did with a
former official of City Government of Shanghai in 1997.
12 Walder,
Communist Neo-Traditionalism, p. 224.
13 Janos
Kornai, “Transformational Recession: A General Phenomenon
Examined through the Example of Hungary's Development,” Economic
Appliquee XLVI (1993, No.2): 181-227.
14 Barry
Naughton, Growing out of the Plan: Chinese Economic Reform, 1978
- 1993 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995), pp. 104-5.
15 Walder,
Communist New-Traditionalism, pp. 237-40.
16 Naughton,
Growing out of the Plan, p. 31.
17 Cheng
Xiaonong, “Gaige zhong guomin jingji shouru liucheng de bianhua”
(“Changes in Distribution of National Income in the Process of
Reform”) Zhongguo: Fazhan yu gaige (China: Development and
Reform) 8 (August 1987): 17-24; “Gaige zhong de hongguan jingji:
Guomin shouru de fenpei yu shiyong” (“The Macroeconomic in the
Process of Reform: Distribution and Use of National Income”)
Jingji Yanjiu (Economic Research) 8 (August, 1987): 16-28.
18 Xiaonong
Cheng, “Distribution of National Income during Economic Reform,”
Working Paper (San Francisco: 1990 Institute, June 1991);
Naughton, Growing out of the Plan, p. 85.
19 Cheng,
(fn.17 & 18).
20 Cheng
Xiaonong, “Weichi wending yu shenhua gaige: Zhongguo mianlin de
jueze” (“Transition versus Stability: China’s Dilemma”) Dangdai
Zhongguo yanjiu (Modern China Studies), 1 & 2 (March 1995): 95.
21 Wenwen Niu,
“Jianshao guoyou qiye de kuisun: jinhou de jianju renwu”
(“Reduce Losses of the State Sector: A Tough Task in the Next
Years”) Jingji Ribao (Economic Daily), December 11, 1997.
22 Naughton,
Growing out of the Plan, p. 205.
23 Cheng
Xiaonong, “Fanrong cong he er lai?--Zhongguo jingji xianzhuang
he qushi de fenxi” (“The Puzzle of China’s Economic Prosperity:
Problems and Perspectives”) Dangdai zhongguo yanjiu (Modern
China Studies) 3 (October, 1996): 31-6.
24 Kornai,
Economics of Shortage.
25 Cheng,
(fn.20), p. 97; Gao Shangquan, “Guoyou qiye de zhidu chuangxin
he fazhan ziben shichang” (“Institutional Innovation of State
Enterprises and Development of Capital Market”) Jingji cankao
bao (Economic Information Daily), September 30, 1997.
26 bid.
27 Cheng,
(fn.23), p.51.
28 Survey
Department of Household Income, State Bureau of Statistics,
“Woguo cheng xiang shouru chaju wenti yanjiu” (“On Urban-Rural
Income Gap in China”) Jingji Yanji (Economic Research) 12
(December, 1994).
29 Zhongguo
gaige bao (China Reform News), January 21, 1998.
30 Gao
Shangquan (fn.25).
31 ibid.
32 Xueguang
Zhou, “Unorganized Interests and Collective Action in Communist
China,” American Sociological Review 58 (February 1993): 54-73.

|