In a Politburo group study session on 23 November 2015, China’s president, Xi Jinping, recommended the book Capital in the Twenty-First Century by the French economist Thomas Piketty. “The rich data he used demonstrated that … unrestrained capitalism accelerates wealth inequality … [His] conclusion is worth us pondering on.”
Back then, Piketty’s work on inequality was reported all over the world and sparked soul-searching among elites from Wall Street to Main Street. Some were surprised that Xi was paying attention, too.
Since his ascent to power in 2012, Xi has discussed the issue of inequality on several occasions. Early this year, he told his provincial ministerial-level cadres that achieving common prosperity was “not just an economic issue, but a significant political one that matters to the party’s basis to rule”.
In the four decades since Xi’s predecessor Deng Xiaoping enabled economic liberalisation, booms in manufacturing and technology have allowed a select few in China to amass vast fortunes. But the tables are turning, with Beijing’s regulators mounting almost daily attacks on private power bases, in particular the technology titans, whose influence has begun to stretch far beyond Asia.
Since February, close to $1 trillion has been wiped off the value of Chinese companies. The Nasdaq Golden Dragon index, which tracks the largest of about 250 Chinese firms listed in New York, was down more than 50% from its February peak last week. Investors fear a standoff between regulators on both sides of the Pacific could eventually lead to the delisting of Chinese stocks from US markets.
From London to New York, investors are wondering what lies ahead. Is Xi simply redressing the balance between corporations and citizens, or is he set on bringing China’s private sector back under state control?
Last Monday, another week of actions began with a vow by top cadres to “regulate excessively high incomes and encourage high-income groups and enterprises to return more to society”. A high-level meeting concluded that while the party had allowed some people to “get rich first”, it was now time to prioritise “common prosperity for all”.
“Under Mao Zedong, everyone in China was poor. Under Deng Xiaoping, people remember the catchphrase ‘to get rich is glorious’; but Deng also said that, ultimately, China will have to achieve common prosperity,” said Yang Li, a China researcher at the Paris School of Economics’ World Inequality Lab, who has co-authored papers with Piketty. “Now that China has reached middle-income status, Xi thinks it’s time to deliver the latter part of Deng’s mantra: to ultimately achieve common prosperity.”
The strategy served another purpose, he said: shoring up popular support for the…
Read More: The party’s over: China clamps down on its tech billionaires | Chinese