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Chinese Century

The Chinese Century (simplified Chinese: 中国世纪; traditional Chinese: 中國世紀; pinyin: Zhōngguó shìjì) is a neologism suggesting that the 21st century may be geoeconomically or geopolitically dominated by the People's Republic of China,[1] similar to how the "American Century" refers to the 20th century and the "British Centuries" to the 18th and 19th, [2] same in the 17-18th centuries dominated by France and the 15-16th centuries dominated by Spain.[3][4] The phrase is used particularly in association with the prediction that the economy of China may overtake the economy of the United States to be the largest in the world.[5] A similar term is China's rise or rise of China (simplified Chinese: 中国崛起; traditional Chinese: 中國崛起; pinyin: Zhōngguó juéqǐ).[6][7]

Map of China

China created the Belt and Road Initiative which according to analysts has been a geostrategic effort to take a larger role in global affairs and challenges U.S. post-war hegemony.[8][9][10] It has also been argued that China co-founded the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and New Development Bank to compete with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund in development finance.[11][12] In 2015, China launched the Made in China 2025 strategic plan to further develop its manufacturing sector. There have been debates on the effectiveness and practicality of these programs in promoting China's global status.

China's emergence as a global economic power is tied to its large working population.[13] However, the population in China is aging faster than almost any other country in history.[13][14] Current demographic trends could hinder economic growth, create challenging social problems, and limit China's capabilities to act as a new global hegemon.[13][15][16][17] China's primarily debt-driven economic growth also creates concerns for substantial credit default risks and a potential financial crisis.

According to The Economist, on a purchasing-power-parity (PPP) basis, the Chinese economy became the world's largest in 2013.[18] On a foreign exchange rate basis, some estimates in 2020 and early 2021 said that China could overtake the U.S. in 2028,[19] or 2026 if the Chinese currency further strengthened.[20] As of July 2021, Bloomberg L.P. analysts estimated that China may either overtake the U.S. to become the world's biggest economy in the 2030s or never be able to reach such a goal.[21] Some scholars believe that China's rise has peaked and that an impending stagnation or decline may follow.[22][23][24]

Debates and factors edit

 
GDP (current US$, not adjusted for purchasing power parity) - United States, China (in trillions of US$, 1960–2019)
 
Nominal GDP per capita (not adjusted for purchasing power parity) - United States, China (1960-2019)

China's economy was estimated to be the largest in the 16th, 17th and early 18th century.[25] Joseph Stiglitz said the "Chinese Century" had begun in 2014.[26] The Economist has argued that "the Chinese Century is well under way", citing China's GDP since 2013, if calculated on a purchasing-power-parity basis.[27]

From 2013, China created the Belt and Road Initiative, with future investments of almost $1 trillion[28] which according to analysts has been a geostrategic push for taking a larger role in global affairs.[8][9] It has also been argued that China co-founded the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and New Development Bank to compete with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund in development finance.[11][12] In 2015, China launched the Made in China 2025 strategic plan to further develop the manufacturing sector, with the aim of upgrading the manufacturing capabilities of Chinese industries and growing from labor-intensive workshops into a more technology-intensive powerhouse.

In November 2020, China signed the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership as a free trade agreement[29][30][31] in counter to the Trans-Pacific Partnership.[32][33][34] The deal has been considered by some commentators as a "huge victory" for China,[35][36] although it has been shown that it would add just 0.08% to China's 2030 GDP without India's participation.[37][38]

Ryan Hass, a senior fellow in foreign policy at the Brookings Institution, said that much of the narrative of China "inexorably rising and on the verge of overtaking a faltering United States" was promoted by China's state-affiliated media outlets, adding, "Authoritarian systems excel at showcasing their strengths and concealing their weaknesses."[39] Political scientist Matthew Kroenig said, "the plans often cited as evidence of China's farsighted vision, the Belt and Road Initiative and Made in China 2025, were announced by Xi only in 2013 and 2015, respectively. Both are way too recent to be celebrated as brilliant examples of successful, long-term strategic planning."[40]

According to Barry Naughton, a professor and China expert at the University of California, San Diego, the average income in China was CN¥42,359 for urban households and CN¥16,021 for rural households in 2019. Even at the purchasing power parity conversion rate, the average urban income was just over US$10,000 and the average rural income was just under US$4,000 in China. Naughton questioned whether it is sensible for a middle income country of this kind to be taking "such a disproportionate part of the risky expenditure involved in pioneering new technologies". He commented that while it does not make sense from a purely economic perspective, Chinese policymakers have "other considerations" when implementing their industrial policy such as Made in China 2025.[41]

Depending on different assumptions of scenarios, it has been estimated that China would either overtake the U.S. to become the world's biggest economy in the 2030s or never be able to do so.[21]

International relations edit

Top five countries by military expenditure in 2020.
According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.[42]

In 2011, Michael Beckley, then a research fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School, released his journal China's Century? Why America's Edge Will Endure which rejects that the U.S. is in decline relative to China or that the hegemonic burdens the U.S. bears to sustain a globalized system contributes to its decline. Beckley argues the U.S. power is durable, and "unipolarity" and globalization are the main reasons. He says, "The United States derives competitive advantages from its preponderant position, and globalization allows it to exploit these advantages, attracting economic activity and manipulating the international system to its benefit."[43]

Beckley believes that if the United States was in terminal decline, it would adopt neomercantilist economic policies and disengage from military commitments in Asia. "If however, the United States is not in decline, and if globalization and hegemony are the main reasons why, then the United States should do the opposite: it should contain China’s growth by maintaining a liberal international economic policy, and it should subdue China’s ambitions by sustaining a robust political and military presence in Asia."[43] Beckley believes that the United States benefits from being an extant hegemon—the U.S. did not overturn the international order to its benefit in 1990, but rather, the existing order collapsed around it.

Scholars that are skeptical of the U.S.'s ability to maintain a leading position include Robert Pape, who has calculated that "one of the largest relative declines in modern history" stems from "the spread of technology to the rest of the world".[44] Similarly, Fareed Zakaria writes, "The unipolar order of the last two decades is waning not because of Iraq but because of the broader diffusion of power across the world."[45]Paul Kipchumba in Africa in China's 21st Century: In Search of a Strategy predicts a deadly cold war between the U.S. and China in the 21st century, and, if that cold war does not occur, he predicts China will supplant the U.S. in all aspects of global hegemony.[46]

Academic Rosemary Foot writes that the rise of China has led to some renegotiations of the U.S. hegemony in the Asia-Pacific region, but inconsistency between China's stated ambitions and policy actions has prompted various forms of resistance which leaves U.S. hegemony only partially challenged.[47] Meanwhile, C. Raja Mohan observes that "many of China’s neighbors are steadily drifting toward either neutrality between Beijing and Washington or simply acceptance of being dominated by their giant neighbor." However, he also notes that Australia, India, and Japan have readily challenged Beijing.[48] Richard Heyderian proposes that "America’s edge over China is its broad and surprisingly durable network of regional alliances, particularly with middle powers Japan, Australia and, increasingly, India, which share common, though not identical, concerns over China’s rising assertiveness."[49]

In the midst of global concerns that China's economic influence included political leverage, Chinese leader Xi Jinping stated "No matter how far China develops, it will never seek hegemony".[50] At several international summits, one being the World Economic Forum in January 2021, Chinese leader Xi Jinping stated a preference for multilateralism and international cooperation.[51] However, political scientist Stephen Walt contrasts the public message with China's intimidation of neighboring countries. Stephen Walt suggests that the U.S. "should take Xi up on his stated preference for multilateral engagement and use America’s vastly larger array of allies and partners to pursue favorable outcomes within various multilateral forums." Though encouraging the possibility of mutually beneficial cooperation, he argues that "competition between the two largest powers is to a considerable extent hardwired into the emerging structure of the international system."[51] According to former Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, China will "[initially] want to share this century as co-equals with the U.S.", but have "the intention to be the greatest power in the world" eventually.[49]

Writing in the Asia Europe Journal, Lei Yu and Sophia Sui suggest that the China-Russia strategic partnership "shows China’s strategic intention of enhancing its 'hard' power in order to elevate its status at the systemic (global) level."[52]

In 2018, Xiangming Chen wrote that China was potentially creating a New Great Game, shifted to geoeconomic competition compared with the original Great Game. Chen stated that China would play the role of the British Empire (and Russia the role of the 19th century Russian Empire) in the analogy as the "dominant power players vs. the weaker independent Central Asian states". Additionally, he suggested that ultimately the Belt and Road Initiative could turn the "China-Central Asia nexus into a vassal relationship characterized by cross-border investment by China for border security and political stability."[53]

Rapid aging and demographic challenges edit

 
Historical estimates of population, combined with the projected population to 2100 based on the UN's medium variant scenario for the top 3 countries with the largest current population: China, India, and the U.S.
 
World Bank projections of China's working-age population through 2050

China's emergence as a global economic power is tied to its large, working population.[13] However, the population in China is aging faster than almost any other country in history.[13][14] In 2050, the proportion of Chinese over retirement age will become 39 percent of the total population according to projections. China is rapidly aging at an earlier stage of its development than other countries.[13] Current demographic trends could hinder economic growth, create challenging social problems, and limit China's capabilities to act as a new global hegemony.[13][15][16][17]

Brendan O'Reilly, a guest expert at Geopolitical Intelligence Services, wrote, "A dark scenario of demographic decline sparking a negative feedback loop of economic crisis, political instability, emigration and further decreased fertility is very real for China".[54][55] Nicholas Eberstadt, an economist and demographic expert at the American Enterprise Institute, said that current demographic trends will overwhelm China's economy and geopolitics, making its rise much more uncertain. He said, "The age of heroic economic growth is over."[56]

Ryan Hass at the Brookings said that China's "working-age population is already shrinking; by 2050, China will go from having eight workers per retiree now to two workers per retiree. Moreover, it has already squeezed out most of the large productivity gains that come with a population becoming more educated and urban and adopting technologies to make manufacturing more efficient."[39]

According to American economist Scott Rozelle and researcher Natalie Hell, "China looks a lot more like 1980s Mexico or Turkey than 1980s Taiwan or South Korea. No country has ever made it to high-income status with high school attainment rates below 50 percent. With China's high school attainment rate of 30 percent, the country could be in grave trouble." They warn that China risks falling into the middle income trap due to the rural urban divide in education and structural unemployment.[57][58] Economists Martin Chorzempa and Tianlei Huang of the Peterson Institute agree with this assessment, adding that "China has overlooked rural development much too long", and must invest in the educational and health resources of its rural communities to solve an ongoing human capital crisis.[58]

Economic growth and debt edit

 
China's share of global export (1990 - 2019)

The People's Republic of China was the only major economy that reported growth in 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic.[59] The economy of China expanded by 2.3% while the U.S. economy and the eurozone are expected to have shrunk by 3.6% and 7.4% respectively. China's share of the global GDP rose to 16.8%, while the U.S. economy accounted for 22.2% of global GDP in 2020.[60] By the end of 2024, however, the Chinese economy is expected to be smaller than what was previously projected, while the U.S. economy is expected to be larger, according to the International Monetary Fund's 2021 report on the global economic outlook.[61]

China's increased lending has been primarily driven by its desire to increase economic growth as fast as possible. The performance of local government officials has for decades been evaluated almost entirely on their ability to produce economic growth. Amanda Lee reports in the South China Morning Post that "as China’s growth has slowed, there are growing concerns that many of these debts are at risk of default, which could trigger a systemic crisis in China’s state-dominated financial system".[62]

Diana Choyleva of Enodo Economics predicts that China's debt ratio will soon surpass that of Japan at the peak of its crisis.[63] Choyleva argues "For evidence that Beijing realizes it is drowning in debt and needs a lifebuoy, look no further than the government's own actions. It is finally injecting a degree of pricing discipline into the corporate bond market and it is actively encouraging foreign investors to help finance the reduction of a huge pile of bad debt."[63]

China's debt-to-GDP ratio increased from 178% in the first quarter of 2010 to 275% in the first quarter of 2020.[63] China's debt-to-GDP ratio approached 335% in the second and third quarters of 2020.[62] Ryan Hass at the Brookings said, "China is running out of productive places to invest in infrastructure, and rising debt levels will further complicate its growth path."[39]

The PRC government regularly revises its GDP figures, often toward the end of the year. Because local governments face political pressure to meet pre-set growth targets, many doubt the accuracy of the statistics.[64] According to Chang-Tai Hsieh, an economist at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, Michael Zheng Song, an economics professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and coauthors, China's economic growth may have been overstated by 1.7 percent each year between 2008 and 2016, meaning that the government may have been overstating the size of the Chinese economy by 12-16 percent in 2016.[65][66]

According to American strategist and historian Edward Luttwak, China will not be burdened by huge economic or population problems, but will fail strategically because "the emperor makes all the decisions and he doesn't have anybody to correct him." He said that geopolitically, China "gained one year in the race" in 2020 by using the measures of a totalitarian government, but this has brought the "China threat" to the fore, pushing other governments to respond.[67]

Sociologist Ho-Fung Hung stated that, although China's extensive lending during the COVID-19 pandemic allowed a quick rebound after the initial lockdown, it contributed to the already deep indebtedness of many of China's corporations, slowing the economy by 2021 and depressing long-term performance. Hung also pointed out that in 2008, although it was claimed mainly in propaganda that the Chinese yuan could overtake the US dollar as a reserve currency, after a decade the yuan has since stalled and decreased in international usage, ranking below the British pound sterling, let alone the dollar.[68]

Chinese decline edit

Some scholars argue that China's rise will be over by the 2020s. According to foreign policy experts Michael Beckley and Hal Brands, China, as a revisionist power, has little time to change the status quo of the world in its favor due to "severe resource scarcity", "demographic collapse", and "losing access to the welcoming world that enabled its advance", adding that "peak China" has already come.[22]

According to Andrew Erickson of the U.S. Naval War College and Gabriel Collins of the Baker Institute, China's power is peaking, creating "a decade of danger from a system that increasingly realizes it only has a short time to fulfill some of its most critical, long-held goals".[23] David Von Drehle, a columnist for The Washington Post, wrote that it would be more difficult for the West to manage China's decline than its rise.[69]

According to John Mueller at the Cato Institute, a "descent or at least prolonged stagnation might come about, rather than a continued rise" for China. He listed the environment, corruption, ethnic and religious tensions, Chinese hostility toward foreign businesses, among others, as contributing factors to China's impending decline.[24]

According to Yi Fuxian, a demography and health researcher at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the Chinese Century is "already over".[70]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Global Trends 2025: A Transformed World. Cosimo. March 2010. p. 7. ISBN 9781605207711.
  • Brown, Kerry (2017) China's World: The Global Aspiration of the Next Superpower. I. B. Tauris, Limited ISBN 9781784538095.
  • Brahm, Laurence J. (2001) China's Century: The Awakening of the Next Economic Powerhouse. Wiley ISBN 9780471479017.
  • Fishman, Ted (2006) China, Inc.: How the Rise of the Next Superpower Challenges America and the World. Scribner ISBN 9780743257350.
  • Jacques, Martin (2012) When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order. Penguin Books ISBN 9780143118008.
  • Hung, Ho-fung (2015). The China Boom: Why China Will Not Rule the World. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-54022-3.
  • Overholt, William (1994) The Rise of China: How Economic Reform is Creating a New Superpower. W. W. Norton & Company ISBN 9780393312454.
  • Peerenboom, Randall (2008) China Modernizes: Threat to the West or Model for the Rest?. Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199226122.
  • Pillsbury, Michael (2016) The Hundred-Year Marathon: China's Secret Strategy to Replace America as the Global Superpower. St. Martin's Griffin ISBN 9781250081346.
  • Schell, Orville (2014) Wealth and Power: China's Long March to the Twenty-first Century. Random House Trade Paperbacks ISBN 9780812976250.
  • Shenkar, Oded (2004) The Chinese Century: The Rising Chinese Economy and Its Impact on the Global Economy, the Balance of Power, and Your Job. FT Press ISBN 9780131467484.
  • Shambaugh, David (2014) China Goes Global: The Partial Power. Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199361038.
  • Womack, Brantly (2010) China's Rise in Historical Perspective. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers ISBN 9780742567221.
  • Yueh, Linda (2013) China's Growth: The Making of an Economic Superpower. Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199205783.
  • Dahlman, Carl J; Aubert, Jean-Eric. (2001) China and the Knowledge Economy: Seizing the 21st Century. WBI Development Studies. World Bank Publications.
  • Hell, Natalie; Rozelle, Scott. (2020) Invisible China: How the Urban-Rural Divide Threatens China’s Rise. University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226739526.

chinese, century, chinese, hegemony, redirects, here, historical, hegemons, ancient, china, five, hegemons, simplified, chinese, 中国世纪, traditional, chinese, 中國世紀, pinyin, zhōngguó, shìjì, neologism, suggesting, that, 21st, century, geoeconomically, geopolitica. Chinese hegemony redirects here For the historical hegemons of ancient China see Five Hegemons The Chinese Century simplified Chinese 中国世纪 traditional Chinese 中國世紀 pinyin Zhōngguo shiji is a neologism suggesting that the 21st century may be geoeconomically or geopolitically dominated by the People s Republic of China 1 similar to how the American Century refers to the 20th century and the British Centuries to the 18th and 19th 2 same in the 17 18th centuries dominated by France and the 15 16th centuries dominated by Spain 3 4 The phrase is used particularly in association with the prediction that the economy of China may overtake the economy of the United States to be the largest in the world 5 A similar term is China s rise or rise of China simplified Chinese 中国崛起 traditional Chinese 中國崛起 pinyin Zhōngguo jueqǐ 6 7 Map of ChinaChina created the Belt and Road Initiative which according to analysts has been a geostrategic effort to take a larger role in global affairs and challenges U S post war hegemony 8 9 10 It has also been argued that China co founded the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and New Development Bank to compete with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund in development finance 11 12 In 2015 China launched the Made in China 2025 strategic plan to further develop its manufacturing sector There have been debates on the effectiveness and practicality of these programs in promoting China s global status China s emergence as a global economic power is tied to its large working population 13 However the population in China is aging faster than almost any other country in history 13 14 Current demographic trends could hinder economic growth create challenging social problems and limit China s capabilities to act as a new global hegemon 13 15 16 17 China s primarily debt driven economic growth also creates concerns for substantial credit default risks and a potential financial crisis According to The Economist on a purchasing power parity PPP basis the Chinese economy became the world s largest in 2013 18 On a foreign exchange rate basis some estimates in 2020 and early 2021 said that China could overtake the U S in 2028 19 or 2026 if the Chinese currency further strengthened 20 As of July 2021 Bloomberg L P analysts estimated that China may either overtake the U S to become the world s biggest economy in the 2030s or never be able to reach such a goal 21 Some scholars believe that China s rise has peaked and that an impending stagnation or decline may follow 22 23 24 Contents 1 Debates and factors 1 1 International relations 1 2 Rapid aging and demographic challenges 1 3 Economic growth and debt 1 4 Chinese decline 2 See also 3 References 4 Further readingDebates and factors edit nbsp GDP current US not adjusted for purchasing power parity United States China in trillions of US 1960 2019 nbsp Nominal GDP per capita not adjusted for purchasing power parity United States China 1960 2019 See also Belt and Road Initiative Made in China 2025 and Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership China s economy was estimated to be the largest in the 16th 17th and early 18th century 25 Joseph Stiglitz said the Chinese Century had begun in 2014 26 The Economist has argued that the Chinese Century is well under way citing China s GDP since 2013 if calculated on a purchasing power parity basis 27 From 2013 China created the Belt and Road Initiative with future investments of almost 1 trillion 28 which according to analysts has been a geostrategic push for taking a larger role in global affairs 8 9 It has also been argued that China co founded the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and New Development Bank to compete with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund in development finance 11 12 In 2015 China launched the Made in China 2025 strategic plan to further develop the manufacturing sector with the aim of upgrading the manufacturing capabilities of Chinese industries and growing from labor intensive workshops into a more technology intensive powerhouse In November 2020 China signed the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership as a free trade agreement 29 30 31 in counter to the Trans Pacific Partnership 32 33 34 The deal has been considered by some commentators as a huge victory for China 35 36 although it has been shown that it would add just 0 08 to China s 2030 GDP without India s participation 37 38 Ryan Hass a senior fellow in foreign policy at the Brookings Institution said that much of the narrative of China inexorably rising and on the verge of overtaking a faltering United States was promoted by China s state affiliated media outlets adding Authoritarian systems excel at showcasing their strengths and concealing their weaknesses 39 Political scientist Matthew Kroenig said the plans often cited as evidence of China s farsighted vision the Belt and Road Initiative and Made in China 2025 were announced by Xi only in 2013 and 2015 respectively Both are way too recent to be celebrated as brilliant examples of successful long term strategic planning 40 According to Barry Naughton a professor and China expert at the University of California San Diego the average income in China was CN 42 359 for urban households and CN 16 021 for rural households in 2019 Even at the purchasing power parity conversion rate the average urban income was just over US 10 000 and the average rural income was just under US 4 000 in China Naughton questioned whether it is sensible for a middle income country of this kind to be taking such a disproportionate part of the risky expenditure involved in pioneering new technologies He commented that while it does not make sense from a purely economic perspective Chinese policymakers have other considerations when implementing their industrial policy such as Made in China 2025 41 Depending on different assumptions of scenarios it has been estimated that China would either overtake the U S to become the world s biggest economy in the 2030s or never be able to do so 21 International relations edit Top five countries by military expenditure in 2020 According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute 42 In 2011 Michael Beckley then a research fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School released his journal China s Century Why America s Edge Will Endure which rejects that the U S is in decline relative to China or that the hegemonic burdens the U S bears to sustain a globalized system contributes to its decline Beckley argues the U S power is durable and unipolarity and globalization are the main reasons He says The United States derives competitive advantages from its preponderant position and globalization allows it to exploit these advantages attracting economic activity and manipulating the international system to its benefit 43 Beckley believes that if the United States was in terminal decline it would adopt neomercantilist economic policies and disengage from military commitments in Asia If however the United States is not in decline and if globalization and hegemony are the main reasons why then the United States should do the opposite it should contain China s growth by maintaining a liberal international economic policy and it should subdue China s ambitions by sustaining a robust political and military presence in Asia 43 Beckley believes that the United States benefits from being an extant hegemon the U S did not overturn the international order to its benefit in 1990 but rather the existing order collapsed around it Scholars that are skeptical of the U S s ability to maintain a leading position include Robert Pape who has calculated that one of the largest relative declines in modern history stems from the spread of technology to the rest of the world 44 Similarly Fareed Zakaria writes The unipolar order of the last two decades is waning not because of Iraq but because of the broader diffusion of power across the world 45 Paul Kipchumba in Africa in China s 21st Century In Search of a Strategy predicts a deadly cold war between the U S and China in the 21st century and if that cold war does not occur he predicts China will supplant the U S in all aspects of global hegemony 46 Academic Rosemary Foot writes that the rise of China has led to some renegotiations of the U S hegemony in the Asia Pacific region but inconsistency between China s stated ambitions and policy actions has prompted various forms of resistance which leaves U S hegemony only partially challenged 47 Meanwhile C Raja Mohan observes that many of China s neighbors are steadily drifting toward either neutrality between Beijing and Washington or simply acceptance of being dominated by their giant neighbor However he also notes that Australia India and Japan have readily challenged Beijing 48 Richard Heyderian proposes that America s edge over China is its broad and surprisingly durable network of regional alliances particularly with middle powers Japan Australia and increasingly India which share common though not identical concerns over China s rising assertiveness 49 In the midst of global concerns that China s economic influence included political leverage Chinese leader Xi Jinping stated No matter how far China develops it will never seek hegemony 50 At several international summits one being the World Economic Forum in January 2021 Chinese leader Xi Jinping stated a preference for multilateralism and international cooperation 51 However political scientist Stephen Walt contrasts the public message with China s intimidation of neighboring countries Stephen Walt suggests that the U S should take Xi up on his stated preference for multilateral engagement and use America s vastly larger array of allies and partners to pursue favorable outcomes within various multilateral forums Though encouraging the possibility of mutually beneficial cooperation he argues that competition between the two largest powers is to a considerable extent hardwired into the emerging structure of the international system 51 According to former Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew China will initially want to share this century as co equals with the U S but have the intention to be the greatest power in the world eventually 49 Writing in the Asia Europe Journal Lei Yu and Sophia Sui suggest that the China Russia strategic partnership shows China s strategic intention of enhancing its hard power in order to elevate its status at the systemic global level 52 In 2018 Xiangming Chen wrote that China was potentially creating a New Great Game shifted to geoeconomic competition compared with the original Great Game Chen stated that China would play the role of the British Empire and Russia the role of the 19th century Russian Empire in the analogy as the dominant power players vs the weaker independent Central Asian states Additionally he suggested that ultimately the Belt and Road Initiative could turn the China Central Asia nexus into a vassal relationship characterized by cross border investment by China for border security and political stability 53 Rapid aging and demographic challenges edit nbsp Historical estimates of population combined with the projected population to 2100 based on the UN s medium variant scenario for the top 3 countries with the largest current population China India and the U S nbsp World Bank projections of China s working age population through 2050See also Aging of China China s emergence as a global economic power is tied to its large working population 13 However the population in China is aging faster than almost any other country in history 13 14 In 2050 the proportion of Chinese over retirement age will become 39 percent of the total population according to projections China is rapidly aging at an earlier stage of its development than other countries 13 Current demographic trends could hinder economic growth create challenging social problems and limit China s capabilities to act as a new global hegemony 13 15 16 17 Brendan O Reilly a guest expert at Geopolitical Intelligence Services wrote A dark scenario of demographic decline sparking a negative feedback loop of economic crisis political instability emigration and further decreased fertility is very real for China 54 55 Nicholas Eberstadt an economist and demographic expert at the American Enterprise Institute said that current demographic trends will overwhelm China s economy and geopolitics making its rise much more uncertain He said The age of heroic economic growth is over 56 Ryan Hass at the Brookings said that China s working age population is already shrinking by 2050 China will go from having eight workers per retiree now to two workers per retiree Moreover it has already squeezed out most of the large productivity gains that come with a population becoming more educated and urban and adopting technologies to make manufacturing more efficient 39 According to American economist Scott Rozelle and researcher Natalie Hell China looks a lot more like 1980s Mexico or Turkey than 1980s Taiwan or South Korea No country has ever made it to high income status with high school attainment rates below 50 percent With China s high school attainment rate of 30 percent the country could be in grave trouble They warn that China risks falling into the middle income trap due to the rural urban divide in education and structural unemployment 57 58 Economists Martin Chorzempa and Tianlei Huang of the Peterson Institute agree with this assessment adding that China has overlooked rural development much too long and must invest in the educational and health resources of its rural communities to solve an ongoing human capital crisis 58 Economic growth and debt edit nbsp China s share of global export 1990 2019 The People s Republic of China was the only major economy that reported growth in 2020 during the COVID 19 pandemic 59 The economy of China expanded by 2 3 while the U S economy and the eurozone are expected to have shrunk by 3 6 and 7 4 respectively China s share of the global GDP rose to 16 8 while the U S economy accounted for 22 2 of global GDP in 2020 60 By the end of 2024 however the Chinese economy is expected to be smaller than what was previously projected while the U S economy is expected to be larger according to the International Monetary Fund s 2021 report on the global economic outlook 61 China s increased lending has been primarily driven by its desire to increase economic growth as fast as possible The performance of local government officials has for decades been evaluated almost entirely on their ability to produce economic growth Amanda Lee reports in the South China Morning Post that as China s growth has slowed there are growing concerns that many of these debts are at risk of default which could trigger a systemic crisis in China s state dominated financial system 62 Diana Choyleva of Enodo Economics predicts that China s debt ratio will soon surpass that of Japan at the peak of its crisis 63 Choyleva argues For evidence that Beijing realizes it is drowning in debt and needs a lifebuoy look no further than the government s own actions It is finally injecting a degree of pricing discipline into the corporate bond market and it is actively encouraging foreign investors to help finance the reduction of a huge pile of bad debt 63 China s debt to GDP ratio increased from 178 in the first quarter of 2010 to 275 in the first quarter of 2020 63 China s debt to GDP ratio approached 335 in the second and third quarters of 2020 62 Ryan Hass at the Brookings said China is running out of productive places to invest in infrastructure and rising debt levels will further complicate its growth path 39 The PRC government regularly revises its GDP figures often toward the end of the year Because local governments face political pressure to meet pre set growth targets many doubt the accuracy of the statistics 64 According to Chang Tai Hsieh an economist at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research Michael Zheng Song an economics professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and coauthors China s economic growth may have been overstated by 1 7 percent each year between 2008 and 2016 meaning that the government may have been overstating the size of the Chinese economy by 12 16 percent in 2016 65 66 According to American strategist and historian Edward Luttwak China will not be burdened by huge economic or population problems but will fail strategically because the emperor makes all the decisions and he doesn t have anybody to correct him He said that geopolitically China gained one year in the race in 2020 by using the measures of a totalitarian government but this has brought the China threat to the fore pushing other governments to respond 67 Sociologist Ho Fung Hung stated that although China s extensive lending during the COVID 19 pandemic allowed a quick rebound after the initial lockdown it contributed to the already deep indebtedness of many of China s corporations slowing the economy by 2021 and depressing long term performance Hung also pointed out that in 2008 although it was claimed mainly in propaganda that the Chinese yuan could overtake the US dollar as a reserve currency after a decade the yuan has since stalled and decreased in international usage ranking below the British pound sterling let alone the dollar 68 Chinese decline edit Some scholars argue that China s rise will be over by the 2020s According to foreign policy experts Michael Beckley and Hal Brands China as a revisionist power has little time to change the status quo of the world in its favor due to severe resource scarcity demographic collapse and losing access to the welcoming world that enabled its advance adding that peak China has already come 22 According to Andrew Erickson of the U S Naval War College and Gabriel Collins of the Baker Institute China s power is peaking creating a decade of danger from a system that increasingly realizes it only has a short time to fulfill some of its most critical long held goals 23 David Von Drehle a columnist for The Washington Post wrote that it would be more difficult for the West to manage China s decline than its rise 69 According to John Mueller at the Cato Institute a descent or at least prolonged stagnation might come about rather than a continued rise for China He listed the environment corruption ethnic and religious tensions Chinese hostility toward foreign businesses among others as contributing factors to China s impending decline 24 According to Yi Fuxian a demography and health researcher at the University of Wisconsin Madison the Chinese Century is already over 70 See also edit nbsp China portalChina specificAdoption of Chinese literary culture Belt and Road Initiative Century of humiliation Chinese Dream Chinese economic reform China s peaceful rise China Lobby Economy of China List of disputed territories of China Pax Sinica String of Pearls Indian Ocean Counter ChinaBlue Team U S politics China containment policy Quadrilateral Security Dialogue Geostrategy in Central Asia Malabar naval exercise China United States relations India United States relations Japan United States relationsGeneralAsian Century Indian Century Post Cold War era Great Divergence Great power Pacific Century New world order Potential superpower The Next 100 Years A Forecast for the 21st Century The Rise and Fall of the Great PowersReferences edit Brands Hal February 19 2018 The Chinese Century The National Interest Archived from the original on March 14 2021 Retrieved March 18 2021 Rees Mogg William 3 January 2005 This is the Chinese century The Times London Archived from the original on 12 April 2020 Retrieved 12 September 2009 Aldrich Robert 1996 Greater France A History of French Overseas Expansion p 304 Page Melvin E ed 2003 Colonialism An International Social Cultural and Political Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 218 ISBN 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Retrieved March 26 2021 It s Too Soon to Announce the Dawn of a Chinese Century jacobinmag com Retrieved 2022 05 09 Opinion What if instead of confronting China s rise we must manage its decline Washington Post Retrieved 18 January 2022 Yi Fuxian The Chinese century is already over The Japan Times Retrieved 13 July 2023 Further reading editGlobal Trends 2025 A Transformed World Cosimo March 2010 p 7 ISBN 9781605207711 Brown Kerry 2017 China s World The Global Aspiration of the Next Superpower I B Tauris Limited ISBN 9781784538095 Brahm Laurence J 2001 China s Century The Awakening of the Next Economic Powerhouse Wiley ISBN 9780471479017 Fishman Ted 2006 China Inc How the Rise of the Next Superpower Challenges America and the World Scribner ISBN 9780743257350 Jacques Martin 2012 When China Rules the World The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order Penguin Books ISBN 9780143118008 Hung Ho fung 2015 The China Boom Why China Will Not Rule the World Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 54022 3 Overholt William 1994 The Rise of China How Economic Reform is Creating a New Superpower W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393312454 Peerenboom Randall 2008 China Modernizes Threat to the West or Model for the Rest Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199226122 Pillsbury Michael 2016 The Hundred Year Marathon China s Secret Strategy to Replace America as the Global Superpower St Martin s Griffin ISBN 9781250081346 Schell Orville 2014 Wealth and Power China s Long March to the Twenty first Century Random House Trade Paperbacks ISBN 9780812976250 Shenkar Oded 2004 The Chinese Century The Rising Chinese Economy and Its Impact on the Global Economy the Balance of Power and Your Job FT Press ISBN 9780131467484 Shambaugh David 2014 China Goes Global The Partial Power Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199361038 Womack Brantly 2010 China s Rise in Historical Perspective Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 9780742567221 Yueh Linda 2013 China s Growth The Making of an Economic Superpower Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199205783 Dahlman Carl J Aubert Jean Eric 2001 China and the Knowledge Economy Seizing the 21st Century WBI Development Studies World Bank Publications Hell Natalie Rozelle Scott 2020 Invisible China How the Urban Rural Divide Threatens China s Rise University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226739526 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese Century amp oldid 1188795973, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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