As China's economy continues to trend downward, Beijing's elites are sparking a new, palpable frustration in the general population.
BY CHRISTINA LARSON
BEIJING – In June, a Chinese friend of mine who grew up in the northern
industrial city of Shenyang and recently graduated from university moved to
Beijing to follow his dream -- working for a media company. He has a full-time
job, but the entry-level pay isn't great and it's tough to make ends meet. When
we had lunch recently, he brought up his housing situation, which he described
as "not ideal." He was living in a three-bedroom apartment split by
seven people, near the Fourth Ring Road -- the outer orbit of the city. Five of
his roommates were young women who went to work each night at 11 p.m. and returned
around 4 a.m. "They say they are working the overnight shift at
Tesco," the British retailer, but he was dubious. One night he saw them
entering a KTV Club wearing lots of makeup and "skirts much shorter than
my boxers" and, tellingly, proceeding through the employee entrance.
"So they are prostitutes," he concluded. "I feel a little
uncomfortable."
But when he tallied his monthly expenses and considered his lack of special
connections, or guanxi, in the city, either to help
boost his paycheck or to find more comfortable but not more expensive housing,
he figured he'd stick out the grim living situation. "I have come here to
be a journalist -- it is my goal, and I do not want to go back now. But it
seems like it's harder than it used to be."
When I asked how his colleagues and former classmates were getting along,
he thought about it for a moment and then replied that some were basically in
the same lot as him, "but many of my friends have parents in Beijing, and
they can save money to live with them. If your family is already established
here, it helps a lot." After a moment, he added: "And some of them
have rich parents who have already bought them their own apartments -- and
cars."
Despite China's astonishing economic growth, it has gotten harder for
people like my friend to get by in the big city. His is not a particularly
lucrative profession. Like many in Beijing, he cannot count on his annual pay
to keep pace with China's official rates of inflation -- which many economists
suspect are lowballed anyway. (The consumer-price-index inflation rate is
considered so sensitive that the State Council approves it before it is
released publicly.) Even so, every month this year consumer-price-index
inflation has exceeded the official average monthly target of 4 percent. Last
month state media hailed it as good news that it was, officially, just
4.2 percent.
Anyone in Beijing can point to examples of friends who see rents hiked 10
percent or more in one year. The prices at restaurants keep going up, even as
portions are getting noticeably smaller. Throw in the loss of intangibles that
money can't buy -- like air
quality and food
safety -- and you
begin to understand the grumbling among some of Beijing's non-wealthy folks
that their standard of living seems to be diminishing, even as the national GDP
surges ahead at a heady 9 percent.
Could it possibly be true that a swath of people in China's big cities is downwardly mobile, if one compared wages with
living expenses? I asked Patrick Chovanec, an associate professor at Tsinghua
University's School of Economics and Management in Beijing. Alas, he told me,
it's difficult to find much clarification in China's famously fudgeable official statistics. (For instance, the official
unemployment rate only includes individuals with urban hukous, or permanent residency permits -- which
excludes the most economically vulnerable.) Still, he noted: "If you
perceive that you're losing buying power -- or have rising but unmet
expectations -- that's when people get upset.… And this country, for a country
growing at over 9 percent, is in a foul mood."
Indeed, there is a palpable sense of frustration in Beijing, especially
compared with the last time I lived here in 2008. You can see it on the dour
faces on the metro, hear it in raspy voices at dinner conversations, and
especially sense it in the new gruffness of taxi drivers, who no longer think
ferrying people around town for 10 yuan, about $1.60, is such a good deal for
them (their base fare hasn't been raised). Still, it's hard to rage against
abstractions. It's a lot easier to fume at obnoxious people.
No wonder, then, that in 2011 the Chinese media and Sina Weibo (China's
version of Twitter) buzzed nearly every month with salacious reports of China's
Paris Hilton-types -- the sons and daughters of the wealthy and political
elite, dangling opulent accessories and impoverished judgment -- behaving badly
in BMWs and Audis and typically expecting to get away with it, to boot.
The year began with the trial of Li Qiming, a university student in Hebei
province who in October 2010 was drunk-driving and slammed into two other college students out
skating, killing one of them. When he saw what had happened, he tried to speed
away, but the campus guard stopped his vehicle. When questioned, the first
thing he is widely reported to have blurted out was, "My father is Li
Gang." Li Gang is the district's deputy police chief.
Then there was 15-year-old Li Tianyi, the son of a high-ranking army official, who had no
license when he got behind the wheel of a BMW in September. While carousing the
streets of Beijing, he grew frustrated when another car was blocking his path.
He reportedly got out of the car and assaulted the other driver while either he
or a friend shouted, "Who will dare call the police?" Behind his
car's windshield was a temporary driving pass for the Great Hall of the People,
China's parliament building.
And earlier this month, a student at Beijing
Film Academy got into a
fight over where he could park his Audi, the telltale car of choice of Chinese
officials. After a brawl in the parking lot, a cleaner, a 43-year-old migrant
worker from nearby Hebei province, was taken to a hospital, where he died.
Perhaps the closest female equivalent was the lightning-rod saga of Guo "Meimei," a petite 20-year-old with a heart-shaped face
and big brown eyes who took to posting photos of herself driving her
"little horse" (a white Maserati) and her "little bull" (an
orange Lamborghini) on her Weibo microblog. On her account, she claimed to be a
general manager at the Red Cross of China, one of the country's largest and
most politically connected charities. Her luxury goods, not to mention horrible
judgment, were widely taken by readers as signs of corruption at the charity.
(In the months following the scandal, which reached its zenith in June,
donations to the charity dropped
offprecipitously).
Later, it came out that she held no such position and was rumored instead to be
either a mistress or relative of someone at the Red Cross.
The anger in China at such dilettantes misbehaving runs deeper than, say,
America's love-hate relationship with Lindsay Lohan. As Michael Anti, a popular
Chinese blogger and political commentator, told me, "The rich are becoming
a dynasty." Now people in China recognize that "you get your position
not by degree or hard work, but by your daddy." Anti added that though
corruption and guanxi are hardly new concepts in China, there was previously a
greater belief in social mobility through merit. "Before, university was a
channel to help you to ruling class. Now the ruling class just promote
themselves."
There is a dark sense that something has changed. "It's not simply
income equality that bothers people -- that's a misconception," Chovanec
told me. "When Jack Ma makes a billion dollars for starting a
successful company, that's OK.… It's inequality of privilege. It's how people
make their money. There's now a whole class of people getting wealthy because
of who they are, not what they do -- and they follow a different set of
rules."
In today's China, the abilities to buy and sell real estate and to win
government contracts are among the greatest drivers of wealth, and it's those
who are already wealthy and well-connected who have access to these
opportunities. If their children are lazy or dull, they can use their stature
to create opportunities and positions for them, cutting short the trajectories
of more able aspirants. Social status is becoming further entrenched because,
as Chovanec notes, "Government is so pervasive in China's economy.…
Government has great power in determining winners and losers, so who you are
and who you know does more than anything else to determine success." And
those at the top increasingly act above the law. "Privilege begets money, and money
begets privilege."
This, of course, runs counter to the optimistic, popular fairy tale of
China over the past 30 years, duly promoted by the ruling Communist Party, that
a rising tide and roaring economy inevitably lifts all boats; that the future
will be better, materially, than the past; that hard work will get you ahead;
and that education is the great leveler. Call it the Chinese dream.
"Well, that used to be true, pretty much -- but not now,"
reflects Qiao Mu, a professor at Beijing Foreign Studies University. "Take
myself. I was born in 1970 into a poor family in west China. There wasn't yet a
large class of rich people in China, so the opportunities were more open. At
that time, I could depend on my hard work and study to advance. I could change
my position in society." But today, he says, sighing deeply, "It's
much more difficult for these young guys, my students. You have to rely on your
background, and those who already have connections and wealth help themselves
and their children.… The condition is getting worse, not better."
Or, as my friend, the struggling reporter, put it: "People no longer
believe you can win by working hard and honestly in China."
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