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{{Short description|Political movement in China}}
{{Short description|Political movement in China}}
{{Use American English|date=February 2019}}
{{Use American English|date=February 2019}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2019}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2019}}
{{Essay-like|date=March 2024}}
{{Essay-like|date=March 2024}}
{{Conservatism in China|Ideologies}}{{conservatism sidebar|national}}{{Contemporary Chinese political thought}}
{{Neoconservatism in China|all}}{{Contemporary Chinese political thought|conservatism}}
'''Neoauthoritarianism''' ({{lang-zh|s=新权威主义|p=xīn quánwēi zhǔyì}}), also known as Chinese '''Neoconservativism''' or '''New Conservatism''' ({{zh|s=新保守主义|p=xīn bǎoshǒu zhǔyì}}) since the 1990s,<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Zheng |first=Yongnian |date=Summer 1994 |title=Development and Democracy: Are They Compatible in China? |journal=[[Political Science Quarterly]] |volume=109 |issue=2 |pages=235–259 |doi=10.2307/2152624 |jstor=2152624}}</ref><ref name="books.google.com">Peter Moody (2007), p. 151. Conservative Thought in Contemporary China. https://books.google.com/books?id=PpRcDMl2Pu4C&pg=PA151
'''Neoauthoritarianism''' ({{lang-zh|s=新权威主义|p=xīn quánwēi zhǔyì}}), also known as Chinese '''Neoconservativism''' or '''New Conservatism''' ({{zh|s=新保守主义|p=xīn bǎoshǒu zhǔyì}}) since the 1990s,<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Zheng |first=Yongnian |date=Summer 1994 |title=Development and Democracy: Are They Compatible in China? |journal=[[Political Science Quarterly]] |volume=109 |issue=2 |pages=235–259 |doi=10.2307/2152624 |jstor=2152624}}</ref><ref name="books.google.com">Peter Moody (2007), p. 151. Conservative Thought in Contemporary China. https://books.google.com/books?id=PpRcDMl2Pu4C&pg=PA151
* Chris Bramall (2008), p. 328-239, 474-475. Chinese Economic Development. https://books.google.com/books?id=A9Rr-M8MXAEC&pg=PA475
* Chris Bramall (2008), p. 328-239, 474-475. Chinese Economic Development. https://books.google.com/books?id=A9Rr-M8MXAEC&pg=PA475
* https://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/</ref> is a current of political thought within the [[China|People's Republic of China]] (PRC), and to some extent the [[Chinese Communist Party]] (CCP), that advocates a powerful state to facilitate [[Chinese economic reform|market reforms]].<ref name=":2">{{Cite book |last=Bramall |first=Chris |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A9Rr-M8MXAEC&pg=PA475 |title=Chinese Economic Development |date=2008-10-08 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-134-19051-5 |language=en}}</ref> It has been described as [[classical conservatism|classically conservative]] even if elaborated in self-proclaimed "[[Marxist]]" theory.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Sautman|first=Barry|author-link=Barry Sautman|date=1992|title=Sirens of the Strongman: Neo-Authoritarianism in Recent Chinese Political Theory|journal=[[The China Quarterly]]|volume=129|issue=129|pages=72–102|doi=10.1017/S0305741000041230|issn=0305-7410|jstor=654598|s2cid=154374469}}</ref>
* https://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/</ref>{{Failed verification|date=November 2024}} is a current of political thought within the [[China|People's Republic of China]] (PRC), and to some extent the [[Chinese Communist Party]] (CCP), that advocates a powerful centralized state to facilitate [[Chinese economic reform|market reforms]].<ref name=":2">{{Cite book |last=Bramall |first=Chris |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A9Rr-M8MXAEC&pg=PA475 |title=Chinese Economic Development |date=2008-10-08 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-134-19051-5 |language=en}}</ref> It has been described as [[right-wing]],<ref>{{cite book |author1=Yuezhi Zhao |title=Communication in China: Political Economy, Power, and Conflict |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RdNqAAAAQBAJ&dq=%22right+-+wing+ideology+of+neo-+authoritarianism%22&pg=PA170 |quote=As such, it is also consistent with the right-wing ideology of neo-authoritarianism, limiting itself to championing China's national self-interests in a neoliberal global order. |date=March 20, 2008 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |pages=170|isbn=978-0-7425-7428-1 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Christer Pursiainen |title=At the Crossroads of Post-Communist Modernisation: Russia and China in Comparative Perspective |quote=Consequently, the CCP's transformation into a right-wing elitist party occurred during the 1990s under Jiang Zeming's reign. |date=September 10, 2012 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |pages=156}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Economic and Political Weekly: Volume 41 |date=June 2006 |publisher=Sameeksha Trust |pages=2212}}</ref> [[Traditionalist conservatism|classically conservative]] even though it incorporated some aspects of [[Marxist-Leninist]] and [[Maoism|Maoist]] theories.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Sautman|first=Barry|author-link=Barry Sautman|date=1992|title=Sirens of the Strongman: Neo-Authoritarianism in Recent Chinese Political Theory|journal=[[The China Quarterly]]|volume=129|issue=129|pages=72–102|doi=10.1017/S0305741000041230|issn=0305-7410|jstor=654598|s2cid=154374469}}</ref>


Initially gaining many supporters in China's intellectual world,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%e8%8d%a3%e5%89%91/ |title=Rong Jian 荣剑 {{!}} The China Story |website=www.thechinastory.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130927000259/http://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%e8%8d%a3%e5%89%91/ |archive-date=2013-09-27}}</ref> the failure to develop democracy led to intense debate between democratic advocates and those of Neoauthoritarianism<ref name=":1" /> in the late 1980s before the [[1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Li |first=H. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=S7eGDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA31 |title=Political Thought and China's Transformation: Ideas Shaping Reform in Post-Mao China |date=2015-04-07 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-137-42781-6 |language=en}}</ref> Neoauthoritarianism remains relevant to contemporary Chinese politics, and is discussed by both exiled intellectuals and students as an alternative to the immediate implementation of liberal democracy, similar to the strengthened [[List of leaders of the Soviet Union|leadership]] of [[General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union|Soviet general secretary]] [[Mikhail Gorbachev]].<ref name=":0" />
Gaining credence in China's intellectual world,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%e8%8d%a3%e5%89%91/ |title=Rong Jian 荣剑 {{!}} The China Story |website=www.thechinastory.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130927000259/http://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%e8%8d%a3%e5%89%91/ |archive-date=2013-09-27}}</ref> the concept of liberal democracy led to intense debate between democratic advocates and neoauthoritarians<ref name=":1" /> prior to the [[1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Li |first=H. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=S7eGDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA31 |title=Political Thought and China's Transformation: Ideas Shaping Reform in Post-Mao China |date=2015-04-07 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-137-42781-6 |language=en}}</ref> It is discussed as an alternative to the implementation of liberal democracy, similar to the strengthened [[List of leaders of the Soviet Union|leadership]] of [[General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union|Soviet general secretary]] [[Leonid Brezhnev]] and the early years of [[Mikhail Gorbachev]].<ref name=":0" />


Its origin was based in reworked ideas of [[Samuel P. Huntington|Samuel Huntington]], advising the [[Post-communism|post-Communist]] East European elite take a gradualist approach to market economics and multiparty reform; hence, "new authoritarianism". A rejection of the prevalent more optimistic modernization theories,<ref name="Peter Moody 2007 p. 152">{{Cite book |last=Moody |first=Peter R. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PpRcDMl2Pu4C&pg=PA152 |title=Conservative Thought in Contemporary China |date=2007 |publisher=Lexington Books |isbn=978-0-7391-2046-0 |language=en}}</ref> but nonetheless offering faster reform than [[Socialist market economy|the socialist market economy]], policy makers close to Premier [[Zhao Ziyang]] would be taken by the idea.<ref>https://www.thechitnastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/ {{Dead link|date=March 2022}}</ref> The doctrine may be typified as being close to him ideologically as well as organizationally.<ref name="Peter Moody 2007 p. 152" /> In early March 1989, Zhao presented Wu's idea of neoauthoritarianism as a foreign idea in the development of a backward country to [[Deng Xiaoping]], who compared it to his own ideology.<ref name="thechinastory.org">{{cite web |url=https://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/ |title=Rong Jian 荣剑 {{!}} The China Story |website=www.thechinastory.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130927000259/http://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%e8%8d%a3%e5%89%91/ |archive-date=2013-09-27}}</ref>
Its origin was based in reworked ideas of [[Samuel P. Huntington|Samuel Huntington]], advising the [[Post-communism|post-Communist]] East European elite take a gradualist approach towards market liberalization; hence, "new authoritarianism". A rejection of the optimistic views on modernization theories,<ref name="Peter Moody 2007 p. 152">{{Cite book |last=Moody |first=Peter R. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PpRcDMl2Pu4C&pg=PA152 |title=Conservative Thought in Contemporary China |date=2007 |publisher=Lexington Books |isbn=978-0-7391-2046-0 |language=en}}</ref> it seeks faster reform of [[Socialist market economy|the socialist market economy]]<ref>https://www.thechitnastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/ {{Dead link|date=March 2022}}</ref> while the party remain ideologically and organizationally sound.<ref name="Peter Moody 2007 p. 152" /> In early March 1989, [[Zhao Ziyang]] presented [[Wu Jiaxiang]]'s idea of neoauthoritarianism to [[Deng Xiaoping]], who compared it to his own ideology.<ref name="thechinastory.org">{{cite web |url=https://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/ |title=Rong Jian 荣剑 {{!}} The China Story |website=www.thechinastory.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130927000259/http://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%e8%8d%a3%e5%89%91/ |archive-date=2013-09-27}}</ref>


==Background==
==Background==
Post-Mao China stressed a "pragmatic approach to rebuilding the country's economy", employing "various strategies of economic growth" following the 1978 [[3rd Plenary Session of the 11th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party|Third Plenum]] that made [[Deng Xiaoping]] the [[Paramount leader|top leader]] of China, beginning the [[Chinese economic reform]].<ref name=":1" /> By 1982 the success of China's market experiments had become apparent, making more radical strategies seem possible and desirable. This led to the lifting of price controls and agricultural decollectivization, signaling the abandonment of the [[New Economic Policy]], or economic [[Leninism]], in favour of [[market socialism]].<ref name=":2" />
Following the 1978 [[3rd Plenary Session of the 11th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party|Third Plenum]], which made [[Deng Xiaoping]] [[Paramount leader]], China employed a variety of strategies to develop it's economy, beginning the [[Chinese economic reform]].<ref name=":1" /> By 1982 the success of China's market experiments had become apparent, making more radical strategies seem possible and desirable. This led to the lifting of price controls and agricultural decollectivization, signaling the abandonment of the [[New Economic Policy]], or economic [[Leninism]], in favour of [[market socialism]].<ref name=":2" />


With economic developments and political changes, China departed from totalitarianism towards what [[Harry Harding (political scientist)|Harry Harding]] characterizes as a "consultative authoritarian regime." One desire of political reform was to "restore normalcy and unity to elite politics so as to bring to an end the chronic instability of the late Maoist period and create a more orderly process of leadership succession." With cadre reform, individual leaders in China, recruited for their performance and education, became more liberal, with less ideological loyalty.<ref name=":1" />
With economic developments and political changes, China departed from totalitarianism towards what [[Harry Harding (political scientist)|Harry Harding]] characterizes as a "consultative authoritarian regime." One desire of political reform was to "restore normalcy and unity to elite politics so as to bring to an end the chronic instability of the late Maoist period and create a more orderly process of leadership succession." With cadre reform, individual leaders in China, recruited for their performance and education, became more economically liberal, with less ideological loyalty.<ref name=":1" />


== History ==
== History ==


=== Emergence ===
=== Emergence ===
Having begun in the era of Mao Zedong's [[Cultural Revolution]], decentralization accelerated under Deng Xiaoping. Writing in 1994, in an apparently neoauthoritarian vein, [[Zheng Yongnian]] believed that "Deng's early reform decentralized power to the level of local government" with the goal of "decentralizing power to individual enterprises" running "afoul of the growing power of local government, which did not want individual enterprises to retain profit (and) began bargaining with the central government over profit retention, (seizing) decision-making power in the enterprises. This intervention inhibited the more efficient behavior that reforms sought to elicit from industry; decentralization... limited progress."
Having begun in the era of Mao Zedong's [[Cultural Revolution]], decentralization accelerated under Deng Xiaoping. In a neoauthoritarian vein, [[Zheng Yongnian]] (1994) believed that "Deng's early reform decentralized power to the level of local government" with the goal of "decentralizing power to individual enterprises" running "afoul of the growing power of local government, which did not want individual enterprises to retain profit (and) began bargaining with the central government over profit retention, (seizing) decision-making power in the enterprises. This intervention inhibited the more efficient behavior that reforms sought to elicit from industry; decentralization... limited progress."


Though the government took a clear stance [[Bourgeois liberalization|against liberalization]] in December 1986, political discussions centered in [[Beijing]] would nonetheless emerge in academic circles in 1988 in the form of democracy and Neoauthoritarianism.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Petracca|first1=Mark P.|last2=Xiong|first2=Mong|date=1990-11-01|title=The Concept of Chinese Neo-Authoritarianism: An Exploration and Democratic Critique|journal=[[Asian Survey]]|language=en|volume=30|issue=11|pages=1099–1117|doi=10.2307/2644692|jstor=2644692|issn=0004-4687}}</ref> Neoauthoritarianism would catch the attention of the [[Chinese Communist Party]] (CCP) in early 1988 when [[Wu Jiaxiang]] wrote an article in which he concluded that the British monarchy initiated modernization by "pulling down 100 castles overnight", thus developmentally linking autocracy and freedom as preceding democracy and freedom.<ref name=":0" />
Though the government took a clear stance [[Bourgeois liberalization|against liberalization]] in December 1986, political discussions centered in [[Beijing]] would nonetheless emerge in academic circles in 1988 in the form of democracy and Neoauthoritarianism.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Petracca|first1=Mark P.|last2=Xiong|first2=Mong|date=1990-11-01|title=The Concept of Chinese Neo-Authoritarianism: An Exploration and Democratic Critique|journal=[[Asian Survey]]|language=en|volume=30|issue=11|pages=1099–1117|doi=10.2307/2644692|jstor=2644692|issn=0004-4687}}</ref> Neoauthoritarianism would catch the attention of the [[Chinese Communist Party]] (CCP) in early 1988 when [[Wu Jiaxiang]] wrote an article in which he concluded that the British monarchy initiated modernization by "pulling down 100 castles overnight", thus developmentally linking autocracy and freedom as preceding democracy and freedom.<ref name=":0" />
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== Theory ==
== Theory ==
{{Conservatism in China|Ideologies}}
A central figure, if not principal proponent of Neoauthoritarianism, the "well-connected"<ref name=":0" /> [[Wu Jiaxiang]] was an advisor to Premier [[Zhao Ziyang]],<ref name="Peter Moody 2007 p. 152" /> the latter being a major architect of the Deng Xiaoping reforms.{{cn|date=April 2024}}
A central figure, if not principal proponent of Neoauthoritarianism, the "well-connected"<ref name=":0" /> [[Wu Jiaxiang]] was an advisor to Premier [[Zhao Ziyang]],<ref name="Peter Moody 2007 p. 152" /> the latter being a major architect of the Deng Xiaoping reforms.{{cn|date=April 2024}} [[Jiang Shigong]] is considered a major ideological proponent of neoconservatism and promoter of the ideas of [[Carl Schmitt]].<ref name=":4">{{Cite news |last=Che |first=Chang |date=December 1, 2020 |title=The Nazi Inspiring China's Communists |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2020/12/nazi-china-communists-carl-schmitt/617237/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201201204916/https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2020/12/nazi-china-communists-carl-schmitt/617237/ |archive-date=1 December 2020 |access-date=December 1, 2020 |work=[[The Atlantic]]}}</ref>


Samuel Huntington's ''[[Political Order in Changing Societies]]'' rejected economic development or modernization as transferable to the political sphere as a mere variable of the former. He preconditioned democracy on institutionalization and stability, with democracy and economic change undermining or putting strain on political stability in poor circumstances. He considered the measure of a political system to be its ability to keep order. Writing in the 1960s, he lauded the United States and Soviet Union equally; what the Soviet Union lacked in social justice was made up for in strong controls.<ref name="Peter Moody 2007 p. 152"/>
Samuel Huntington's ''[[Political Order in Changing Societies]]'' rejected economic development or modernization as transferable to the political sphere as a mere variable of the former. He preconditioned democracy on institutionalization and stability, with democracy and economic change undermining or putting strain on political stability in poor circumstances. He considered the measure of a political system to be its ability to keep order. Writing in the 1960s, he lauded the United States and Soviet Union equally; what the Soviet Union lacked in social justice was made up for in strong controls.<ref name="Peter Moody 2007 p. 152"/>
Line 52: Line 57:
*https://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/</ref>
*https://www.thechinastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/</ref>


Wu considered social developments like liberal democracy unable to proceed simply from new authorities. Democracy has to be based on the development of the market, because he market reduces the number of public decisions, the number of people seeking power and political rights for economic bernefit, and therefore the "cost" of political action. The separation of the political and economic spheres lays a foundation for a further separation of powers, thereby negating autocracy despite the centralizing tendency of the state. The market also defines interests, increasing "responsibility" and thereby decreasing the possibility of bribery in preparation for democratic politics. On the other hand, political actions become excessive without a market, or with a mixed market, because a large number of people will seek political posts, raising the "cost" of political action and making effective consultation difficult. To avoid this problem, a country without a developed market has to maintain strongman politics and a high degree of centralism.<ref>Michel C. Oksenberg, Marc Lambert, Melanie Manion. 1990. P127-128. Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict.</ref>
Wu considered social developments like liberal democracy unable to proceed simply from new authorities. Democracy has to be based on the development of the market, because the market reduces the number of public decisions, the number of people seeking power and political rights for economic bernefit, and therefore the "cost" of political action. The separation of the political and economic spheres lays a foundation for a further separation of powers, thereby negating autocracy despite the centralizing tendency of the state. The market also defines interests, increasing "responsibility" and thereby decreasing the possibility of bribery in preparation for democratic politics. On the other hand, political actions become excessive without a market, or with a mixed market, because a large number of people will seek political posts, raising the "cost" of political action and making effective consultation difficult. To avoid this problem, a country without a developed market has to maintain strongman politics and a high degree of centralism.<ref>Michel C. Oksenberg, Marc Lambert, Melanie Manion. 1990. P127-128. Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict.</ref>


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==
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When neoauthoritarianism emerged to scholarly debate, Rong Jian opposed his old idea as regressive, favoring the multiparty faction. He would become famous for a news article on the matter.<ref name="thechinastory.org"/>
When neoauthoritarianism emerged to scholarly debate, Rong Jian opposed his old idea as regressive, favoring the multiparty faction. He would become famous for a news article on the matter.<ref name="thechinastory.org"/>


[[Chinese Canadians|Chinese-Canadian]] sociologist [[Yuezhi Zhao]] views the neoauthoritarians as having attempted to avoid an economic reform crisis through dictatorship,<ref name="Yuezhi Zhao 1998 p.43">Yuezhi Zhao (1998), p.43. Media, Market, and Democracy in China. https://books.google.com/books?id=hHkza3TX-LIC&pg=PA43</ref> and [[Barry Sautman]] characterizes them as reflecting the policy of "pre-revolutionary Chinese leaders" as well as "contemporary Third World strongmen", as part of ideological developments of the decade he considers more recognizable to westerners as conservative and liberal. Sautsmans sums its theory with a quote from Su Shaozi (1986): "What China needs today is a strong liberal leader."<ref name=":0" />
[[Chinese Canadians|Chinese-Canadian]] sociologist [[Yuezhi Zhao]] views the neoauthoritarians as having attempted to avoid an economic crisis through dictatorship,<ref name="Yuezhi Zhao 1998 p.43">Yuezhi Zhao (1998), p.43. Media, Market, and Democracy in China. https://books.google.com/books?id=hHkza3TX-LIC&pg=PA43</ref> and [[Barry Sautman]] characterizes them as reflecting the policy of "pre-revolutionary Chinese leaders" as well as "contemporary Third World strongmen", as part of ideological developments of the decade he considers more recognizable to westerners as conservative and liberal. Sautsmans sums its theory with a quote from Su Shaozi (1986): "What China needs today is a strong liberal leader."<ref name=":0" />


[[Cheng Li|Li Cheng]] and Lynn T. White nonetheless regard the neoauthoritarians as resonating with [[technocracy]] emerging in the 1980s as a result of "dramatic" [[1978 Truth Criterion Controversy|policy shifts in 1978]] that promoted such to top posts.<ref name="Yuezhi Zhao 1998 p.43"/> Henry He considers the main criticism of neoauthoritarianism to be its continued advocacy of an "old" type of establishment, relying on charismatic leaders. His view is corroborated by Yan Yining and Li Wei, with the addition that for Yan what is needed is law, or Li democracy, administrative efficiency and scientific government. Li points out that previous crisis in China were not due to popular participation, but power struggles and corruption, and that an authoritarian state does not usually separate powers.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite book |last1=Oksenberg |first1=Michel C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8pIYDQAAQBAJ |title=Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict - The Basic Documents |last2=Lambert |first2=Marc |last3=Manion |first3=Melanie |date=2016-09-16 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-315-28907-6 |language=en}}</ref> A criticism by Zhou Wenzhang is that neoauthoritarianism only considers problems of authority from the angle of centralization, similarly considering the main problem of authority to be whether or not it is exercised scientifically.<ref>Oksenberg, Michel, 1938-; Sullivan, Lawrence R; Lambert, Marc; Li, Qiao. 1990 p129. Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict. https://books.google.com/books?id=8pIYDQAAQBAJ</ref>
[[Cheng Li|Li Cheng]] and Lynn T. White nonetheless regard the neoauthoritarians as resonating with [[technocracy]] emerging in the 1980s as a result of "dramatic" [[1978 Truth Criterion Controversy|policy shifts in 1978]] that promoted such to top posts.<ref name="Yuezhi Zhao 1998 p.43"/> Henry He considers the main criticism of neoauthoritarianism to be its continued advocacy of an "old" type of establishment, relying on charismatic leaders. His view is corroborated by Yan Yining and Li Wei, with the addition that for Yan what is needed is law, or Li democracy, administrative efficiency and scientific government. Li points out that previous crisis in China were not due to popular participation, but power struggles and corruption, and that an authoritarian state does not usually separate powers.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite book |last1=Oksenberg |first1=Michel C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8pIYDQAAQBAJ |title=Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict - The Basic Documents |last2=Lambert |first2=Marc |last3=Manion |first3=Melanie |author-link3=Melanie Manion |date=2016-09-16 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-315-28907-6 |language=en}}</ref> A criticism by Zhou Wenzhang is that neoauthoritarianism only considers problems of authority from the angle of centralization, similarly considering the main problem of authority to be whether or not it is exercised scientifically.<ref>Oksenberg, Michel, 1938-; Sullivan, Lawrence R; Lambert, Marc; Li, Qiao. 1990 p129. Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict. https://books.google.com/books?id=8pIYDQAAQBAJ</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==
{{portal|China| Conservatism|Politics}}
{{portal|China| Conservatism|Politics}}
{{col div|colwidth=25em}}
*[[Politics of China]]
*[[Politics of China]]
*[[Authoritarian capitalism]]
*[[Authoritarian capitalism]]
*[[Authoritarian conservatism]]
*[[Authoritarian conservatism]]
*[[Autocracy]]
*[[Autocracy]]
*[[Chiangism]]
*[[Chinese state nationalism]]
*[[Chinese state nationalism]]
*[[Conservatism in China (disambiguation)|Conservatism in China]] (disambiguation)
*[[Conservatism in China (disambiguation)|Conservatism in China]] (disambiguation)
*[[Conservative socialism]]
*[[Conservatism in Hong Kong#National security law and autocratisation|Conservatism in Hong Kong § National security law and autocratisation]]
**[[Radical pro-Beijing camp]]
*[[Dang Guo]]
*[[Dang Guo]]
*[[Economy of China]]
*[[Elitism]]
*[[Legalism (Chinese philosophy)]]
*[[Neo-Confucianism]]
*[[Neo-nationalism]]
*[[New Life Movement]]<ref>{{Cite news |last=Zi |first=Yang |date=6 July 2016 |title=Xi Jinping and China's Traditionalist Restoration |work=The Jamestown Foundation |url=https://jamestown.org/program/xi-jinping-chinas-traditionalist-restoration/ |access-date=22 June 2024}}</ref>
*[[Party-state capitalism]]
*[[Revisionism (Marxism)]]
*[[Revisionism (Marxism)]]
*[[Technocracy]]
*[[Technocracy]]
*[[Ultraconservatism]]
{{Div col end}}


== References ==
== References ==
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{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Conservatism in China|*]]
[[Category:Conservatism in China|*]]
[[Category:Politics of China]]
[[Category:Authoritarianism]]
[[Category:Authoritarianism]]
[[Category:Capitalism]]
[[Category:Contemporary Chinese philosophy]]
[[Category:Contemporary Chinese philosophy]]
[[Category:Ideology of the Chinese Communist Party]]
[[Category:Politics of China]]
[[Category:Right-wing politics in China]]
[[Category:Syncretic political movements]]

Latest revision as of 11:53, 22 November 2024

Neoauthoritarianism (Chinese: 新权威主义; pinyin: xīn quánwēi zhǔyì), also known as Chinese Neoconservativism or New Conservatism (Chinese: 新保守主义; pinyin: xīn bǎoshǒu zhǔyì) since the 1990s,[1][2][failed verification] is a current of political thought within the People's Republic of China (PRC), and to some extent the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), that advocates a powerful centralized state to facilitate market reforms.[3] It has been described as right-wing,[4][5][6] classically conservative even though it incorporated some aspects of Marxist-Leninist and Maoist theories.[7]

Gaining credence in China's intellectual world,[8] the concept of liberal democracy led to intense debate between democratic advocates and neoauthoritarians[1] prior to the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre.[9] It is discussed as an alternative to the implementation of liberal democracy, similar to the strengthened leadership of Soviet general secretary Leonid Brezhnev and the early years of Mikhail Gorbachev.[7]

Its origin was based in reworked ideas of Samuel Huntington, advising the post-Communist East European elite take a gradualist approach towards market liberalization; hence, "new authoritarianism". A rejection of the optimistic views on modernization theories,[10] it seeks faster reform of the socialist market economy[11] while the party remain ideologically and organizationally sound.[10] In early March 1989, Zhao Ziyang presented Wu Jiaxiang's idea of neoauthoritarianism to Deng Xiaoping, who compared it to his own ideology.[12]

Background

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Following the 1978 Third Plenum, which made Deng Xiaoping Paramount leader, China employed a variety of strategies to develop it's economy, beginning the Chinese economic reform.[1] By 1982 the success of China's market experiments had become apparent, making more radical strategies seem possible and desirable. This led to the lifting of price controls and agricultural decollectivization, signaling the abandonment of the New Economic Policy, or economic Leninism, in favour of market socialism.[3]

With economic developments and political changes, China departed from totalitarianism towards what Harry Harding characterizes as a "consultative authoritarian regime." One desire of political reform was to "restore normalcy and unity to elite politics so as to bring to an end the chronic instability of the late Maoist period and create a more orderly process of leadership succession." With cadre reform, individual leaders in China, recruited for their performance and education, became more economically liberal, with less ideological loyalty.[1]

History

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Emergence

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Having begun in the era of Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution, decentralization accelerated under Deng Xiaoping. In a neoauthoritarian vein, Zheng Yongnian (1994) believed that "Deng's early reform decentralized power to the level of local government" with the goal of "decentralizing power to individual enterprises" running "afoul of the growing power of local government, which did not want individual enterprises to retain profit (and) began bargaining with the central government over profit retention, (seizing) decision-making power in the enterprises. This intervention inhibited the more efficient behavior that reforms sought to elicit from industry; decentralization... limited progress."

Though the government took a clear stance against liberalization in December 1986, political discussions centered in Beijing would nonetheless emerge in academic circles in 1988 in the form of democracy and Neoauthoritarianism.[13] Neoauthoritarianism would catch the attention of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in early 1988 when Wu Jiaxiang wrote an article in which he concluded that the British monarchy initiated modernization by "pulling down 100 castles overnight", thus developmentally linking autocracy and freedom as preceding democracy and freedom.[7]

Persistence as Neoconservativism

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Growth in per capita GDP in the tiger economies between 1960 and 2014[14]

Neoauthoritarianism lost favor after the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre. Henry He considers that, while June 4 halted the movement for democracy, because neoauthoritarianism avoids the issue of popular involvement, it would therefore be a downfall for it and General Secretary Zhao Ziyang as well. He considers it to have transformed into a kind of "neo-conservatism" after that.[15]

With the failure of democracy in Russia, and the good performance of Singapore, it would continue to infiltrate the upper echelons of the CCP as a neo-conservatism. Most associated with Shanghai intellectuals, Wang Huning, a leading advocate in the 1980s, would go on to become a close advisor to CCP general secretary Jiang Zemin in the 1990s. The neo-conservatives would enjoy Jiang's patronage.[2]

New Conservatism or neoconservatism (Chinese: 新保守主义; pinyin: xīn bǎoshǒu zhǔyì) argued for political and economic centralization and the establishment of shared moral values.[16]: 637–9 [17]: 33  The movement has been described in the West by political scientist Joseph Fewsmith.[16] Neoconservatives are opposed to radical reform projects and argue that an authoritarian and incrementalist approach is necessary to stabilize the process of modernization.[18]

Joseph Fewsmith writes that, the 1989 crackdown aside, the government lacked the resources to fundamentally address the problems of the worsening agricultural sector, shifting the past conservative-reform dynamic to one of guiding marketization and managing the consequences of reform.[16] Writing in 1994, Zheng Yongnian considered capitalism as providing a check on state power by dividing public and private spheres, and that "Neoconservativism" was becoming popular at that time, in contrast to liberal intellectuals who argued for the collapse of the centralized state as necessary to economic growth. He writes that "In order to introduce a true market economy, Beijing has to free individual enterprises from local administrative meddling and regain control over funds for central investments in the infrastructure. The state must first recentralize in order to deepen decentralization, as many authors suggest."[1]

Still considering democracy a long-term goal, the events of June 4 seemed to confirm the "neoconservatives" belief in a strong state, considering China's autocratic model to actually be weak and ineffectual. They also consider a strong state important in economic growth along the lines of Asian Tiger economies and continued to draw ideas from Samuel Huntington, particularly his book Political Order in Changing Societies. Whatever his use as a foreigner who advocated limiting the scope of democracy, his ideas seemed to have merit on their own.[10]

Social critic Liu Xiaobo believed that the CCP grew conservative in response to 1989, without any new ideas, and apart from "neo-conservativism" conservatism itself became popular in intellectual circles along with the revival of old Maoist leftism.[10]

An important neoconservative document was the 1992 China Youth Daily editorial "Realistic Responses and Strategic Options for China after the Soviet Upheaval", which responded to the fall of the Soviet Union.[19]: 58  "Realistic Responses" described the end of the Soviet state as the result of "capitalist utopianism", and argued that the CCP should transform from a "revolutionary party" into a "ruling party".[19]: 59  The authors believed that the party should depart from the legacy of the Bolshevik Revolution and reformulate socialism according to China's particular national conditions.[19]: 60 

The neoconservatives enjoyed the patronage of Jiang Zemin during his term as top leader and General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (1989–2002), and Jiang's theory of the Three Represents has been described as a "bowdlerized form of neoconservatism".[20]: 151  Prominent neoconservative theorists include Xiao Gongqin, initially a leading neoauthoritarian who promoted "gradual reform under strong rule" after 1989,[19]: 53  and Wang Huning,[16]: 637  who became a member of the Politburo Standing Committee, the CCP's highest executive body, headed by CCP general secretary Xi Jinping in 2017.[21]

Theory

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A central figure, if not principal proponent of Neoauthoritarianism, the "well-connected"[7] Wu Jiaxiang was an advisor to Premier Zhao Ziyang,[10] the latter being a major architect of the Deng Xiaoping reforms.[citation needed] Jiang Shigong is considered a major ideological proponent of neoconservatism and promoter of the ideas of Carl Schmitt.[22]

Samuel Huntington's Political Order in Changing Societies rejected economic development or modernization as transferable to the political sphere as a mere variable of the former. He preconditioned democracy on institutionalization and stability, with democracy and economic change undermining or putting strain on political stability in poor circumstances. He considered the measure of a political system to be its ability to keep order. Writing in the 1960s, he lauded the United States and Soviet Union equally; what the Soviet Union lacked in social justice was made up for in strong controls.[10]

By the late 1980s, many elements of Maoism had been abandoned in China and a complete transition to capitalism seemed possible to many given past performance. Though needing restating by Wu Jiaxiang to receive attention, Marxist scholar Rong Jian proposed a neoauthoritarianism requiring a strong state and reform-minded elite, or "benevolent dictatorship", to facilitate market reform and with it democracy.[citation needed]

With a more Marxistic foundation, Neoauthoritarianism is differentiated from both Maoism and Huntington by holding economic change to be a condition for political change, while late Maoism considered either as being able to facilitate the other. Moreover, the idea that superstructural development was necessary to facilitate economic growth seemed dubious to Chinese leadership given the explosion of the market, giving credence to the idea.[23]

Wu considered social developments like liberal democracy unable to proceed simply from new authorities. Democracy has to be based on the development of the market, because the market reduces the number of public decisions, the number of people seeking power and political rights for economic bernefit, and therefore the "cost" of political action. The separation of the political and economic spheres lays a foundation for a further separation of powers, thereby negating autocracy despite the centralizing tendency of the state. The market also defines interests, increasing "responsibility" and thereby decreasing the possibility of bribery in preparation for democratic politics. On the other hand, political actions become excessive without a market, or with a mixed market, because a large number of people will seek political posts, raising the "cost" of political action and making effective consultation difficult. To avoid this problem, a country without a developed market has to maintain strongman politics and a high degree of centralism.[24]

Legacy

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China's measures for successful economic and political stabilization led many scholars and politicians to accept the role of an authoritarian regime in fast and stable economic growth. Although the Chinese state is seen as legitimizing democracy as a modernization goal, economic growth is seen as more important.[1]

In his 1994 article Zheng Yongnian elaborates that, "Administrative power should be strengthened in order to provide favorable conditions, especially stable politics, for market development. Without such a political instrument, both 'reform' and 'open door' are impossible... A precondition of political development is the provision of very favorable conditions for economic progress. Political stability must be given highest priority... without stable politics, domestic construction is impossible, let alone an 'open door' policy. So, if political reform or democracy undermines political stability, it is not worthwhile. In other words, an authoritarian regime is desirable if it can produce stable politics."[1]

Deng Xiaoping explains: "Why have we treated student demonstrations so seriously and so quickly? Because China is not able to bear more disturbance and more disorder." Given the dominance of the Chinese state, Zheng believes that, when it is finally implemented, democracy in China is more likely to be a gift from the elite to the society rather than brought about by internal forces.[1]

A 2018 study of schools of political theory in contemporary China identified neoconservatism, still alternatively named neoauthoritarianism, as a continuing current of thought alongside what are now the academically more prominent Chinese New Left, New Confucianism, and Chinese liberalism.[25]

Criticism and views

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When neoauthoritarianism emerged to scholarly debate, Rong Jian opposed his old idea as regressive, favoring the multiparty faction. He would become famous for a news article on the matter.[12]

Chinese-Canadian sociologist Yuezhi Zhao views the neoauthoritarians as having attempted to avoid an economic crisis through dictatorship,[26] and Barry Sautman characterizes them as reflecting the policy of "pre-revolutionary Chinese leaders" as well as "contemporary Third World strongmen", as part of ideological developments of the decade he considers more recognizable to westerners as conservative and liberal. Sautsmans sums its theory with a quote from Su Shaozi (1986): "What China needs today is a strong liberal leader."[7]

Li Cheng and Lynn T. White nonetheless regard the neoauthoritarians as resonating with technocracy emerging in the 1980s as a result of "dramatic" policy shifts in 1978 that promoted such to top posts.[26] Henry He considers the main criticism of neoauthoritarianism to be its continued advocacy of an "old" type of establishment, relying on charismatic leaders. His view is corroborated by Yan Yining and Li Wei, with the addition that for Yan what is needed is law, or Li democracy, administrative efficiency and scientific government. Li points out that previous crisis in China were not due to popular participation, but power struggles and corruption, and that an authoritarian state does not usually separate powers.[15] A criticism by Zhou Wenzhang is that neoauthoritarianism only considers problems of authority from the angle of centralization, similarly considering the main problem of authority to be whether or not it is exercised scientifically.[27]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Zheng, Yongnian (Summer 1994). "Development and Democracy: Are They Compatible in China?". Political Science Quarterly. 109 (2): 235–259. doi:10.2307/2152624. JSTOR 2152624.
  2. ^ a b Peter Moody (2007), p. 151. Conservative Thought in Contemporary China. https://books.google.com/books?id=PpRcDMl2Pu4C&pg=PA151
  3. ^ a b Bramall, Chris (October 8, 2008). Chinese Economic Development. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-19051-5.
  4. ^ Yuezhi Zhao (March 20, 2008). Communication in China: Political Economy, Power, and Conflict. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-7425-7428-1. As such, it is also consistent with the right-wing ideology of neo-authoritarianism, limiting itself to championing China's national self-interests in a neoliberal global order.
  5. ^ Christer Pursiainen (September 10, 2012). At the Crossroads of Post-Communist Modernisation: Russia and China in Comparative Perspective. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 156. Consequently, the CCP's transformation into a right-wing elitist party occurred during the 1990s under Jiang Zeming's reign.
  6. ^ Economic and Political Weekly: Volume 41. Sameeksha Trust. June 2006. p. 2212.
  7. ^ a b c d e Sautman, Barry (1992). "Sirens of the Strongman: Neo-Authoritarianism in Recent Chinese Political Theory". The China Quarterly. 129 (129): 72–102. doi:10.1017/S0305741000041230. ISSN 0305-7410. JSTOR 654598. S2CID 154374469.
  8. ^ "Rong Jian 荣剑 | The China Story". www.thechinastory.org. Archived from the original on September 27, 2013.
  9. ^ Li, H. (April 7, 2015). Political Thought and China's Transformation: Ideas Shaping Reform in Post-Mao China. Springer. ISBN 978-1-137-42781-6.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Moody, Peter R. (2007). Conservative Thought in Contemporary China. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-2046-0.
  11. ^ https://www.thechitnastory.org/key-intellectual/rong-jian-%E8%8D%A3%E5%89%91/ [dead link]
  12. ^ a b "Rong Jian 荣剑 | The China Story". www.thechinastory.org. Archived from the original on September 27, 2013.
  13. ^ Petracca, Mark P.; Xiong, Mong (November 1, 1990). "The Concept of Chinese Neo-Authoritarianism: An Exploration and Democratic Critique". Asian Survey. 30 (11): 1099–1117. doi:10.2307/2644692. ISSN 0004-4687. JSTOR 2644692.
  14. ^ Data for "Real GDP at Constant National Prices" and "Population" from Economic Research at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Archived 3 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine.
  15. ^ a b Oksenberg, Michel C.; Lambert, Marc; Manion, Melanie (September 16, 2016). Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict - The Basic Documents. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-28907-6.
  16. ^ a b c d Fewsmith, Joseph (July 1995). "Neoconservatism and the End of the Dengist Era". Asian Survey. 35 (7): 635–651. doi:10.2307/2645420. JSTOR 2645420.
  17. ^ Zhao, Suisheng (2015) [2000]. "'We are Patriots First and Democrats Second': The Rise of Chinese Nationalism in the 1990s". In McCormick, Barrett L.; Friedman, Edward (eds.). What if China Doesn't Democratize?: Implications for War and Peace. Abingdon: Routledge. pp. 21–48. ISBN 9781317452218.
  18. ^ Liu, Chang (2005). "Neo-Conservatism". In Davis, Edward L. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture. Abingdon: Routledge. ISBN 9781134549535.
  19. ^ a b c d van Dongen, Els (2019). Realistic Revolution: Contesting Chinese History, Culture, and Politics after 1989. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1108421300.
  20. ^ Moody, Peter (2007). Conservative Thought in Contemporary China. Plymouth: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0739120460.
  21. ^ Yi, Wang (November 6, 2017). "Meet the mastermind behind Xi Jinping's power". The Washington Post. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  22. ^ Che, Chang (December 1, 2020). "The Nazi Inspiring China's Communists". The Atlantic. Archived from the original on December 1, 2020. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  23. ^ Chris Bramall (2008), p. 328-239, 474-475. Chinese Economic Development. https://books.google.com/books?id=A9Rr-M8MXAEC&pg=PA475
  24. ^ Michel C. Oksenberg, Marc Lambert, Melanie Manion. 1990. P127-128. Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict.
  25. ^ Cheek, Timothy; Ownby, David; Fogel, Joshua (March 14, 2018). "Mapping the intellectual public sphere in China today". China Information. 32 (1): 108–120. doi:10.1177/0920203X18759789.
  26. ^ a b Yuezhi Zhao (1998), p.43. Media, Market, and Democracy in China. https://books.google.com/books?id=hHkza3TX-LIC&pg=PA43
  27. ^ Oksenberg, Michel, 1938-; Sullivan, Lawrence R; Lambert, Marc; Li, Qiao. 1990 p129. Beijing Spring 1989: Confrontation and Conflict. https://books.google.com/books?id=8pIYDQAAQBAJ
  28. ^ Zi, Yang (July 6, 2016). "Xi Jinping and China's Traditionalist Restoration". The Jamestown Foundation. Retrieved June 22, 2024.