Corruption is thriving in China, this tends to weaken transparency and bring into question how much faith you should have in its government. In Shanghai and Beijing, where big corruption scandals involving top
officials have been exposed in recent months, new cases of alleged
high-level wrongdoing are still coming to light. In Beijing the
state-owned media reported last week that Zhou Liangluo, the chief of
Haidian district, home to many of the city's universities and high-tech
companies, had been detained for allegedly engaging in shady property
deals. In Shanghai it emerged earlier this month that Yin Guoyuan, a
former deputy head of the housing bureau, was being investigated for
similar reasons. China recently charged former railways minister Liu Zhijun with
corruption and abuse of power, it is the latest step in a
graft investigation into the scandal-plagued railways.
In the case of the former railways minister he faces either a lengthy jail sentence or possibly death, how
severely he is dealt with will be an indicator of how seriously new
Chinese President Xi Jinping Xi takes his fight on corruption. Liu “practiced favoritism and carried out malpractice, misused his
power and caused big losses to public property and the interests of the
state and the people”, the official Xinhua news agency said. “As a worker for the state, Liu Zhijun used his position to help
others seek gain, illegally accepted wealth and assets from other
people. The numbers involved were huge and the circumstances very
serious,” Xinhua added. Liu took huge bribes and misused his position to help the chairman of
an investment company get enormous illegal profits.
Scandals such as these have stoked debate
within the Communist Party and more widely in China about the need for better ways
of dealing with corruption. Failure to contain wide spread corruption among
Chinese officials poses one of the most serious threats to the nation’s
future economic and political stability, says a new report from the
Carnegie Endowment. Minxin Pei, an expert on economic reform and
governance in China, argues that corruption not only fuels social unrest
and contributes to the rise in socioeconomic inequality, but holds
major implications beyond its borders for foreign investment,
international law, and environmental protection. Pei paints a
sobering picture of corruption in China, where roughly 10 percent of
government spending, contracts, and transactions is estimated to be used
as kickbacks and bribes, or simply stolen.
Pei examines the root causes
for China’s rampant corruption, slow economic reforms, lax
enforcement efforts, and reluctance by the Communist Party to adopt
political reforms, he expresses concern that the ensuing economic losses are jeopardizing
financial stability. He notes that even though the Chinese government has more than
1,200 laws, rules, and directives against corruption, implementation is
spotty and ineffective. Few corrupt officials go to jail, less than three percent, this makes corruption a high-return, low-risk
activity, even low-level officials have the opportunity to amass an
illicit fortune. The amount of money stolen through corruption scandals has risen
exponentially since the 1980s, it is concentrated in
sectors with extensive state involvement, such as infrastructure
projects, real estate, government procurement, and financial services. The absence of competitive political process and a free media make these
high-risk sectors susceptible to fraud, theft, kickbacks, and bribery.
The cost of corruption is incalculable. "Crony communism" and the corruption that comes with it undermines social stability
and sparks tens of thousands of protests each year. It contributes to
China’s environmental degradation, deterioration of social services, rising cost of health care, housing, and education. China’s corruption also harms Western
economic interests, particularly foreign investors who risk
environmental, human rights, and financial liabilities, and must compete
against rivals who engage in illegal practices to win business in
China. He says the U.S. government should devote resources to tracking reported
cases of corruption in China, increase legal cooperation with China to
prevent illegal immigration by corrupt officials and money laundering,
and insist on reforms to China’s law-enforcement practices and legal
procedures.
Despite much anxious rhetoric, the Communist Party is not on the brink of
collapse, but the anger it generates among the people and how party members actions are so at odds is it with
the ideals the party espouses. Still it appears that China's leaders are in no mood for serious reform.
While it has not yet derailed China’s economic rise, sparked a
social revolution, or deterred Western investors, it would be
foolish to conclude that the Chinese system has an infinite capacity to
absorb the mounting costs of corruption. Eventually,
growth will falter. With ghost cities, and a banking system that can not be trusted, I content that the reason that inflation is easing in China may be the result of domestic demand waning. This could be the first signs of a hard landing. As China continues to produce funny, fuzzy, and flimsy numbers the world will begin to question and eventually lose faith in its flawed system. We may now be seeing the first cracks are beginning to show.
Footnote; For more on China and the bubble that is being created please read the post below, http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/02/china-bubble-yes-it-is.html
A lot of people that I personally know rely much on their income protection cover in case of unemployment. I guess this only means more people are losing their trust on their corrupt officials.
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