For years, I have been writing columns
predicting China’s decline. This week, the decline became undeniable. The road
downhill will not be smooth — neither for China nor for us.
اضافة اعلان
The news is that the death rate in China
outnumbered the birthrate for the first time in more than 60 years. Last time,
it was famine caused by Mao Zedong’s economic policies that led to an estimated
36 million deaths from starvation. Now, it is young Chinese couples who, like
their peers in much of the developed world, do not want children.
So far, the demographic downshift has been
small — 9.56 million births last year against 10.41 million deaths, according
to Chinese government statistics. That is out of a total population of 1.4
billion. The country will not be running out of people anytime soon.
But the longer trend lines look awful for
Beijing. In 1978, when Deng Xiaoping’s economic reforms got underway, China’s
median age was 20.1 years. In 2021, it was 37.9, exceeding that of the US.
China’s fertility rate is 1.18. The replacement rate necessary to maintain a
stable population is 2.1.
As of 2018, there were an estimated 34
million more males in China than females — the result of a one-child policy
that led couples to abort girls at a higher rate than boys. China’s working-age
population has been shrinking for years; a government spokesperson estimated
that it will fall to 700 million by the middle of the century.
The ripple effect of an aging ChinaIf you think the world has too many people
already, then all this might sound like good news. It is not. China is
increasingly likely to grow old before it gets rich, consigning hundreds of
millions of Chinese to a penurious and often lonely old age. A declining
population generally correlates with economic decline — roughly a
1-percentage-point decline in economic growth for every percentage-point
decline in population, according to Ruchir Sharma, a former head of emerging
markets at Morgan Stanley. And China, both as an export hub and as a vast
market, has been a major driver of global economic growth for four decades. Its
weakness will ripple through the world economy.
A declining population generally correlates with economic decline — roughly a 1-percentage-point decline in economic growth for every percentage-point decline in population
But the scariest aspect of China’s decline
is geopolitical. When democracies experience economic problems, they tend to
become inward-looking and risk-averse. When dictatorships do, they often become
externally focused and risk-inclined. Regimes that cannot, or will not, address
domestic discontents through political and economic reforms often try to do so
through foreign adventures.
That is a point worth thinking about now
that Beijing is also reporting the slowest rate of economic growth in nearly
four decades. The immediate cause here is Xi Jinping’s catastrophic mishandling
of the COVID crisis — the punitive lockdowns, the rejection of foreign
vaccines, the abrupt end of restrictions, the constant lying.
But China’s economy was already in trouble
before the pandemic: a real estate bubble at the point of bursting, record high
capital flight, the end of Hong Kong as a relatively free city, and Chinese
companies like Huawei increasingly unwelcome in Western countries on account of
espionage and intellectual-property-theft concerns.
A pragmatic government might have been able
to tackle these challenges. But Xi has appointed a gang of yes men to the
Politburo for his unprecedented third term as supreme leader. If — or as —
economic conditions deteriorate, they are likelier to find answers to their
problems in aggression rather than reform. Think of inflationary Argentina on
the eve of the invasion of the Falklands or bankrupt Iraq just before the
invasion of Kuwait.
Deterrence, détente, and dissidentsWhat should the US do? Three things.
First, deterrence. The better Kyiv does
militarily against Moscow, the more deeply the lesson will be learned in
Beijing that taking Taipei would not be as easy as it seems. The sooner Taiwan
acquires large stores of easy-to-use, hard-to-target weapons such as Stinger
and Javelin missiles, the more hesitant China’s military planners will be to
step on a sea urchin. The more the US does to help Japan, Australia, and other
allies strengthen their militaries, the greater the deterrent effect it will
have on China’s regional ambitions.
When democracies experience economic problems, they tend to become inward-looking and risk-averse. When dictatorships do, they often become externally focused and risk-inclined.
The administration is doing much of this
already. It needs to do more of it, much faster.
Second, trade detente. Trying to punish
Beijing via Donald Trump’s tariffs aggravates the relationship while harming
both sides economically. We should offer to roll them back in exchange for
guarantees from China that it will end its hacking campaigns against US
institutions.
If it cheats, the tariffs can be reimposed
and doubled.
Finally, human rights. At every
opportunity, the US State Department should speak up loudly for China’s
dissidents. Jimmy Lai and Qin Yongmin, among others, should be as familiar to
Americans as Andrei Sakharov and Natan Sharansky were in the 1970s. Their names
should be raised at every bilateral meeting with Chinese officials not only out
of concern for their lives but also as reminders that our fundamental
differences with Beijing are not strategic. They are moral.
In the long run, the greatest hope we can
have for China is its people. The greatest investment we can make in the coming
decades of turbulence is to keep faith with them.
Read more Opinion and Analysis
Jordan News