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Home » TRANSCRIPT: What China Will Be Like As A Great Power: Martin Jacques Keynote

TRANSCRIPT: What China Will Be Like As A Great Power: Martin Jacques Keynote

Read the full transcript of author Martin Jacques’ keynote address titled “What China Will Be Like As A Great Power” at the 32nd Annual Camden Conference in Camden, Maine, US on February 22, 2019.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

MARTIN JACQUES: China, what’s it going to be like as a global power? Well, ten years ago, we probably wouldn’t have asked this question with a sense of imminence. We could see China rising dramatically, but we didn’t see it at that stage as a great power. Ten years later, the situation is very different.

First, there’s the decline of the United States, following or accentuated by the Western financial crisis. And secondly, there’s the rise of China, again, following the Western financial crisis, and the doubling in size of China, the Chinese economy, in the subsequent ten years, compared with the American economy growing by about 10% in that period.

And as a result of these changes, under Xi Jinping, there’s been a shift in Chinese foreign policy, which I think we’re all aware of, which is moving from the Deng Xiaoping’s idea of moving carefully, quietly, hiding your capability, hiding your leadership, to something which is much more outgoing and expansive, moving to the idea that China was not just a recipient of globalization, a player in globalization, but was also a maker and shaper of globalization. We’re in a new situation.

One of the difficulties, I think, that we’ve had in the West is we’ve always been on the back foot, we’ve always been a bit on the defensive, we’ve always been a bit behind the game when it came to China. We didn’t really believe in it beyond the point. We didn’t believe it was sustainable. And now, I think, we have to face the fact that this is a remarkable change that’s taking place, and we somehow have to be able to make sense of it, to understand it.

But the Achilles heel in the West has been that really, we don’t understand China. In some profound way, we don’t understand China. And the reason for this is that our paradigm is that we are universal, that everyone should be, one day will be, is required to be like us. There’s only one modernity in the world. It’s our modernity.

Now frankly, this is no longer a sustainable position. It hasn’t been a sustainable position for a while, but it’s absolutely not sustainable any longer in the world, because we see not only the transformation of China, but so many developing countries which do not come from the same historical, political, cultural roots as the West. And we have to now try and understand, in this context, the difference that is China.

China is Not Like the West

China has never been like the West. It isn’t like the West, and it never will be like the West. I don’t mean that there aren’t connections, similarities, and so on, but there are some fundamental differences which are enduring differences. Now I want to make three points in this context.

The first is that China, we think of countries being essentially nation states, but China is not in any simple way a nation state. China, this was at the beginning of China, these are the crude maps I’ve got here, but 2,000 years ago, over 2,000 years ago, the beginning of China as a polity. The Han Dynasty, still over 2,000 years ago, you can already see is occupying a large part of the eastern part of China. It was only at the end of the 19th century, when China got into big, big trouble and became very divided and occupied in parts, that China finally conceded that it should be a nation state.

In other words, it adapted to the European, then European norms of the international system, and it began to call itself a nation state. So you know, that’s what, 120, 130 years ago, something like that? That’s a sliver of time when you consider a 2,000 odd year history of China. So to understand China, we’ve got to understand it, in my view, primarily not as a nation state, primarily as a civilisation state, that its inheritance is a civilisational inheritance.

Ideas about the relationship between the state and society, Confucian values, the role of the individual within Chinese society, traditions like Guanshi, a certain type of relationship networks in China, or even Chinese food for that matter, Chinese language, are civilisational inheritances of China, which way predate the period of it being a nation state. So China is a civilisation state and a nation state, and this marks it out, I think, in all sorts of ways, if we tease the different aspects of China properly, tease out the differences that China is about.

And there’s another example of this, you know, China of course is huge, those four provinces of China are bigger, have a bigger population between them than that of the United States. But the point I want to make here is that China, we think of China, we think of China as often, you know, a very centralised country, run from Beijing and so on, which isn’t true actually, it would be impossible to run a country the size of China, 1.4 billion people nearly, from Beijing.

China has many different customs, many different cultures, although its primary language is Mandarin, many different languages spoken, and so on. And so China learnt over a long historical period, pre-communist period, I mean I’m talking about the imperial period, that the only way that China could really operate and could hang together was if it was on the basis of a certain sort of respect for difference, if you like, or to put it another way, one civilisation, many systems.

And so for example, this lives on today, if you look at the handover of Hong Kong in 1997, Deng Xiaoping’s idea was “one country, two systems.” Very different way of thinking to that of a nation-state, drawn from the tradition of Chinese civilisation.