The Contemporary Transformation of the International System Professor John Wilton Lecture 4 The transformation of the states-system: China Lecture 4 Additional source: Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 2010, Vol.38, no.3 (special issue ‘After Liberalism’) Lecture 4 1.Developments in China post-Mao Zedong 2. 2.China today domestically and internationally Lecture 4 1.Developments in China post-Mao Zedong - Deng Xiaoping’s ‘Open Door’ policy 1978 = partial liberalisation and modernisation of China’s economy - May/June 1989 ‘Tiananmen Square’ = political crisis as China’s political institutions incapable or unwilling to respond to effects of economic modernisation domestically + failure to respond to international changes in Soviet Union and East/Central Europe Lecture 4 -China took its own specific ‘road’ to economic reforms - selective, focused initially on agriculture, international trade and foreign investment (‘open door’ and ‘long march’ to a more market economy) - BUT initially continued centralised ‘output planning’ and State ownership of medium and large enterprises Lecture 4 China’s economic reforms successful in: a)accelerating growth rate in economy and sustaining it over long period; b)transforming collective agriculture; c)spurring growth of rural industry; d)expansion of exports e) Lecture 4 2. China today domestically and internationally - 2000 China 6th largest economy in world - 2010 (March – June) China 2nd largest economy in world (overtook Japan, according to Japanese govt. figures) - urban population estimated to double by 2025 (estimated will have 221 cities with one million plus populations – Europe 35) - 2006 overtook USA as largest emitter of greenhouse gases Lecture4 China’s official international political strategy “to unswervingly pursue an independent foreign policy of peace …. The fundamental goals are to preserve China’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, create a favourable international environment for China’s reform and opening up and modernisation construction, maintain world peace and propel common development.” (Chinese govt website. www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/wjdt/) Lecture 4 July 2001 Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation (with Russia) - economic, strategic cooperation, and diplomatic and geopolitical reliance, plus some military cooperation and sharing of military ‘know how’ = counterbalance to USA developments in the region strategically after 9/11 in 2001 Lecture4 USA/China areas of disagreement: a)Climate change b)Human Rights c)Taiwan d)‘Rogue states’ – (i) North Korea (ii) Iran (iii) Burma e)Military competition f)Economic disputes – China’s currency, tariffs, ‘rare earth metals’, censorship/Google