Is China Socialist or State Capitalist? - Hudson and Bond pt 1/2

Will China resist financialization and lead the way on climate policy, or is it a form of capitalism that will not reduce inequalities much further and isn’t serious about phasing out fossil fuel? Michael Hudson and Patrick Bond in a discussion about what we can expect from the CCP. Note: this was recorded before the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

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written by Slim Williams for Paul Jay’s documentary film “Never-Endum-Referendum“.  

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8 Comments

  1. China respects all of humanity..we in the West have lost ours.The great leaders of our FAKE DEMOCRACIES are willing to merchandise EVERYTHING, including us all.

    We are about to have a very BAD KARMA problem.

  2. I have a question for all of you, especially Paul and any economist: What precisely have you written about James Hansen?

  3. This is more general comment, not directly tied to the interview:

    I was thinking about the state of the environment, how it is degrading more quickly than scientists earlier reported or realize. Our consumer culture, and that includes China as well, which commodifies so many of our interactions with the world, is probably the main reason why we are heading down such a destructive path. Yet, because our economy is built on business, trade and how each of us exchanges our labor to create goods and services, it is really difficult to imagine and to actively create another culture, an alternative way of being. Previous cultures in history (hunter gatherers or later agricultural societies like Egypt) had very different views of the world and their place in it: the Native peoples’ view of Mother Earth, for example.

    Neoliberalism, the dominant ideology of the United States and the West, has been incredibly successful in commodifying so much of our lives, including mining history and religion for movies and music, or blurring the line between our private and work lives with the gig economy, and enterprises like Uber or Airbnb. Consider that for previous societies music was a reflection of the sacred, part of worship or giving thanks to deities. Today it can fill that role, but also is often just a commodity, something to consume and purchase, before moving on to the next song.

    How do we break from this culture of commodification, of neoliberalism, before, like a Greek or Shakespearean tragedy, we cause our own destruction?

  4. Hi Paul,

    Thank-you for interviewing two sharp minds with first hand experience in China. I also appreciate how you guide the interview and try to summarize your guests’ answers, to gain better clarity.

    I have a few more requests for topics I hope you will consider:
    Europe: I have heard the leadership of the EU called “spineless” for not preventing the situation in Ukraine, and for bowing to the US, which has actively prevented peace. Could you interview someone with close knowledge of Europe as to why this happened and why the US has so much influence there, even 75+ years after WWII?
    Africa: My image of Africa is without firsthand experience and often from NGOs like World Vision. I saw a BBC report on Ethiopia where it showed a very different picture, one of being modernized as part of the Belt & Road Initiative. The US, on the other hand, is still trying to keep Africa a group of failed or subject states. Could you do an interview about the current state of Africa, and how Africa could create a better future?
    Venezuela and South America: The US govt has tried over decades to keep South America a group of failed or subject states, as well. Venezuela and Cuba are famous examples of resistance to this. Could you talk to someone like Ben Norton or Glenn Greenwald (who both live on the continent, I believe) to find out how South America can resist the US? It seems like these countries go through cycles of throwing off US manipulation, only to have progressive gov’ts overthrown by US backed coups.

  5. After Mao, China became a directed economy. Talk of socialism, capitalism, billionaires…is just silly and sloppy. Each 5-year plan criticized and built on the last. The purpose was to place China among the top tiered nations. Mission is now accomplished. China is now closing its technological gaps, e.g. chips.

    The U.S. drooled as its saw China as a huge market place. Laughter. And exactly what do we make to send to China, besides empty containers?

    To understand the stupidity of the West, recall Clinton’s assertion that China’s entry into the WTO was a win-win proposition. The Clintons have never been the brightest bulbs, but they have been the greediest and perhaps the most wicked.

    So what happened?

    Outsourcing to China began in earnest. Walmart used to tout “Made in America.” Tour Walmart now, you find practically everything is made in China. In China, Walmart insisted that labor be cheap.
    China became the factory to the world. Hmmm What does the U.S. make?

    Walt Whitman Rostow of the Johnson administration, an avid anti-communist, showed China the way: Rapid industrialization. In fact China acknowledged its debt to Rostow. Surprised? For those of us old enough to have followed all this, there is NO SURPRISE. China verbally acknowledged Rostow’s wisdom.

    What did China do to attract U.S. outsourcing and U.S. capital investment?
    1. It offered many Western companies, 10-year freedom from taxation.
    2. It manipulated its currency, lowering yuan equivalent to the dollar, making goods cheaper to make and more profitable to sell to the U.S.
    3. It denied any serious collective bargaining. After all, “collective bargaining” was state run.
    4. It penalized its own firms. China’s firms had to pay higher taxes than foreign firms. I kid you not.

    American greed bit the bait. And all the West can do now is complain about intellectual rights. Western labor bit the dust. The end of the U.S. had begun. We are witnessing its internal rot.

    To answer your concerns about climate: A very real and pertinent concern. Both China and Russia—who have held joint military operations, sharing weaponry—are aware of the issue. But it is all too little too late. The stupidity of NATO boggles the mind. Do you think NATO is interested in climate, with all those bio-labs on Russia’s doorstep? Game over. Roaches win.

  6. Why is pollution in China less of a product of self interest then the U.S.? How do you measure? How do you quantify? Why assume that China or the US is acting for the greater good?
    I look forward to the next part of the interview.

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