'Lei Feng Spirit' - antidote to selfishness - sleepsNick Land / text
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You ain't seen nothing yet
By Nick Land
Shanghai Star. 2004-03-11
It is easy for the growing number of "China watchers" throughout the world,
enthralled by the rapid emergence of a front-ranking economic power setting
new development records with each passing year, to overlook the fact that
the past half-decade has been an unusual difficult time in which to perform
such feats.
The disappearance of Japan, North Asia's locomotive economy, into a
seemingly interminable state of stagnation from the beginning of the 1990s
was compounded by the virulent "Asian flu" of 1997, which devastated
financial markets across the whole western curve of the Pacific Rim. Although
the Chinese mainland itself avoided the worst effects of the 1997 financial
contagion, its economic partners within the region were thrown into
spectacular disarray, along with Hong Kong and Taiwan. The turn of the
millennium was thus a period of painful re-adjustment and recovery for the
previously unstoppable "tiger" economies.
A further blow fell with the 2001 popping of the US "Cyberspace" bubble,
followed by years of economic dislocation and shrunken demand, further
hampering the recovery of China's East Asian neighbours. Yet another
consequence of the US "dot-crunch" was the disturbing growth of US
protectionist sentiment, exacerbated by the heated populist rhetoric
characterizing the run-up to the 2004 election.
As if this economic environment was not already sufficient to derail
development hopes, China and its neighbours were also stricken by the
SARS contagion last year, which caused widespread international anxiety - at
times approaching panic - with a consequent fall-off in investment, visitors
and consumer spending.
Despite this succession of misfortunes, China posted scorching growth of 9.1
per cent last year. So observers wondering whether Wen Jiabao's
surprisingly modest forecast for 2004 GDP growth, at 7 per cent, points to a
long-term cooling of China's economic surge should probably think again.
Not only is China's domestic legal and economic policy framework continuing
to advance rapidly on its course of reform and opening up, but the dismal
global climate of recent years is looking more positive than it has for years. In