Wednesday, March 11, 2020
chinese reform essays
chinese reform essays    Two years after the death of Mao Zedong in 1976, it became apparent     to many of China's leaders that economic reform was necessary. During his     tenure as China's premier, Mao had encouraged social movements such as the     Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution which had had as their bases     ideologies such as serving the people and maintaining the class struggle.     By 1978 "Chinese leaders were searching for a solution to serious economic     problems produced by Hua Guofeng, the man who had succeeded Mao Zedong as     CCP leader after Mao's death" (Shirk 35). Hua had demonstrated a desire to     continue the ideologically based movements of Mao. Unfortunately, these     movements had left China in a state where "agriculture was stagnant,     industrial production was low, and the people's living standards had not     increased in twenty years" (Nathan 200). This last area was particularly     troubling. While "the gross output value of industry and agriculture     increased by 810 percent and national income grew by 420 percent [between     1952 and 1980] ... average individual income increased by only 100 percent"     (Ma Hong quoted in Shirk 28). However, attempts at economic reform in     China were introduced not only due to some kind of generosity on the part     of the Chinese Communist Party to increase the populace's living standards.     It had become clear to members of the CCP that economic reform would     fulfill a political purpose as well since the party felt, properly it would     seem, that it had suffered a loss of support. As Susan L. Shirk describes     the situation in The Political Logic of Economic Reform in China,     restoring the CCP's prestige required improving     economic performance and raising living standards.     The traumatic experience of the Cultural Revolution     had eroded popular trust in the moral and political     virtue of the CCP. The party's leaders decided to     shift the base of party legitimacy from virtue to     competen...     
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