...The question about capitalism is... tough to answer. In my mind,
white-bread-American capitalism is a combination of a company trying to
make money in the confines of a society that's sure as hell gonna know
if it dumps metric tons of company waste in the nearest river while
being watched over by a government that is reasonably free from graft
and will freak out if that dumping happens while also operating in a
society where everyone has the freedom to take pictures with their cell
phones and put them up on Twitter if the rivers turn purple/blue/green,
etc.
China is... different. On one hand, Chinese (and, of
course, Japanese) people work a thousand circles around a typical
American. Capitalists could find this attractive, of course. A
capitalist might be really thrilled by the idea that in China there
really aren't weekends and the average worker gets one day off PER
MONTH. Also, in China the workers sometimes come from other parts of the
country and leave their children behind. This is because in China
children tend to be raised by the grandparents, and this is because
there are mandatory retirement ages (in the 50s for both men and women
though the men are usually allowed to work a bit longer than women), so
that there is really no such thing as older workers.
The family
relationship in China is one where the husband and wife and child also
have the husband's parents living with them in a tiny little apartment.
The husband and wife both work, the grandparents were mandatorily
retired years ago, and take care of the grandchild. The husband and wife
might work where they live or one or both might work in another city
altogether tons of miles away. They all might see each other once or
twice a year. This is why "golden week" or other such vacation weeks are
so incredibly important... it's when families see each other.
Sons
are more valued than daughters not because one gender is more prized
than another but because sons are usually an aging parent's only hope
for a semi-comfortable retirement. When you grow old, you move in with
your SON, not your daughter, for your daughter already married some guy
and his parents already live with them and there ain't no room for you
and even if there were, it's not what's done. If you have no son, you're
pretty much screwed, unless you've amassed money, but that doesn't
happen for the typical worker in China.
Sure, there is
unbelievable wealth in China, but the typical worker doesn't have any of
it. Business and moneymaking in China is wrapped in graft, rolled up in
intellectual property theft, and includes generous amounts of corporate
espionage. One could argue that it's actually far more capitalistic
than what you see in America! Businesses, free from that pesky EPA, can
(and will) dump what they wish in the rivers. Free from labor laws,
they can (and will) have workers working 16 hour days with only one day
off a month. Free from any kind of court system that functions, they
can (and will) steal intellectual property from any and all without
shame or even self-consciousness. There was an "Apple" store (the fake
kind) just down the street from my apartment the whole entire time I
lived in Chengdu. It looked and functioned EXACTLY like a real "Apple"
store. They had the logo out front, the same shirts worn by the workers
inside, the same displays/posters/advertising, the same everything.
Anyone would have thought that it was a real Apple store, but it was
total fraud from start to finish. And no one cared at all or did
anything about it, because in China it was totally normal.
Read the rest here.
I think this may be one of the best short descriptions of modern China that I have read. The description of China's economy reminds me in many ways of our own during the so called "Gilded Age."
New Class: American Orthodox History
8 hours ago
4 comments:
The Chinese economy may be somewhat similar to the 19th century American one, but the mentality of the two peoples is vastly different. Mao, for example, would have sacrificed millions
of Chinese to a US nuclear attack without batting an eye - and said so.
One could argue that it's actually far more capitalistic than what you see in America! Businesses, free from that pesky EPA, can (and will) dump what they wish in the rivers.
I think that it is a shame that the American right has convinced people that real capitalism means environmental pollution. This is not what Adam Smith or F.A. Hayek would have considered "capitalism." If I empty my septic tank into my neighbor's yard, he can sue me for trespass. If I do not dump it, but simply leave it open to evaporate, such that the stench bothers him, he can sue me for private nuisance. These sorts of common-law understandings of what is and is not acceptable behavior are the background against capitalism is even possible. In other words, norms and customs concerning pollution are not an obstacle to capitalism, they are a prerequisite.
Unfortunately, while this is clear enough at the individual level, somehow it becomes confusing to people if you multiply it 1000x to an industrial scale. Then FOX News decries it as an interference with capitalism to tell a corporation that they may not do with the civic water supply that which everyone agrees that one man may not due to his neighbor's well.
I know that this is hardly an original observation, but television is making us stupider.
Iannes
I am growing tired of your persistently rude drive by commentary. If you have nothing substantive to contribute to the discussion please refrain from posting.
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