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Modern China

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Commerce did not develop; China turned inward at a time when the world was opening. ... poor treatment of the citizenry lost them public support during the civil war. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Modern China


1
Modern China
  • Understanding China by Ju Yanan
  • Ju looks at China by asking a series of questions
    key to understanding its economic and political
    place in todays world
  • Is China a world power? Is it for real? Recall
    that the USSR collapsed utterly after 75 years,
    the last 40 of which it spent as a world power
    second only to the U.S. China is 50 years old and
    in the last 5 parlayed its economic reforms of
    the last 20 years into recognitioncan it
    overcome its problems and develop?
  • To what extent will the Chinese economies
    (collectively) change the global economy? China,
    Taiwan, Hong Kong and businesses in SE Asia
  • Why does doing business with China requires you
    to understand how the Chinese conduct business
    among themselves?
  • How likely is democracy to replace 4000 years of
    central government?
  • Will China overcome the endemic corruption at its
    core? Corruption and lack of Confucian moral
    governance has plagued China since the 1300s.
  • What future steps ought China take to achieve its
    goals? With 1.25 billion people and the 3rd
    largest land mass in the world there are critical
    needs.
  • What is the role and future of the family in
    China in the 21st C?

2
Modern China
  • China in 2000 as predicted by Lu
  • A reasonably solid economic, financial and
    technological foundation will position China to
    compete favorably against the US and EU for a
    larger share of the global economy.
  • The PRC will lead Hong Kong and Taiwan economies.
  • Overseas Chinese will be key to Chinas economic
    progress.
  • The EU and US will compete with Japan for the
    China market.
  • Chinas infrastructure will improvetransportation
    business.
  • Political reform will be slow or not at all
    (dont expect democracy).
  • Consumerism will reach a new high in China.
  • Pandemic corruption could hold China back, impede
    progress.
  • Education of the masses is key, along with moral
    values, and must be promoted.
  • Chinas population size is its enemy, and will
    continue to impede the pace of economic and
    social development.
  • You will have the job of examining one of these
    predictions in detail, and reporting on China in
    2000, 50 years after its last unification under
    central governmental leadership.
  • See http//www.china.org.cn/english/shuzi-en/en-sh
    uzi/index.html 50 Years of the Peoples Republic
    of China (ISBN7-9900020-46-2/Z) 2001
    http//www.asiasociety.org/arts/chinaphotos

3
Modern China
  • Prelude to the Last 100 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 1
  • Southern Song fell to the Mongols under Khubilai
    Khan in the 1279 his Yuan Dynasty had Beijing as
    its capital.
  • Yuan was foremost a military machine but once it
    took over China, its troops had to earn their
    keep by agriculture and generally were poorthe
    fighting capacity of their hereditary military
    households deteriorated the officers formed a
    segregated and self-perpetuating salaried
    aristocracy.
  • Illiterate and unfamiliar with Chinese culture,
    they ruled through W Asians and even a few
    Europeans (M. Polo) while the Song avoided
    government service they were tribal and selected
    successors by the collective assembly of chiefs
    (the Chinese expected hereditary succession) the
    exam system was suspended so the Yuan banked on
    the local, unschooled town clerks to serve.
  • Internal unrest, disastrous military campaigns
    against Japan and SE Asia left the unsinicized
    Yuan open Man(chu) in 1364.
  • The unemployed Chinese scholars during Yuan
    invested in significant private scholarship and
    neo-Confucian ideas of governance that stressed
    loyalty to its ideals before dynasty.

4
Modern China
  • Prelude to the Last 100 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 2
  • Ming ruled from 1368-1644, saw a doubling of
    population and modest peace, advance in education
    and philosophy, literature and art, and a vibrant
    elite gentry society.
  • Its first emperor was, by birth a peasant, who
    kept his understanding of the countryside in mind
    during his 30 year reign.
  • Much time was spent on the military, to protect
    against Mongols one way was to make his military
    leaders nobles of greater rank and wealth than
    were the Mongol generals and ruled with an iron
    fist he beheaded his prime minister in 1380 for
    treason and everyone in his guanxi network, some
    400,000.
  • He did away with high ministerial office and
    tried to micromanage through a growing body of
    eunuchs.
  • There was financial disaster since there was no
    differentiation between government and imperial
    funds.
  • Later Ming emperors adhered to his government
    structure and were unable to change it to meet
    cultural changes. Commerce did not develop
    China turned inward at a time when the world was
    opening.

5
Modern China
  • Prelude to the Last 100 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 3
  • Institutional adaptation was the first challenge
    of the Man of Manchuria--to go beyond tribal
    politics. In 1600 they adopted terminology,
    forms and ideas of Confucianism and used them as
    they were meant to be used, to support and
    maintain political authority. In 1644, Ming
    sought Man help in quelling rebellion but once in
    China Man turned the tables on the Ming, defeated
    them, took the Beijing capital and within 20
    years all of China.
  • As the Qing Dynasty, Manchu people ruled China
    from 1644-1911.
  • Man had less cultural differences with Chinese
    that did Mongols.
  • 3 early scholarly emperors reigned 133 years with
    dedication and ability.
  • Man maintained their ethnicity by forbidding
    Chinese immigration to Manchuria, by practicing
    endogamy, eschewing Chinese customs such as foot
    binding, and maintaining their own language.
  • Man royal princes were given wealth but no land
    base for any power build-up.
  • Military control was maintained by strategically
    placed banner garrisons and a army of Man troops
    (Chinese troops were provincial militia only).
  • Civil and provincial administrations appointed a
    Man and a Chinese (two provincial governors,
    etc.) and drew the best from the exam system.
  • Man killed its opponents but recognized the
    status of Chinese gentry families that accepted
    Qing rule (symbols shaved forehead queue). The
    strategic elite of local leaders began with 1
    million lower gentry (first level degrees) and 5
    mil. male commoners with some learning. Their
    charge was to indoctrinate the masses.
  • Indeed, Man took the Mantle of Heaven but the
    price of alien despotism was eternal vigilance
    and quashing anything remotely seditious.
  • Emperors were patrons who encouraged literature
    and arts but paranoia about being alien led to
    expunging books that reflected negatively on
    non-Chinese rule.
  • Qing won control over NW Mongolians and ruled
    through their civil administration.
  • Like the Mongols, Man had little interest in
    expanding commerce or sea trade.

6
Modern China
  • Prelude to the Last 100 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 4
  • Our perusal of the centuries from Yuan to late
    Qing is a brief overview, noting the key changes
    but not repeating sociological details.
  • Chinas population increase, especially during
    Qing, from 160 million to 400 million, was due to
    peace, better crop varieties, greater yields, and
    newly opened lands. Crop yields outpaced
    population growth.
  • The climate did experience a period of warming.
  • Earlier ripening varieties of rice permitted two
    crops/year.
  • Corn was introduced from the Americas for
    marginal dry land farming.
  • Sweet potatoes offered the highest yield of any
    crop in sandy soil.
  • Investment in irrigation was continuous and
    important.
  • At the same time, the production per worker
    declined as reclaiming land, terracing, etc.
    increased the labor input requirements farm size
    decreased.
  • Scholars estimate 80 mu (12 acres)/family in 500,
    25 in 1100,
  • Agricultural invention slowed after Song as the
    labor force increased.
  • Loss of land/farm and productivity of the farm
    labor was exacerbated by reduced woman-power
    through the cultural practice of footbinding.

7
Modern China
  • Prelude to the Last 100 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 5
  • The expansion of Chinas domestic trade began
    with agriculture and while the merchant class was
    growing in strength and capacity, it was at the
    mercy of corrupt officials wanting
    payoffsmerchants never broke free of official
    supervision.
  • Merchant-official symbiosis characterizes
    Qingproduction was taxed and supervised by
    officials and the state retained its economic
    prerogatives (monopolies, etc.).
  • A pre-modern financial system inhibited commerce
    (usury) as did state competition and oversight.
  • Limitations of the law failed to foster commerce
    law was chiefly penal, subordinate to morality
    and aimed to preserve orderthe Confucian
    hierarchy of relationships.
  • Law did not deal with commerce or local
    issues--business disputes were settled within the
    guilds, interfamily issues through negotiation.
  • Under these conditions, Qing would be and was
    slow to industrialize.
  • Nonofficial capitalist enterprise and state
    fostering of industry were limited and
    constrained by Chinese culture ideas in the
    18th C.

8
Modern China Fairbank 202 treaty ports
  • Prelude to the Last 100 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 6
  • Qing population in 1800 was huge and people
    vulnerable to drought, flood, famine and disease,
    problems the government could not meet indeed
    domestic rebellion, foreign invasion and a ruling
    elite that aimed to control both and preserve its
    rule weakened China in the 19th C and are a
    preview of Chinas woes in the 20th C.
  • The White Lotus Rebellion 1796-1804 was a
    peasant-supported uprising against their plight
    that cost 5 yrs. of state revenues to put down.
  • Chinese who defied Ming and Qing and engaged in
    maritime activities were poised to expand into
    international commerce as opportunities such as a
    week Qing allowed.
  • European and other maritime traders offered
    Beijing a piece of the trade action but were
    rebuffed, although they were opening up the China
    trade.
  • Rebellion on the Turkistan frontier, 1826-35
    further distracted Qing it settled commercial
    issues there by giving local commercial
    concessionsa model it would apply to Britain
    with disastrous results.
  • Britain demanded to deal with Qing officials
    rather than middle-men, tantamount to diplomatic
    equality and flouting the tribute system China
    retaliated by outlawing opium, lost the 1839-42
    Opium War, gave up foreign concessions (foreign
    jurisdiction over foreign nationals) to Britain,
    the US and France, and a host of other rights
    China gave up Hong Kong to Britain, the 1st of 5
    treaty ports (later 80!).
  • In all of the treaties of the mid 19th C Qing
    benefited less than its partner.
  • Mid-19th C brought the Great Taiping
    Rebellion/civil war other flare-ups.

9
Modern China the last emperor
  • Prelude to the Last 100 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 7
  • The last half of the 19th C saw the continuing
    decline of the Qing along with attempts to absorb
    new ideas from the W, beginning with armaments,
    science and technology, all the while trying to
    retain Chinese values. This led to reaction
    against all things western from the conservative
    scholarshampering industrialization though
    there had been tacit official approval.
  • The defeat in 1894-95 by Japan in the NE can be
    laid at the feet of the imperial monarchy, the
    superficiality of its administration and its
    inability to be a modern central government. To
    pay off the Japanese, China went deeply into debt
    with Europe and those countries gained more of a
    foothold in China.
  • To most Chinese, and especially the gentry,
    Christian missionaries were the ideological arm
    of foreign aggression in the 17th C (it was
    banned 1724-1846) and again in the 19th conflict
    was deep.
  • Treaty rights included setting up missions
    through China, with 1300 Americans, Canadians and
    British at 500 stations (church, school, clinic)
    but only 60,000 converts (clearly, China was not
    to be a Christian nation).
  • The crisis and humiliation of the late 1800s let
    to a reform attempt that culminated in the 40
    reform decrees aimed at modernizing China this
    led many to joining the Boxer cult (a commoner
    movement to rid China of foreign imperialists).
  • The Boxer Rising of 1898-1901 was defeated and
    Chinese collaborators under protocols signed with
    11 foreign powers were executed, examinations
    were suspended in 45 cities, the foreign quarter
    in Beijing was enlarged, and 25 Qing forts were
    dismantled plus, Qing agreed to pay a huge
    amount.
  • The Confucian-based system of government that
    stressed good conduct was disgraced and
    demoralized by this capstone of insults at the
    hands of foreigners. What would follow was a
    change in government-gentry relations.

10
Modern China
  • Prelude to the Last 100 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 8
  • 1901-12/16 saw the gentry support the dynasty
    against the Taiping by militial bureaus in the
    countryside supported by loyal soldiers and
    funded by gentry followed by gentry-elite active
    in reviving Confucian education and joining
    government followed by nationalist reformists
    that found the Qing too slow and incapable of
    leading.
  • It was too late by 1900 for the Qing court to
    centralize power at Beijing major governors were
    firmly in charge at the provincial level,
    including in foreign relations. Modernization of
    education was resisted, moves against footbinding
    and opium war rebuffed, and constitutionalism in
    Japan were touted.
  • Such changes precipitated power struggles within
    the central government and between it and the
    provinces.
  • Japanese constitutionalism was a model some
    wanted to impose on Qing however, reform simply
    could not overcome the insoluble system problems
    and the revolution of 1911 set up a short-lived
    republic in 1911 (Sun Yatsen) followed by the
    dictatorship of Yuan Shikai.
  • Unfortunately, conservatism thwarted any social
    revolution, military governors became warlords,
    the Neo-Confucian revival failed to gain wide
    support in the cities. Lineages were preserving
    their local dominance.

11
Modern China
  • Prelude to the Last 50 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 1
  • The Republic of China is a complex period
    (1912-49) there was a great influx of foreign
    goods, ideas and ways warlords unsettled the
    countryside and foreigners were in economic and
    administrative roles in treaty ports.
  • Nationalist sentiment against foreign imperialism
    grew.
  • Merchants acted as middle men in international
    trade, taking commissions and fostering native
    banks they adopted new technology (transport,
    etc.) by royal edict their status was up-graded.
  • They formed Chambers of Commerce and nation-wide
    associations that helped free them from
    government control.
  • Scholars left office and formed the New Culture
    Movement aimed to study discard old values that
    held China back, modernized the written word
    (into vernacular Chinese), and studied the new
    ideas of Post WW I Europe (socialism, rights of
    labor women, etc.).
  • WW I benefited Chinas merchants who supplied
    needed raw materials as industrial growth took
    place (cotton mills, flour mills, cigarette,
    paper and match industries. Growth during the
    period 1912-20 was 13.8 annually, modern banks
    developed, electric power was used. Guangzhou
    (Canton) and Shanghai were major centers with new
    organizations, internationalism, joint stock
    companies (heavily family-based). Merchants were
    alienated from the dynasty yet needed a strong
    modern government to fend off outsiders and quell
    warlords.
  • The May 4 Movement (1919) was sparked by Western
    peacemakers who left former German concessions
    in Shandong in Japanese hands--students,
    merchants, labor and scholars boycotted Japanese
    goods, held strikes, etc.
  • Some scholars among them formed a Chinese
    Communist movement.

12
Modern China
  • Prelude to the Last 50 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 2
  • Reunification of warlord-divided China took 30
    yrs., a period of historical confusion because of
    several parallel processes in action.
  • On the international front 1) the 1920s Rights
    Recovery Movement aimed to abolish the
    inequalities in the treaties with the W. 2) and
    in 1931 energies were diverted to patriotic
    resistance to Japanese invasion war--1937-45.
  • In domestic politics a united front of two party
    dictatorships pursued unification Chinese
    Communist Party and Nationalist Party.
  • The West encouraged reform over revolution for
    China, the USSR violent revolution it hedged
    bets by aiding both the Chinese Nationalists and
    the Communists
  • The parties had cooperated and competed in the
    1920s to smash warlords and roll back
    imperialists, became deadly enemies in 1927, and
    both fought against the Japanese 1937.
  • A key name is Sun Yatsen, the symbolic senior
    figure of the Revolutionary League that took over
    after the coup over Qing Sun found in communist
    support in his Nationalist cause.
  • His untimely death in 1925 opened the door for
    Chiang Kaishek (Jiang Jieshi) who ousted the
    leftists and communists in purges from 1927 on,
    declared his Nationalist government which was
    internationally recognized in 1928.
  • The Nationalist (Guomindong) government lacked
    leadership, was corrupt allied with the S.
    Chinese mafia (Green Gang), and unable to govern
    400 million Chinese Jiang soon moved toward
    fascism with himself as dictator.
  • Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931, diverting
    energies Nationalists wooed Nazi Germany but its
    links to Japan ended that promising alliance
    shortly after 1937.

13
Modern China MAP 307
  • Prelude to the Last 50 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 3
  • As the Nationalists struggled to built up the
    military to fight Japan, the communists (CPP),
    once 60,000 strong but reduced by the purges of
    1927, struggled to survive in countryside
    outposts.
  • Mao Zedong provided the ideology and organization
    to raise the revolution after 1931, expanding CPP
    bases by force and guile.
  • Mao had to build an army (Soviets helped with
    arms), build peasant support, and avoid Jiangs
    army. Nationalists using German strategies for
    combating the CPP guerilla tactics in 1934 forced
    Mao and his followers on The Long March.
  • The year-long Long March began with 100,000 in
    Jiangsi and ended with fewer than 8,000 in
    Shaanxisurvivors became the aristocracy of the
    1949 Revolution Mao continued to build peasant
    support for revolution.
  • The war against Japanese aggression was dictated
    by Moscow in 1935 and alliance with Jiang in
    1936. Mao made the strategic decision to have
    separate armies and continued to convert
    liberated areas to his movement, establish
    autocratic power there, and prepare for the
    eventual revolution.
  • Whether Chiangs party could have led China to
    modernization had the Japanese war not allowed
    the CPP to rebuild, is unclear the West backed
    Jiang because of the CPPs ideology and ties to
    the USSR.

14
Modern China MAP 313
  • Prelude to the Last 50 Years Late Qing-1949
    Revolution 4
  • Militarist Japan tried to conquer China by
    seizing Manchuria in 1931 and began a full
    invasion in 1937, aiming to conquer China bring
    it into the modern world it didnt expect its
    aggression to bolster nationalism.
  • During the 1937-45 period, Japan occupied large
    chunks of China and its populous Jiangs Free
    China was large but CCPs area in the west was
    smaller.
  • Jiangs Nationalist regime was conservative and
    won few hearts liberals tended towards the CCP
    ideology and even left Nationalist areas to move
    to the CCP stronghold.
  • 1937-45 there was war on two frontsNationalists
    and CCP against Japan CCP and Nationalists
    against each other.
  • The West foresaw the likelihood of a Chinese
    revolution after the Japan war and the strength
    of the CPP the US unwisely declared its support
    for the Nationalists and Jiang.
  • In 1936 Mao rewrote Marxist-Leninist communism in
    Chinas image, focusing on the peasant masses
    (not the alienated working class) CCP cadres
    worked to improve the lot of the peasantry while
    fighting Japan.
  • Japan was defeated in 1945 and shortly thereafter
    civil war broke out in China.
  • Nationalist incompetence in the field,
    mismanagement of the economy and poor treatment
    of the citizenry lost them public support during
    the civil war.
  • The army did not even try to gain local support
    in the field it feared the Man in Manchuria so
    made no allies there its tactics didnt include
    fighting and night it moved slowly. Further,
    Jiang repeatedly made inept field decisions,
    micromanaged the war and ignored US advisors.
  • Maos writings assert the need to consult the
    masses and allow them some level of say in
    government at the same time they extol the need
    for central control and central
    leadership--During the civil war, the CCP
    undertook land reform to gain peasant support.
  • It gained support from the beleaguered Man in the
    NE who had suffered under the Japanese and
    defeated the Nationalists.
  • Many battles ended with Nationalist
    surrender--the CPP entered Beijing in 1949 in US
    trucks led by US tanks captured from the
    Nationalists.
  • What was left of the nationalists fled to
    formerly Japanese-ruled Taiwan as the Republic of
    China, recognized by the US as the rightful
    government of all China led by Jiang.

15
Modern China
  • FILM The Last Emperor
  • Review, select scenes up to Cultural Revolution.
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