Capitalist communism
In the comments to yesterday's post on China trading its way to world influence, James of Hobson's Choice said:
I feel a little awkward because now, and for another decade, China is likely to perform impressively. I'm not excessively alarmed about the price of oil right now, although well-informed observers may disagree. But it's incorrect to assume that Japan is struggling now because it adopted a western model of economic growth; likewise South Korea or Taiwan. These countries adopted highly centralized growth models which have faltered as they hit their ceilings; China's is even more so.
So of course China will grow long enough to make me look like an idiot, and then hit the same sort of wall.
I said yesterday there's more than one way to be a capitalist, and that all those ways wield the full power of capitalism to change things. China's very controlled approach to capitalism indicates to me they see this too and are constructing a mode of capitalism that works with their intent. As a result I don't expect China to hit that wall.
Here's a thought experiment that will support that view. Imagine there are no trade embargoes against Cuba, starting today.
To assume a centrally directed economy…well, to assume another kind exists in the wild, but that's another post…to assume it must max out simply because it is centrally controlled is to history provides all likely examples. What we've seen is liberal philosophy supported by capitalist economy (USofA historically), capitalist philosophy supported by capitalist economy (USofA now), socialist philosophy supported by capitalist economy (Europe) and communist philosophy supported by socialist economy (Russia). One has failed for the most part…the one with the socialist economic model.
China, I believe, is crafting a communist philosophy supported by capitalist economy approach. You can react to communism as a moral failing if you like, but this has a good chance of success. It would have to be measured sanely differently…the US economy, being driven by consumerism, is measured in terms of income and expenditure. The US economy is like a bicycle…if it doesn't keep moving it will fall down.