China is undergoing one of
the great economic transformations in human history. It has moved from
communism toward what it calls "market socialism" at breakneck
pace, and enjoyed double-digit economic growth as a result.
As an inevitable
consequence, the grip of central state power has begun to relax. Even such
draconian policies as the one-child-per-family rule are loosening in
practice if not yet in law.
Sino-American relations are
poised to enter a new era of cooperation and trade--if the U.S. warhawks
don't get in the way. Commentators such as A.M. Rosenthal of the New York
Times call attention to the persecution of Christians in China, and no
doubt there is truth here. But he wants to use this as justification for a
new round of interventionism and China bashing.
Others think the U.S.
should cut off trade relations as a way of pressuring the regime toward a
greater recognition of human rights. Some others decry China's
"interference" in American politics, as if the U.S. hasn't had
something to say about Chinese politics in the past. Others still believe
American policymakers "lost" China in the 1940s, and want to
enlist Cold War tactics to get it back.
Much of the confusion stems
from the tendency to think of China as an inherently collectivist society,
just as some mistakenly regard Russia as inherently authoritarian. This is
far from the case.
In Economic Thought before
Adam Smith, Murray Rothbard noted the three essential schools of Chinese
thought: Taoism, Confucianism, and Legalism, all established from the 6th
to the 4th century B.C. These worldviews focus respectively on the
individual, the family, and the state. Chinese history has been an
ongoing, interacting tension around the points of that triad.
Confucianism stresses
patriarchy and family relationships. It has not been friendly to market
ideas, but, in its original form, it did not extol the state as the
"father figure." Confucius even put the military state outside
the social structure, writing that "A man does not use good iron for
nails, nor good men for soldiers."
Even closer to
individualist thinking is Taoism, formed by Lao Tzu, a contemporary of
Confucius. He taught that individual happiness is the basis of a good
society. He saw the state, with its "laws and regulations more
numerous than the hairs of an ox," as the persistent oppressor of the
individual, "more to be feared than fierce tigers." He was an
opponent of taxation and war, and his students and the tradition that
followed him were consistently libertarian.Natural law ideas are inherent
in both the Taoist and Confucian worldviews, and the Confucian idea of
sagacious judges building up a series of precedents to draw upon is
nothing if not the basic concept of Anglo-American "common law."
In contrast, the Legalism
of Chin Shih Wang Ti, the first great Emperor who unified China more than
two millennia ago, has much in common with Mao's conception of Marxism and
Western ideas of Positive Law. But even using mass murder and totalitarian
control, the Great Unifier was no more successful than the Communists at
building a Chinese religion around statism.
The statism of the Legalism
tradition has always been tempered by Taoist individualism and the
Confucian emphasis on the family. Together, Taoism and Confucianism form a
strong cultural resistance to imperial state ambitions. With the
resurgence of the market economy in China, the Tao, especially, appears to
have more than nine lives.
Chinese history has also
been what the Chinese call "the eternal struggle between the Imperial
Dragon and the Local Snakes." Americans ought to relate. Our own
history has been a similar struggle between advocates of republican
decentralization, based on natural rights concepts not unlike those of the
Taoists and Confucians, and the positive-law statism of proponents of
centralization and empire. The great strength of the market economy, of
course, is that it is inextricably interwoven with decentralization.
In the last 150 years,
Western relations with China have backed the Imperial Dragon, big
governments always preferring to deal with other big governments. This had
tragic consequences for people and trade relations on both sides. In the
U.S., the federal government has expanded at the expense of individuals,
families, localities, and states; similarly in China, the "Imperial
Dragon" has grown at the expense of the "Local Snakes."
Yet the individualist
tradition owes much to China. In the early modern period, the West was
fascinated by the wealth and creativity of China. It was China's political
theorists who first saw the loss of the "mandate of Heaven" as a
justification for political change. This is surely a step beyond the
notion of the "divine right" of kings favored by some Western
conservatives.
H.G. Creel and other
Sinologists have observed that Thomas Jefferson's good ideas on education
bear a striking resemblance to those of Confucius, probably acquired from
French thinkers much enamored of China. And as European bureaucratization
increased early in the nineteenth century bolstered by the ideas of
Positivism, it was Alexis de Tocqueville who referred to its rise in
France as "le system chinois."In the 1940s, Chiang K'ai-shek's
hyper-inflationist government, despite help at various times from the
U.S.S.R., Germany, Japan, and the U.S., had lost legitimacy among large
numbers of the Chinese people. In 1944 the Communists, meeting in Yenan
concluded that, given Stalin's hatred toward them and help for their
enemies, the best hope was to look toward the U.S.
U.S. policymakers rejected
that overture, and the U.S. intervention in Korea and Vietnam brought
relations with China to a low point. Ironically, it was the great
"China Basher," Richard Nixon, who initiated a rapprochement
with the Communist regime.
Faced with the overwhelming
reality that socialism meant bankruptcy and barbarism "and impressed
by the free-market successes of the Asian tigers" reformers in the
Chinese government began market reforms in 1979. These reforms have made
remarkable advances despite such tragedies as Tiananmen Square.
With the Cold War over,
some restless Americans urge a "get tough" policy with China.
Such pressures are counterproductive when applied to individuals and even
more so to a country with China's cultural tradition.
Instead, we need to be
supportive of that Taoist individualism that is thousands of years old,
not just dating from the market reforms of 1979.
The important step toward
the establishment of freedom and human rights--and the two are not
separate--is to build up the rule of law. Traditional Chinese concepts of
law are actually closer to those in the West than many realize.
One aim of the
"Cultural Revolution" in the decade after 1966 was to destroy
the law schools, libraries, and faculties where the Chinese were
attempting to adapt their system to Western ideas of law. The more
creative faculty and students were sent to work on farms or clean toilets,
or put in prison or worse.
Since 1979 the Chinese have
mounted a massive effort to recapture that lost ground. But law schools
and legal traditions are not built overnight. We need to support those
making such efforts, however, not aid their enemies by China bashing.
The Tao, with its emphasis
on individualism, non-aggression, and voluntary exchange, was the
progenitor of modern libertarianism and Austrian economics. It is basic to
the rise of the market economy and the decline of socialism in China.
Following those principles means working at the level of people to people,
and business to business, getting involved with government at the local
and provincial levels, if at all, and stopping the bashing and
warmongering.
FURTHER READING:
Joseph Needham, Science and
Civilization in China: History of Scientific Thought (Cambridge University
Press, 1956);
Murray N. Rothbard Economic
Thought Before Adam Smith (Edward Elgar, 1995);
Jonathan Spence, The Search
for Modern China (W.W. Norton, 1990).
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