Authoritarian Powers
eBook - ePub

Authoritarian Powers

Russia and China Compared

  1. 114 pages
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

Authoritarian Powers

Russia and China Compared

About this book

The statistics detailing the socioeconomic growth of Russia and China are impressive. On some projections, China will be the world's largest economy by 2050, and Russia will be the sixth largest. Yet despite this impressive record of economic growth, a striking feature of both countries is the inegalitarian nature of their development – notwithstanding the (post)communist legacy. On most conventional measures, the two countries are now among the most unequal in the world, and the level of inequality has increased significantly since the 1990s. What effect does this endemic economic inequality have on political stability? From Aristotle onwards, observers have concluded that the greater the inequality within a society, the greater the likelihood of instability. This book addresses the relationship between economic inequality and political stability in Russia and China. Several chapters examine how economic performance has driven institutional reform, while others evaluate long term trends in public opinion to see how economic change has affected the public's views of politics. The conclusion is that both regimes have proved adept at adapting to rising inequality by managing the policy agenda, guiding public opinion and co-opting or repressing political opposition. The chapters in this book originally published as a special issue in Europe-Asia Studies.

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Yes, you can access Authoritarian Powers by Stephen White,Ian Mcallister,Neil Munro in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Politics & International Relations & Politics. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Economic Inequality and Political Stability in Russia and China

STEPHEN WHITE, IAN MCALLISTER & NEIL MUNRO
AT THE THIRD BRICS SUMMIT ON HAINAN ISLAND IN 2011, Russian president Dmitri Medvedev claimed that the BRICS countries—with the addition of South Africa to Brazil, Russia, India and China—now included the ‘biggest states of three continents’.1 But it was much less clear that these five countries represented a sustainable model of political development over the medium or longer term. All of the countries have displayed increasing economic inequality over the past half century, while only one—India—could be classed as a mature, stable democracy. The essays in this special section focus on the two largest, most populous and least democratic of the BRICS, Russia and China, to examine the impact of economic inequality on their political trajectories.2
The statistics detailing the socioeconomic growth of Russia and China are impressive. Taken together, the two countries account for 41% of the total territory of the original four BRICs countries, and for 51% of their total population and 63% of their GDP. On Goldman Sachs projections, by 2050 China is likely to be the world’s largest economy, and Russia is to be its sixth largest.3 Despite their impressive record of economic growth, a striking feature of both countries is the non-egalitarian nature of their development—notwithstanding the (post)communist legacy. On most conventional measures, these two countries are now among the most unequal in the world. According to calculations derived from Russian official statistics, the Gini coefficient rose from 0.28 in 1990 (Alexeev & Gaddy 1993, p. 29) to 0.42 in 2010;4 the best estimates of Chinese Gini coefficients indicate a very similar rise, from 0.26 in 1983—just after the introduction of the contract responsibility system—to 0.49 in 2012 (Chen et al. 2010, p. 20; Wildau & Mitchell 2016).
The widening of income inequalities has been an international phenomenon; but according to the United Nations 2010 Human Development Report, it has been ‘especially marked in the countries that were part of the former Soviet Union’ (United Nations 2010, p. 72). On their figures, Gini coefficients were already higher in Russia than in the UK, and higher in China than in the United States. One consequence was that both countries were increasingly well represented on Forbes’ list of the world’s billionaires: in the 2011 list China doubled its representation to 115 (which took it to second place) and Russia was in third place with 101; there were more billionaires in Moscow at this time than in any other city in the world.5
What effect does such endemic economic inequality have on political stability? Aristotle pointed out in his Politics that ‘when men are equal they are contented’ (Everson 1996, p. 132). He drew particular attention to the people of Tarentum, who, ‘by sharing the use of their own property with the poor, [gained] their good will’ (Everson 1996, p. 160). Accordingly, ‘democracy appears to be safer and less liable to revolution than oligarchy’ (Everson 1996, p. 121). Concerns of this kind have been taken up by many later writers, including John Stuart Mill, who provided in his Representative Government for additional votes for those who exercised ‘superior [managerial] functions’ on the belief that the poor would otherwise use their electoral preponderance to enact ‘class legislation’ (Mills 1964, pp. 282, 285, 283).
The relationship between economic inequality and political instability in Russia and China is the topic of this special section. The five essays address different aspects of the relationship, and take different methodological approaches, but ultimately address a single core question: to what extent does inequality pose a challenge to the existing political systems?
Political instability in Russia and China
The evidence suggests that economic inequality in Russia and China is both substantial and increasing. Official statistics are always subject to political manipulation—as was the case when Russia increased its official count of ‘the poor’ by more than 2 million in early 2011 to take account the evidence of the 2010 census.6 There is, however, a substantial literature that can help us identify some of the shortcomings in official data and supplement them with independent estimates.7 For example, the Higher School of Economics has developed a comprehensive ‘index of wellbeing’ which shows that living standards for 40% of the population are still below where they were at the end of the communist period, as if ‘two countries’ existed in parallel (Kukol 2011, p. 11).
In China, household income and expenditure surveys have generally confirmed that economic disparities have been increasing not only in monetary terms, but also across households and regions and between urban and rural areas (Cai et al. 2010; Chen et al. 2010; Liu 2010).8 Despite attempts to enhance welfare programmes, the main thrust of the recent reforms has been to reduce or even eliminate the ‘iron rice bowl’ approach to social protection. The social programmes that have replaced them leave much of the population with scant protection in the event of sickness, old age or disability (Duckett 2007, 2011; Li & Zhong 2009). In both countries there are additional flows of ‘hidden income’, often related to corruption; on Chinese evidence about 75% of this additional income accrues to those who already have higher incomes, widening inequalities still further.9
The process by which political power has been converted into economic advantage has been documented in a range of studies. In Russia, as Kryshtanovskaya and White (2011) have shown, a form of ‘state capitalism’ has developed in which leading officials dominate the boards of the largest companies, and in particular what the authorities have defined as ‘strategic enterprises’ in fuel and energy, the military–industrial complex, and the infrastructure. The more important the company, the more likely it is to include ministers or even members of the presidential administration on its board. And these patterns have persisted, despite the enforced withdrawal of state officials from a number of high-profile company boards in 2011: first deputy premier Zubkov remained at Gazprom, deputy premier Sechin at Rosneftegaz, energy minister Shmatko at RusHydro and Zarubezhneft, and transport minister Levitin on the board of Sheremetevo airport.10
For China, too, it is widely accepted that political power has enabled Communist Party (CCP) cadres and government officials to benefit disproportionately from economic growth (Goodman 2008). While government officials did not benefit from ‘nomenklatura privatisation’ in the same way as their Russian counterparts, they or their children had opportunities to acquire shares in state businesses (a notable phenomenon has been the children of officials engaging in business and in so doing benefitting from their parents’ political capital). For this and other reasons, current scholarship inclines towards the view that economic growth and marketisation are unlikely to lead to the emergence of new elites that might challenge the regime (Dickson 2003, 2008). This conclusion is based on an examination of the CCP’s organisation and structure, its corporatist strategy of developing business associations, the logic of co-option, the CCP’s strategy of adaptation in the light of lessons drawn from the Soviet collapse11 and surveys of entrepreneurs themselves.12
The sustainability of authoritarian politics of a Russian or Chinese kind has been placed in doubt by sustained, high level economic growth. A rich and still-influential social science literature associated particularly with Lipset (1959) has suggested that rising levels of GDP will of themselves undermine authoritarian politics: societies will become more complex, professionals will increasingly combine to advance their own interests, and ‘cross-cutting cleavages’ will predispose political actors towards bargaining and accommodation rather than zero-sum confrontation. For some, such as Pye (1990), the changes that had taken place in Eastern Europe were indeed a demonstration of the explanatory power of modernisation theories of this kind; but in the Russian case, its political system was actually more authoritarian in 2011 than it had been at the end of the Soviet period. Will post-communist authoritarianism in Russia be undermined by a still-developing society?
In the case of China, scholars have documented a rising tide of popular protest which usually does not confront the regime directly, remaining concerned with local and particular interests. However, such protest often crossed the boundary from ‘official, prescribed politics’ to ‘politics by other means’ (O’Brien 2003, 2008; O’Brien & Li 2006; Wasserstrom 2009; Cai 2010). Elsewhere, Gilley (2004) has spoken of China’s ‘democratic future’ and Walter and Howie (2010) of the ‘fragile foundation of China’s extraordinary rise’. Advancing a contrary view, Whyte (2010b) and Wright (2010) emphasise tolerance and an acceptance of the status quo among the Chinese mass public. Studies intended for a wider audience have been equally divided: for Hutton (2007) there could in the end be no alternative to democracy and the rule of law, while Jacques (2009) places more emphasis on the adaptability of China’s distinctive culture. Meanwhile, in China itself, public expressions of discontent more than tripled in the five years to 2010, reaching 180,000 annually.13
Overview of the special section
The essays that follow examine these themes from several d...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Series
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright
  6. Contents
  7. Citation Information
  8. Notes on Contributors
  9. 1. Economic Inequality and Political Stability in Russia and China
  10. 2. The Social Contract Revisited: Evidence from Communist and State Capitalist Economies
  11. 3. Actual and Perceptual Social Inequality under Transformative Change in Russia and China
  12. 4. Predictors of Support for State Social Welfare Provision in Russia and China
  13. 5. Economic Change and Public Support for Democracy in China and Russia
  14. 6. Why do Authoritarian Regimes Provide Public Goods? Policy Communities, External Shocks and Ideas in China’s Rural Social Policy Making
  15. Index