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Authors: James Fallows

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Something similar is true of “The $1.4 Trillion Question,” which if adjusted for exchange rates and China’s ever-mounting assets would be more like “The $2 Trillion Question” as I write. During the 2008 U.S. presidential election, candidates from both parties depicted this as yet more evidence of the Chinese threat. I contend that it certainly reflects an imbalance in the financial structure of both countries, and that it is not good for either in the long run. But the effects of the imbalance are, for now, much worse on China. The money being loaned to and invested in America is money that China’s own people, still on average very poor, cannot use to build the schools and sewer systems and smokestack-scrubbers their own country needs.

“‘The Connection Has Been Reset,’” chapter eight, explains why China’s scheme for controlling the Internet is both less intrusive and more effective than most outside discussion assumes. It is surprisingly porous and flexible and allows escape routes for people who are really bothered by its limits—and who might protest more vigorously if they were entirely cut off from outside information flow. But the Chinese government’s “Great Firewall” makes it just enough of a nuisance for ordinary Internet users to reach unauthorized Web sites that most of them don’t bother. Instead they stay safely within controlled terrain. This has important implications for the way outsiders understand censorship in China and the way it shapes internal Chinese debate. Finally, “China’s Silver Lining” argues that the environmental pre dicament is as bad as outsiders assume—but also much better, since so many parts of China’s political, business, and civic structure are now trying to cope with it. This understanding affects the way outsiders deal with China on future pollution and climate-change issues, since it suggests ways that China can be part of the solution rather than a huge problem.

These policy-oriented chapters, like the reports on some people and institutions of contemporary China, do not presume to be complete or final accounts. They offer a few parts of the complicated picture of China today. I hope they entertain and inform readers. But if they do no more than remind people of how complex the picture is, they’ll have accomplished something.

A few practical notes: When my wife and I arrived in China in mid-2006, one U.S. dollar was worth eight Chinese yuan renminbi, abbreviated here as RMB; two years later, the dollar was worth about 6.8 RMB. In some places, where useful for clarify, dollar-RMB figures have been adjusted to reflect that change. Otherwise, the material has been left as originally published.

The Atlantic Monthly
has been my professional home for more than twenty-five years. To recognize my colleagues properly would require listing every name on the masthead. I do thank past and present members of the
Atlantic
staff as a whole, especially James Bennet, Ben Bradley, David Bradley, Janice Cane, Ben Carlson, Abby Cutler, Marge duMond, John Galloway, Jennie Rothenberg Gritz, Terrence Henry, Teddy Kahn, Julie Klavens, Corby Kummer, Sue Parilla, Ellie Smith, Justin Smith, Sage Stossel, Scott Stossel, Maria Streshinsky, Jason Treat, and Jenny Woodson. For their generosity and help in China, and in the United States while we were in China, I would like to thank Phil Baker, Dominic Barton, Daniel Bell, Robin Bordie and Andy Rothman, Lila Buckley, Liam Casey, Dovar Chen, Peter Claeys, Melanie and Eliot Cutler, Jessica Dong, Patty and Marvin Fabrikant, Frank Fahrenkopf, John Flower and Pamela Leonard, Becky Frankel, Jeremy Goldkorn, Stephen Green, Dan Guttmann, Catharine Han, Susan Harrington and Alan Zabel, Andrew Houghton, Jiang Mianheng, Ken Jarrett, Kent Kedl, Kai-fu Lee, Kenny Lin, Kitty Leung, Yumin Liang, Andrew Lih and Mei Fong, Adam Minter, Andy Moravcsik and Anne-Marie Slaugher, Russell Leigh Moses, Rebecca Nicolson and Tom Baldwin, John Northen, Minxin Pei, Lucia Pierce, Shaun Raviv, Sidney Rittenberg, Bob Schapiro, Baifang and Orville Schell, Shi Hongshen, Susan Shirk, Sherry Smith and Marcus Corley, Sun Zhe and Nina Ni, Tu Weiming, Jim and Bonnie Wallman, Sean Wang, Louis Woo, Jenny and Bill Wright, Jarrett Wrisley, and Zeezee Zhang. As always I would like to thank my literary agent, Wendy Weil; plus my editors, Dan Frank of Pantheon and Keith Goldsmith of Vintage.

This book is dedicated to my wife, Deb. We recklessly signed on as members of a volunteer work group in West Africa for our “honeymoon” just after we were married many years ago, and have been supporting each other in similar adventures ever since.

Beijing

September 2008

 

POSTCARDS FROM
TOMORROW SQUARE

 

POSTCARDS FROM
TOMORROW SQUARE

DECEMBER 2006

 

T
wenty years ago, my wife and I moved with our two young sons to Tokyo. We expected to be there for three or four months. We ended up staying in Japan and Malaysia for nearly four years. We traveled frequently in China, Indonesia, Thailand, South Korea, and the Philippines, and we dodged visa rules to get into Burma and Vietnam. One year our children attended Japanese public school, which helped and hurt them in ways we’re still hearing about. After our family moved back to Washington, I spent most of another year on reporting trips in Asia.

Not long ago [July 2006], my wife and I moved to Shanghai for an indefinite stay. You can’t do the same thing twice, and we know that this experience will be different. Our children are twenty years older and on their own. We are, well, twenty years older. The last time, everything we saw in Japan and China was new to us. This time, we’re looking at Shanghai to compare its skyscrapers and luxury-goods shopping malls with the tile-roofed shop houses and run-down bungalows we first saw here in 1986. The whole experience of expatriation has changed because of the Internet, which allows you to listen to radio programs via Webcast and talk daily with friends and family via Skype.

But it still means something to be away from the people you know and the scenes and texture of daily home-front life: the newspapers, the movies, the range of products in the stores. (Most of America’s ubiquitous “Made in China” merchandise is hard to find in China itself, since it’s generally destined straight for export.) And the overall exercise is similar in this way: The Japan of the 1980s was getting a lot of the world’s attention; today’s China is getting even more. My family and I saw Japan on the way up. During the first few months we were there, the dollar lost one-third of its value against the yen. On each trip to the money-changing office the teller’s look seemed to become more pitying, and on each trip to the grocery store (forget about restaurants!) we ratcheted our buying targets another notch downward. The headlines trumpeted the yen’s strength and the resulting astronomical valuation of Japan’s land, companies, and holdings as signs of the nation’s preeminence. The dollar’s collapse made us acutely aware of the social bargain that affected everyone in Japan: high domestic prices that penalized consumers, rewarded producers, and subsidized the export success of big Japanese firms.

China has kept the value of its currency artificially low (as Japan did until 1985, just before we got there), and because it’s generally so much poorer than Japan, the daily surprise is how inexpensive, rather than expensive, the basics of life can be. Starbucks coffee shops are widespread and wildly popular in big cities, even though the prices are equivalent to their U.S. levels. But for the same 24 yuan, or just over $3, that a young Shanghai office worker pays for a latte, a construction worker could feed himself for a day or two from the noodle shop likely to be found around the corner from Starbucks. Pizza Hut is also very popular, and is in the “fine dining” category. My wife and I walked into one on a Wednesday evening and were turned away because we hadn’t made reservations. Taco Bell Grande is similarly popular and prestigious; the waiters wear enormous joke-like sombreros that would probably lead to lawsuits from the National Council of La Raza if worn in stateside Taco Bells. Kentucky Fried Chicken is less fancy but is a runaway success in China, as it is in most of Asia.

Through my own experiment in the economics of staple foods, I have been surprised to learn that there is such a thing as beer that is too cheap, at least for my taste. On each of my first few days on scene, I kept discovering an acceptable brand of beer that cost half as much as the beer I’d had the previous day. It was the Shanghai version of Zeno’s paradox: The beer became steadily cheaper yet never quite became free. I had an early surprise discovery of imported Sam Adams, for 12 yuan, or $1.50 per 355-ml bottle, which is the regular U.S. size. The next day, I found a bottle of locally brewed Tiger, the national beer of Singapore, for 7 yuan, or 84 cents per 350 ml. Soon I moved to 600-ml “extra value” bottles of Tiger at 6 yuan (72 cents per 600 ml), then Tsingtao at 3.90 yuan (45 cents per 600 ml), then Suntory at 2.90 yuan (35 cents per 600 ml). It was when I hit the watery, sickly sweet Suntory that I knew I’d gone too far. There was one step farther I hesitated to take: a local product called REEB (ha ha!), which I often saw the illegal migrant construction workers swilling, and which was on sale for 2.75 yuan. One night, in a reckless mood, I decided to give REEB a try. It was weaker than the Suntory—but actually better, because it wasn’t as sweet.

The signs of China’s rise are of course apparent everywhere. We can still see many parts of Shanghai that have escaped the building boom of the last two decades—the streets lined with plane trees in the old French Concession district, the men who lounge outside in pajamas or just boxer shorts when the weather is hot. But to see them we have to look past everything that’s new, and the latest set of construction cranes or arc-welding teams working through the night to finish yet more projects. From a room in the futuristic Tomorrow Square (!) building where we have been staying, I can look across People’s Square to see three huge public video screens that run commercials and music videos seemingly nonstop. The largest screen, nearly two miles away, is the entire side of the thirty-seven-story Aurora building in Pudong, Shanghai’s new financial district. In the daytime, the sides of the building are a shiny gold reflective color. At night, they show commercials to much of the town. “People under thirty can’t remember anything but a boom,” a European banker who has come to Shanghai to expand a credit-card business told me. “It’s been fifteen years of double-digit annual expansion. No one anywhere has seen anything like that before.”

My family arrived in Japan just at the beginning of what is widely considered to be its collapse. About the strange nature of that “decline”—one that left Japan richer, and its manufacturing and trading position stronger, than it was during its “boom”—there will be more to say in later reports. But obviously it raises the question: Is this ahead for China? Have we arrived in time to watch another bubble burst? I don’t know—no one can—but as a benchmark for later reports, I will mention some of the things that have surprised me in my first few weeks, and I’ll do so via lists.

Numbered lists are popular everywhere—the Ten Commandments, the Four Freedoms—but they seem particularly attractive in this part of the world. When I first arrived in Japan, everyone was talking about the “Three Ks”—the three kinds of work for which the country was quietly tolerating immigrant labor. These were what translated as the “Three Ds”: the jobs considered too
kitanai
(dirty),
kiken
(dangerous), or
kitsui
(difficult) to attract native-born workers in modern, rich Japan. During World War II, Japanese forces were notorious for applying a policy of “Three Alls” to occupied China: kill all, burn all, loot all. Memories of that slogan made for hard feelings when a Japanese-owned firm recently tried to register the trademark “Three Alls” (
sanguang
) in China; because of protests, the application was turned down. In early 2006 the Chinese government put out a widely publicized list of “Eight Honors and Eight Dishonors,” or more prosaically “Eight Dos and Don’ts,” to express what President Hu Jintao called the “socialist concept of honor and disgrace.” For instance: Do strive arduously; don’t wallow in luxury. I bought a poster with the full list at the local Xinhua bookstore.

In a similar constructive spirit, I now offer “Four Cautions and Two Mysteries.” These are meant to illustrate what has surprised me so far and what I am most curious about. It is also a partial and preliminary agenda for future inquiry.

CAUTION ONE:
WATCH OUT, JAPANESE PEOPLE!

 

To get into a talk with a Japanese intellectual or statesman is sooner or later to ponder the effects of World War II. When will Japan emerge from the war’s shadow as a “normal” nation, with a constitution written by its own people (versus the one created by Douglas MacArthur) and with a bona fide army, as opposed to something that has to call itself the “Self-Defense Force”? When will the Chinese and Koreans—and for that matter the Singaporeans and Filipinos and Australians—stop maumauing Japan with their wartime complaints? What special mission and message does Japan have for the world, as the first and only country to have suffered a nuclear attack? Will Japan’s view of America always be skewed into an inferiority/superiority complex because of the U.S. role as conqueror in the war? The process is similar to discussions in Germany—except that Germans tend to be preemptively apologetic about the problems their forebears caused the world, and Germans make no special claim to suffering like Japan’s.

The process is not at all similar to discussions about the war on this side of the Sea of Japan. I put this item first, because for me it has been the most startling. “Frankly, we hate the Japanese,” an undergraduate at a prestigious Chinese university told me in English. The main difference between his comment and what I heard from countless other young people was the word
frankly
.

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