China and the US:
Comparing Leadership Selection
By James Petras
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
November 13, 2017
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Photo of Trump and Xi in Vietnam, November 9, 2017 |
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The US selection of leaders has virtually nothing to do with
democratic processes and
outcomes. It is useful to contrast this
with the process in China. In most instances, China’s
selection of
leaders is far more meritocratic, successful and performance-based. In
both the US
and China, the process lacks transparency.
US Economic, Political, and Cultural Leadership
The selection of US economic, political and cultural leaders is based
on several
undemocratic procedures.
1. Inheritance via family ties
2. Personal access to credit and
financing
3. Political patronage
4. Lobby and elite sale and
purchase of office and favors
5. Media links
6. Political
repression and manipulation of electoral procedures
7. Incumbency and
use of state resources
8. Ethno-religious nepotism
9. Internal
party hierarchy
10.Closed party decisions (opacity)
11. Ability to
keep secrets
Leaders, whether appointed, self-appointed and selected through
money, media, elite
networks, turn the electoral process into
virtual afterthoughts in the US system. US economic
leaders have
increased the flow from productive profits and investments upward to the
financial
sector and/or outwardly overseas to tax havens.
US political leaders have increased military expenditures and wars,
diverting public
funds from domestic social services and welfare,
diminishing domestic economic growth and
markets for investment and
trade.
US cultural leaders have been rewarded for defending, promoting and
embellishing
imperial conquests and denigrating independent nations
and leaders. They have also been
rewarded for promoting the most
degrading and frivolous consumerism, undermining social
and
community cohesion.
The lack of transparency in the US selection process of leaders in
major investment
banks, political parties, legislative and executive
offices and academia is growing at an
alarming rate and with
significant negative consequences: US leaders do not have to pass
rigorous exams nor do they face interviews with peers with competence in
their fields of work.
US business leaders are not judged by their
economic and political performance. Responsibility
for disastrous
wars, corrupt bank bailouts, financial crises and skyrocketing health
care costs do
not disqualify a candidate for leadership positions.
Documented performance criteria are not the basis for selecting
Congressional and
Presidential leaders. The decisive factors
influencing political selection are the capacity to
promote elite
interests, pursue imperial wars to gratify the ambitions and greed of
civilian
militarists and mask widespread corruption to grease the
wheels of speculation.
China: Consultation, Meritocracy and Performance
Chinese leaders are selected on the basis of multi-level
consultation, meritocracy and
performance in office.
China’s recent Party Congress highlighted three areas of vital
concern: reducing
inequalities, addressing environmental degradation
and health care.
In contrast, last year’s US Congressional elections focused on its
pledge to reduce
corporate taxes for the super-rich despite the
increasing social and economic inequality,
removal of state and
federal regulation protecting the population and environment from
corporate polluters, and reducing public funding for access to competent
health care,
undermining citizen well-being and exacerbating the
rise in premature deaths and decreased life
expectancy for the poor
and working class.
The American political elite is full of ‘climate change’ deniers and
promoters of the
worst kinds of pollution.
The US Congress spent an enormous amount of time and energy pursuing
partisan
conspiracies while refusing to address the raging epidemic
of prescription narcotic addiction,
which has killed over 600,000
Americans in 15 years.
President Xi Jinping demanded that Chinese leaders direct their
efforts to correct the
‘unbalanced and inadequate development and
the people’s ever growing needs for a better life’.
President Xi
emphasized the goal of ‘greening the economy’, mentioning it 15 times in
his
address to the Party Congress- compared to only once in the
previous Party meeting (FT
11/1/17, p 11).
Chinese public and private investors have responded to health and
environmental
priorities set by President Xi – stock indexes
spiraled in those sectors (FT 11/11/17, p. 11).
At the top level,
leadership engages in consultations and debates among competing
elites, discussing past and present outcomes in developing current and
future policies.
At the middle levels, ultra-competitive public
service examinations are determinant in
the selection and
appointment of Chinese officials.
At the top and middle levels of leadership job performance is one of
the leading factors
determining selection. The four decades of
spectacular economic growth that has lifted 500
million Chinese
people out of poverty is a reflection of the effective system for
selection and
promotion of leaders.
Maintaining peace and friendship with other countries for over forty
years -- except for
a brief border conflict with Vietnam in 1979--
has been a major factor influencing leadership
selection. In
contrast, despite multiple disastrous and brutal wars, Presidents
Clinton, Bush and
Obama were re-elected to office in a two-party
‘duopoly’ system universally regarded as
‘rigged’. The effect of
these wars on the deterioration of US domestic economy is not reflected
in the candidate selection or in the outcome of the presidential or
congressional elections.
China has selected leaders who have
demonstrated ability and seriousness in
investigating and punishing
over one million corrupt public officials and plutocrats. Anti
corruption crime-fighters have been promoted as ‘clean and hardworking’
leaders.
In contrast, the US Administration has repeatedly appointed
Wall Street criminals to
senior positions in Treasury, the Federal
Reserve and the IMF with disastrous results for the
citizenry, with
no capacity for analyses or correction.
One of the most selective and prestigious Party mechanisms is found
in the
Organization Department (OD) of the Chinese Communist Party
(FT 10/30/17, p. 9). The OD
meets privately and reviews selections
for leadership on the basis of a ‘complex combination of
nominations,
written and oral exams and investigations, and a majority vote among
ministers.
Leaders, thus selected, assume collective responsibility
– and they do not position themselves
by ‘leaking decisions’ (FT
ibid).
Conclusion
In both the US and China the
selection of leaders are not based on elections or
consultations
with the citizens. However, there are vast differences in the process
and
procedures of leader selection resulting in vast differences in
the outcomes.
China is largely a meritocracy, with vestiges of family
nepotism, especially with
reference to some business-state
appointments.
Performance counts a lot, and most citizens credit the leadership of
the Chinese Party
for China’s long-term, large-scale socio-economic
success. In contrast, the vast majority of US
citizens are cynical
and dissatisfied with top economic appointments because of their
documented past and present socio-economic failures. The citizens direct
their greatest dismay
at the top financial leaders (whom they view
as corrupt oligarchs) for plunging our country into
repeated crises,
perpetual wars, growing inequalities and deep, widespread poverty. The
loss of
stable, well-paying jobs and the deterioration of community
and family cohesion has outraged
the citizens because these are in
stark contrast with pervasive, deep-seated corruption in high
places
and almost total judicial impunity for high officials, politicians and
oligarchs alike.
China’s on-going prosecution of corrupt leaders has
no counterpart in the US.
Business-politician bribes are legalized in the US when they are
termed ‘campaign
financing’ or ‘consultant fees’. One has only to
consider the half-million dollar lecture fees
paid to the Clintons
by grateful Wall Street financiers for their 30 minute recitations of
platitudes and influence peddling.
In the field of foreign policy, China’s leaders defend their national
interest. US leaders
shamelessly kowtow to Israeli lobbyists,
promoting Tel Aviv’s interests.
Chinese leaders marginalize
critics in the name of harmony, stability, peace and growth.
US
leaders marginalize, imprison and brutalize Afro-Americans, immigrants,
environmentalists and anti-war activists, as well as Wall Street and
government whistle
blowers, in the name of free markets and nebulous
liberal democratic ‘values’.
China, with all of its drawbacks in terms of democratic procedures
and rights, is moving
toward a less corrupt, less bellicose and more
accountable dynamic society with carefully
vetted and developed
leadership.
The US is moving toward a more corrupt, crime ridden and despotic
(‘police state’)
society with unaccountable leaders, warmongers and
criminal at the helm.
The gap between promise and performance is widening in the US, while
it narrows in
China.
China’s rigorous, meritocratic selection process has demonstrated
greater capacity to
respond to new challenges and majority needs
than the dysfunctional and corrupt US electoral
charade, which
cannot even address the addiction crisis brought on by unregulated over
prescription of opiates, let alone respond to the environmental crises
of climate change and
mega-storms ravaging US communities.
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