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The Perfect Dictatorship: China in the 21st Century, by Stein Ringen
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The Chinese system is like no other known to man, now or in history. This book explains how the system works and where it may be moving.
Drawing on Chinese and international sources, on extensive collaboration with Chinese scholars, and on the political science of state analysis, Stein Ringen concludes that under the new leadership of Xi Jinping, the system of government has been transformed into a new regime radically harder and more ideological than the legacy of Deng Xiaoping. China is less strong economically and more dictatorial politically than the world has wanted to believe.
By analyzing the leadership of Xi Jinping, the meaning of "socialist market economy," corruption, the party-state apparatus, the reach of the party, the mechanisms of repression, taxation and public services, and state-society relations, The Perfect Dictatorship broadens the field of China studies, as well as the fields of political economy, comparative politics, development, and welfare state studies.
- Sales Rank: #244601 in Books
- Published on: 2016-09-06
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 8.90" h x .50" w x 6.00" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 208 pages
Review
A new interpretation of the Chinese party-state―shows the advantage that derives from a comparative theorist looking at the Chinese system.
(Tony Saich, Harvard University)This is an excellent book which asks important questions about China's future. In a lively and persuasive manner, the author vividly analyzes key data in a comparative and theoretical manner. Far and away the best introduction to how the CCP dictatorship works.
(Edward Friedman, University of Wisconsin-Madison)There is no lack of scholars and pundits abroad who tell us that dictatorship in China is for the greater good. In a timely and engagingly written book, Stein Ringen systematically demolishes all the components of this claim.
(Frank Dikötter, University of Hong Kong)Ringen provides a wealth of information regarding Chinese leadership and policies in a style that doesn't assume prior knowledge, thereby making it accessible to a wide range of readers interested in the region.Library Journal
(Library Journal)Mr. Ringen explodes this favorite propaganda slogan [that Beijing has lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty] even further and does so with the fresh eyes he promises.
(Howard W. French Wall Street Journal) About the Author
Stein Ringen is emeritus professor at the University of Oxford. He brings to this study extensive experience of state analysis in America, Britain, Scandinavia, Europe, and Korea. He is the author, most recently, of Nation of Devils: Democratic Leadership and the Problem of Obedience.
Most helpful customer reviews
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
This is a timely book that produces insightful conclusions drawn ...
By Denis
This is a timely book that produces insightful conclusions drawn from objective observations and research evidence obtained through the writer's associates, friends, connections and government or party officials in China.
Born 50 years ago and educated in Hong kong, I have been living and working here all along. I have found this book has presented objectively, with the support of evidence, the observations and the current situation in today's China, that most mainlanders and even Hongkongers have been already well aware of, but many of them have chosen to turn a blind eye to them or have decided to refuse to accept them by saying that all these have been fabricated by some people with ill intention.
This book has helped me clear some doubts as to why the party-state always uses heavy-hand approach to subdue civil right activists, though many of them just employing gentle attitude and mild actions. In addition, it also explains why after 2012 when Xi Jinping took over the helm, he has been tightening control within CCP, in different aspects of the society, and on every level of government, including, recently, applying unprecedented controls on some cornerstones of Hong kong in defiance of strong oppositions from Hongkongers.
Lately, he has solidified the political, military and economic powers into his ownself alone as the core of the party-state, making himself comparable with Deng Xiaoping and Mao Zedong. The book also provides a logical reason behind Xi's move to concentration of powers.
Though the book's conclusions are critical and maybe objectionable to the pro Beijing Chinese, it helps many understand more why the leaders of the party-state have done what have been done to their countrymen in wake of the era of Mao, which might be, sadly but angrily to say, necessary from the point of view of CCP for their ambition to maintain its perpetual leadership in China.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
Overestimating China, Underestimating its Leaders
By David Wineberg
This monograph of China explains the entire government structure, including naming all the opaque black boxes in the schema. It lays out the rankings, the social services, the offices, the departments, and most importantly, the guiding principles of all of them - The Party. It is comprehensive, realistic, and most of all, revealing. China is not doing nearly as well as it says or we think.
Ringen says the present nihilistic, materialistic, money grubbing state of China is a direct result of the Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989. At that time the Chinese believed they were on an upward curve, but The Party/state informed them in no uncertain terms that freedom was not and never would be available to the Chinese. “The economy is for the state; it is not for the other way around,” Ringen says. As long as the perception is that China is growing at near double digit rates, people and business are pacified, and The Party can flourish. That is why the official statistics are all lies.
Like any garden variety dictatorship, China is paranoid. There are files on literally everyone. There are untold numbers of different police forces, operating thuggishly and plainclothesed. Local officials are promoted on the basis of their intelligence gathering. Local housewives are community spies. Photocopy stores feed directly to intelligence services. Arrest and unlimited detention do not require charges, and when they come, they are often bizarre and clearly not in violation of any law. Nonetheless, people are sometimes held for life, their families evicted, and if they had students, they can be jailed and tortured too. Nothing can interfere with the ethos The Party wants for China. Ringen’s longest most detailed chapter concerns such cases of arrest or censorship. It seems that China’s whole internal focus is to prevent people coming together. Any concerted effort from anywhere is crushed, often before it can act. That is how thorough and subversive the intelligence gathering is. The country can afford over a million people censoring the internet, but it won’t allow people driven from the countryside to the cities the same social rights as city dwellers. Ringen says China has performed remarkably poorly in raising living standards, compared to other countries such as South Korea or even Britain when compared from the same starting point in 1949. The Party, however, has performed miracles for its members. Ringen estimates the state skims more than half and possibly two-thirds of GDP. It clearly does not give that much back. Taxes are oppressive, and daily corruption adds to the burden.
The bulk of the book examines the structures in place: the tax structure, the safety net, the justice system, the hukou residency system, the class system, and of course, The Party, for which everything else has been built. Ringen says China is not there for its people (a welfare state) and it is not there for its vision (ideological state). It is there purely to support, sustain and promote The Party, which he calls a “trivial state” – no greater purpose.
Ringen cautions that we might be at common turning point, one we always miss. The rise of the Nazis, the rise of the USSR – and maybe now China. The parallels are eerily similar. We have long, and continue to pretend, that China is moving towards liberalization and democracy. It isn’t. It is moving to secure the future of The Party, and that does not involve either democracy or liberalization, he says. The leadership makes no bones about it. The sooner we start taking the official words of Chinese leaders literally, the better we will be positioned to deal with the fallout.
David Wineberg
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Fascinating
By Autamme_dot_com
China is a fascinating country with a very interesting political and economic system that is often inscrutable to outsiders. This book sets out to explain how things work in the country today and seek to guess how things will be in the future.
The system may be protected by a façade or misunderstanding, aided perhaps by a spate of good fortune. The author believes that the government today is a relatively hard-line regime that is less strong economically and more dictatorial politically than the world has wanted to believe. This reviewer doesn’t know, but the author seemingly knows his stuff and puts forward a sensitive, powerful and engaging series of arguments to sustain his position. It brings forth a number of interesting questions and observations against the Chinese state which, at worst case, could translate into traumatic economic actions and maybe even civil disturbances. The author goes against the grain and does not agree that the existing system works for the common Chinese good, even if it may appear different to western eyes.
The Chinese economy is large and there has been massive economic growth, yet the economy has not transformed into a strong, structured and sustainable system. Question marks exist as to whether it has been built on a weak, questionable structure that may fall down like the proverbial house of cards in the future. If it should happen, the reverberations both internally and externally will be long-ranging. Are the current leaders really leading, or clinging on with a harsh, dictatorial style, desperately trying to keep the train on its tracks? The author seems to believe that that they are struggling to keep the lid on things rather than driving the country forward with a strict, authoritarian yet benevolent style. What of the future? The author believes that there is a tug-of-war about ideologies and how they are implemented and it is far from clear which side will win.
This was a fascinating and enjoyable book that is packed full of information that provides a great overview of China and a bit of what makes the country tick. The book does not claim to have all the answers or even can develop all of the key questions, yet it does not pull its punches with what it can comment on. You don’t even need to be a “China nerd” to enjoy this book. It is more than capable of satisfying the casual, curious reader at the same time.
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