Push driven by a conviction that markets and entrepreneurs are not to be fully trusted; ‘the market-reform camp is all but gone’
Xi Jinping, long distrustful of the private sector, is moving assertively to bring it to heel.
China’s most powerful leader in a generation wants even greater state control in the world’s second-largest economy, with private firms of all sizes expected to fall in line. The government is installing more Communist Party officials inside private firms, starving some of credit and demanding executives tailor their businesses to achieve state goals.
In some cases, it is taking charge entirely of companies it regards as undisciplined, absorbing them into state-owned enterprises.
The push is driven by a deepening conviction within the country’s leadership that markets and private entrepreneurs, while important to China’s rise, are unpredictable and not to be fully trusted. The view that state planners are better at running a complex economy has gained currency this year, with Beijing relying heavily on state directives to engineer a V-shaped recovery from the shock of Covid-19.
Mr. Xi has made his priorities especially clear in recent months. In September, the party issued new guidelines for private companies, reminding them to serve the state and vowing to use education and other tools to “continuously enhance the political consensus of private business people under the leadership of the party.”
WSJ
China’s Xi Ramps Up Control of Private Sector. ‘We Have No Choice but to Follow the Party.
2 comments:
long distrustful of the private sector
As if there can truly be a private sector with government-privileged private credit creation or government-run private credit creation!
Talk about contradictions!
So China isn't any smarter than the West to think they can run an economy without proper feedback, i.e. an honest money system.
Still, maybe China will be quicker than the West to put limits on land ownership and thus, in that regard, conform to the Bible more than the so-called Christian West.
Old Chinese proverb: Don't let your dog poop on the trail.
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