• garbage [none/use name,he/him]
        arrow-down
        1
        ·
        4 years ago

        this is an interesting line of discussion that i hope you guys can actually flesh out a bit more.

          • garbage [none/use name,he/him]
            ·
            4 years ago

            is that just due to the standard of living at the time? i'm sure OP is talking about it being better for workers in that the upper class got 86ed, but you're concentrating more on actual individual lifestyles. how long did it take for living standards to rise after mao got rid of the landlords and such?

            • PhaseFour [he/him]
              ·
              edit-2
              4 years ago

              how long did it take for living standards to rise after mao got rid of the landlords and such?

              It depends on which living standards. They eradicated mass opiate addiction, reduced houselessness, reduced food scarcity (by growing less opiates), increased access to health care, etc. All of these were possible with the backwards productive base of China at the time.

              Although, widespread scarcity still existed. There was little access to electricity and other public utilities, few machines to assist agriculture, and few means of transportation (trains, cars, etc). These were all problems that could not be solved with China's productive base.

              China's attempt to develop their productive base under Mao was a complete disaster. Due to horrible relationships with the CPSU, the Soviet Union did not assist them. And I don't think I need to delve into the failure of the Great Leap Forward.

              China's solution to this problem was the Grand Bargain. They offered their massive labor force to the industrialized capitalist West. In exchange, China was given access to western industry, universities, and capital investment.

              From this Grand Bargain, China has been able to rapidly increase the standard of living for people in the country, and break from the stagnation that plagued China in the 60's and 70's. Poverty has been eradicated. Workers and peasants have access to luxuries unimaginable 40 years ago: agricultural technology, electricity, public utilities, transportation, etc. More Chinese people support the Communist Party now than ever before

              These are huge accomplishments, and a new development in socialist construction. However, there were trade-offs.

              1. The Chinese bourgeoisie were given a more powerful role in society, because they became the liaison between China and the capitalist West.
              2. The Chinese bourgeoisie do what the bourgeoisie always do: extract surplus value by any means necessary. This led to well-known cases of worker exploitation, such as the Foxconn and Apple incidences in the mid 00's.
              3. China had to maintain friendly relationships with the capitalist West, or risk divestment. This ended China's effort to spread revolution to other countries. Instead, they advocate a platform of peaceful co-existence with all existing states.
              • garbage [none/use name,he/him]
                ·
                4 years ago

                so it would seem that all they need is another mao style 86in of the upper class and they should be able to maintain self sustainability and transfer into socialism soon then.

                • PhaseFour [he/him]
                  ·
                  4 years ago

                  If there's the political will, China will be in a better situation than any socialist state in history.

                  It is possible their bourgeoisie are powerful enough to delay or prevent a full transition to socialism. Although, their bourgeoisie's power comes from their relationship to the capitalist West. The West is in terminal decline, which also hurts the Chinewe bourgeoisie.

        • mayor_pete_buttigieg [she/her]
          ·
          4 years ago

          lol yeah. "I support modern China because they adopted a more free market and it increased living standards." Sounds pretty liberal to me...