By Ian
Bremmer JULY 3, 2012
This piece
originally appeared in Reuters Magazine.
As Europe’s
leaders struggle to restore confidence in the single currency and America ’s economy limps ahead at a painfully
slow pace, China ’s
economy continues to power forward at its now characteristically strong clip.
For
the past three decades,
Such
appearances, however, are misleading. The appeal of state capitalism lies in
its ability to withstand the occasional crises that afflict market systems,
thus shielding the general population from politically inconvenient
disruptions. It is a system in which the state uses state-owned enterprises,
national champion firms, sovereign wealth funds, and politically loyal banks to
dominate the process of domestic wealth creation. To be sure, this is not
communism; significant segments of state capitalist economies are in private
hands. But the state plays the largest role in ensuring that market forces
serve political ends—by ensuring that, profitable or not, businesses invest in
projects that bolster social stability and protect the ruling elite’s political
control.
State
control is not the future of capitalism. It is a dead end from which China will have
to free itself if it is truly destined to dominate the world economy. As a
system and by design, state capitalism ensures that wealth creation does not
threaten the leadership’s hold on political power. Its ability to stimulate
growth and general prosperity is a secondary benefit. Forced to choose between
public wealth and political survival, state capitalists will always protect
their own interests first. In China ,
as elsewhere, commercial activity depends on access to information, and the
Internet provides the best and most efficient access to it. Yet if the Internet
threatens to enable popular resistance to China ’s authoritarian government,
and if political officials have the means to shut the Internet down, even
temporarily, they will do just that.
State
capitalism’s greatest weakness lies in its intolerance of “creative
destruction,” a process that invests liberal capitalism with vital
self-regenerating momentum. The liberal capitalist model makes it possible for
the workers, resources, and ideas invested in a dying industry to spontaneously
recombine in novel configurations to produce goods and services that satisfy
emerging demand. But the economic engineers of state capitalism fear any form
of destruction that develops beyond their control. This is why state-owned
companies, which build influence within government over time, often succeed in
resisting the need to adapt to changing times.
Then there
is the question of openness. Within autocratic state capitalist systems,
government-owned companies like China National Petroleum Corporation and some
of the Arab world’s sovereign wealth funds shun the transparency that long-term
resilience and adaptability demand. This opacity can benefit a country’s ruling
elite by hiding unsuccessful investment decisions, but it is very harmful for
the system’s long-term health. When such institutions can hide their failures,
they are free to inflict much more lasting harm than they otherwise could.
Managed
capitalism also falls short when it comes to exploiting innovation, though
government-directed investment can play an important role in the development of
new technologies. The Internet arose from a U.S. government subsidized defense
project, but it was profit-driven companies that developed and reimagined the
Internet and thus transformed the world. History shows that over time state
officials never value assets and allocate resources as efficiently as market
forces can.
Even in China , state
officials understand that citizens are the engine of economic vitality. That is
why the state has embarked on an historic and ambitious plan to shift wealth
from China ’s
largest companies to the country’s consumers. China ’s leaders know that the next
generation of economic growth must be less dependent on exports to Europeans
and Americans; creating domestic consumer demand is crucial. Thus the process
of empowering Chinese consumers will undermine state capitalism’s appeal even
within the country that has made this system so seductive
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