When Does the Chinese Century Begin?

“Why do you want your son to get to know China?” James asks. We’re sitting in the sun, by a rushing canal in beautiful Lijiang Old Town.

“Well,” I say. “I’m British. The 1800s were our century. The 1900s were America’s century. And the 2000s will be China’s century.”

This isn’t, as my ma points out when we talk on Skype later, precisely accurate. A better system would date Britain as a world power from the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars, after 1815, the US from the end of World War I, the last and most disastrous of a series of costly wars (sound familiar?), after 1918.

And China — well, I’m wondering quite when people will date the Chinese century from. 2020 has a nice kind of symmetry, though I don’t know how auspicious it is in Chinese astrological and number terms.

But Z, a child of the new millennium, thinks we’re already in it, here in 2011, his eleventh year.

“Everything’s made in China now,” he says. “Nothing’s made in America. They have more American money than America does. They’re buying up most of Africa and they have a monopoly on virtually everything.”

In the short time we’ve been here, there have been moments that feel significant. We watched the launch of the first module of China’s space station.

The guys at state TV set the montage to the tune of America the Beautiful. A sense of humour? Or just the knowledge that the hundreds of millions who tuned in would neither know nor care?

Still, as a friend observes on Facebook, there’s a poetry to it. China launching their first station as the American space programme goes down — and playing an American anthem…

An innocent mistake? It could have been. Since the Deng Xiaoping era in the 1980s Chinese schoolchildren, who put in punishing hours of school and homework, have learnt not only the geography of Asia, Western Europe and Latin America but every state of the US and its capital. They don’t, however, learn American music.

Over green tea, we talk with James for a bit about debt, the downgrade, the fact that China holds more dollars than the US, now.

“But we’re poor people,” he says. “China is poor! This is what we can’t understand. Why are we poor people lending these rich people money?”

But, I think, this was how it went with America. There’s a Gilded Age in China now, when the rich are super-rich, and consume to bust, the poor are poor and work incredibly hard to get richer.

And, as America got rich lending and selling into Europe — proceeds made off the back of its hardworking poor — China is getting rich selling into the US and Europe. Funding, in effect, as America did for us, wars that our country could not afford.

Another turning point? Back from our trek in Tiger Leaping Gorge, I check the Guardian to see what’s been up with the world in our absence.

A headline leaps out at me:

“US and China Call for Eurozone Action”

“The world’s two economic superpowers,” the article states — matter-of-factly.

How long, I wonder, before there’s only one? A decade? I’ve been reading Thomas Friedman’s The Lexus and the Olive Tree, a book that strikes me as on some levels strangely prescient and on others a wild misfire.

He praises Enron. The new modes of financing, the miracle that means you can slice up a bundle of mortgages and they become (deep breath now!) risk-free.

The things that the 99% are now Occupying Wall Street for. Will it change anything? Probably not.

When Z was a toddler, we marched with over a million others through London against the Iraq War. Our government went in anyway.

In China, you can see the growth. The new roads. New railways. New buildings. New stores. New cities. Everywhere you look. Even the supermarkets are bigger here.

You see the hot chicks in their designer labels, the politicians in their luxury watches — graft features here, as it did during the American Gilded Age — tiny jade abacuses, an executive toy, selling for tens of thousands of pounds.

You can also see the grinding poverty. A mentally ill woman gathering medicinal herbs, dressed in rags, in the mountain.

Is it a good thing, this handover of power?

You could argue that it’s bad. China executes slightly more people per head of population than the US does; it tortures slightly more; its people are much less free.

You could argue that it’s good. China’s interventions in the outside world to secure its interests are more mercantile than military — buying up water for hydro-electricity rather than bombing the Middle East for oil.

I don’t think it’s a bad thing, or a good thing. It’s, well, a thing.

Empires rise and fall. They always have, and until humans find a better way to get along, they always will.

And I’m curious to see how this great nation, a mother of invention with the longest continuous history in the world, adapts to its position centre stage.

That said, by the time Z’s children are old enough to explore, I don’t think it will be Westerners exploring China.

There will be millions upon millions upon tens of millions of Chinese exploring the West. We won’t, most of us, be able to afford to do the return journey.

The first person on the moon was American.

The first person onto Mars?

My money’s on Chinese.

But what do you think?

11 Responses

  1. Lluís says:

    I think this 21st century the world is going to be run by people who speak Chinese and English, and of course China is #1 candidate to be leading superpower. How to deal with that is something that West may not be ready to understand how to do it yet…. We’ll see! Nice post!

    • Theodora says:

      Thanks for your comment, Lluis. It feels much more obvious when you are here and can see not only the scale of the place but the wealth and the energy. I don’t really see another candidate out there at the moment, though, of course, times change. I wonder, also, whether we’re looking at a both more fragmented – Catalonian independence, Scottish independence — and more federated Europe. But time will tell. And, I think, I’ll plough on with Chinese for Z’s sake. It will stand him in good stead, I figure.

  2. Ainlay says:

    All I know about China now is that I don’t know it. The diff bet rich and poor. culturally now is vaster than between the Appalachian hills and Hollywood in the US. I also will never understand how billions of people can switch from total allegiance to one philosophy to a completely and totally different set of beliefs not once, but twice in 50 years. In one family the grandparents could have bowed to godlike emperors, the parents served in the communist red army and now their children are devoted to making money.

    • Theodora says:

      It’s interesting, isn’t it? I think the belief system switch is an interesting one. China had a long, long history of peasant revolts, stretching back hundreds of years, so the turmoil from 1911 (and the Boxer Rising and the Taiping in the previous century): and there’s a lot more continuity between the imperial cult and the personal cult of Mao than one would think. Did you see that book that’s in all the bookshops? Chairman Mao: Man not God. It’s by his bodyguard. Explains a lot, I think.

      I’d agree the disparities are huge. But so are the disparities between one generation and the next. Mind you — in terms of transitions — the American South has gone from segregation to a black president in the same timespan between the cultural revolution and fervent capitalism. Our guide today grew up wishing that when he was an adult he had the money to eat meat once a month…

      And, god, I don’t know China either. Looking forward to discovering more of it, though…

      • Ainlay says:

        That is a good point about the American south – I guess since I’m there I hear more about about how unhappy they are with the switch and we just don’t hear as much dissent from China so it seems like there was this seamless click from one format to another!
        Are you staying in China or going to England?

        • Theodora says:

          Well, looking at the statue of Mao in the Chengdu town square, he looks positively imperial… I think the other factor to bear in mind is that China has never had democracy, so the notion of choosing one’s leaders, rather than them being chosen for you by fate and surviving due to their skill as good leaders — y’know, the fact that you are in power, proves that you are right — is ingrained. I wouldn’t say that the UK sharing an aircraft carrier with France is quite the cultural shift that Obama/capitalism are, but it’s still a massive one .

  3. Tai says:

    I think the whole discourse of Chinese century is a Euro-American invention and says more about Euro-American unease about their ever diminishing power in the world than about Chinese rise.

    Since industrial revolution Europe has dominated and pillaged the world. The US has taken over the imperial project in the 20th century and the US is still the only superpower in the world. But it’s an ailing stagnating empire which like all declining empires is quite destabilizing to the world.

    Of course, due to its size Chinese leap forward looks very impressive but looking from a different perspective China only follows Japanese and Korean steps, and with a big lag, which it won’t close in any time soon. The sheer scale of political, economical and environmental problems China is facing now is staggering.

    But to the rest of the developing world, growing Chinese presence is largely beneficial. Chinese philosophy of engagement with the global South is far more socially progressive and effective than what the West has been doing so far. China will be one of the world’s regional leaders together with Japan/SKorea, Russia, the EU, the US and Brazil. China wants to be a kind of leader in the Third world. This idea has been there since Mao and so far they’ve been promoting a new kind of more equal and mutually beneficial relationship between the Third world economies, which I think is good for humanity as a whole.

    As far as empires go, so far China has not shown any intention of imperial quest. They do want to get Taiwan back and have lots of border issues with neighbours but even in Asia China’s power is checked by Japan/S.Korea, the US, Russia and India- all these powerful states fear Chinese military rise and keep China in check, so I don’t really see how Chinese can dominate the world in our life time. They will be an important player, but one of many others in an increasingly competitive world 🙂

    • Theodora says:

      So glad you see that China’s largely non-militarist. There’s a misunderstanding about the size of the army, which is famously the world’s largest employer — and can’t afford to cut jobs in the current economic climate. The assumption is that they’re all massing around the Diaoyu or exploiting Tibetans. Most of the time, they’re managing crowds at tourist attractions or helping hand out the skates at ice rinks. Seriously.

  4. Tai says:

    Yeah, it seems the Diaoyu issue flared up mostly cause the Japanese started pushing it, so China has to react. I’d say the most trouble makers in Asia right now are the US backed Japan and S.Korea-both very right-wing corporate regimes that the US uses to contain China.

    The big army is pretty much useless in modern warfare, so I guess it’s the same as the US, they seem to have a big army partly to dampen youth unemployment problem. But also it’s true in that modern armies in China, Indonesia, India and other countries are mostly employed to fight domestic population, suppress ethnic rebelions, grassroot democratic movements and keep their empires together.

    I also think that what’s lost behind all these cold war rhetoric is that the biggest fight of the 21st century won’t be between China and the US as the neo-realist US propaganda machine tries to make people think, for me it’s the people of the world against TNCs and governments that are controlled by these globalized business elites 🙂

    • Theodora says:

      It would be lovely if that is the battle of the century — the end of transnational capitalism. I don’t see it, though. I don’t see the global poor and the more privileged Occupy folk aligning as they might. Though, who knows? It might be…

      • Tai says:

        One thing one can see time and again is that the corporate capitalism is suicidal by nature. The corporations are just unable by nature to stop maximizing profits at any cost. The ice caps are melting and they are rejoicing and escalating scramble for the Arctic oil and gas. I guess they believe if shit really hits the fan they can always retreat into their gated communities and fortified mansions…

        I have many friends in Spain and I’ve been following closely what’s happening there. The way they just ‘lost’ a whole generation is quite telling. There is a lot of radicalized and marginalized well educated youth in Europe at the moment. Will there be another 1968? Maybe not. Maybe there will be something new.

        I recall in the early 90s some could really foretell like Fukuyama about the end of history, and here we are in 2013 and history is going on and we don’t know where it’s all heading.

        The left have been completely marginalized world wide in the last decades (maybe with the exception of Latin America), but the social grassroots movements are still there. And when you travel you can also see a lot of social movements in the developing countries. In China too, despite the media blackout, if you search you can see a lot of grassroots social protests are happening there. People organize to fight for their rights everywhere, they may be separate and they might fail to change the overall structure most of the time, but it’s inside human psyche to fight for justice. Even Indians paralyzed as they are inside their caste system, they organize, resist, challenge their system and sometimes they win, like with the Coca-Cola case in Kerala and many others. I really think we are living in interesting times 🙂