How Does China View the Question of American Leadership,
and Perceived American Decline?
Bruce Jones
July 09, 2014, Foreign Policy Forum
In March 2014, I published Still Ours to Lead:
America, Rising Powers and the Tension between Rivalry and Restraint —a book
that argues that both American decline and China’s rise (as well as that of
other powers) has been substantially exaggerated. I’ve talked about these themes
in several American cities, in Canada and in Europe. And while the questions
that accompany my presentation vary, there’s one that is always asked: how do
the emerging powers react to this argument?
Brazil's and India’s
Reaction
I had a good sense of what the Brazilian and Indian
reaction would be. There are many parts of the argument that are deeply
sympathetic both to their rise and their position, and as for the places where
I’m critical, my friends in both capitals recognize that I’m critical from a
position of underlying support. What’s more, there’s no one in either Brasilia
or New Delhi that has any genuine pretense to leadership of the international
system – and quietly, several of them still look to Washington to lead the
international system, albeit taking the emerging powers’ interests increasingly
into account. For all the pageantry and rhetoric that surrounds the BRICS and
their Summits, the fact is that both Brazil and India recognize that many of
their interests lie closer to those of the U.S. than those of
China.
China’s Reaction
But what the Chinese
reaction would be, I wasn’t sure. Americans spent a lot of time over the past
month debating the news that China had overtaken the U.S. when measured by
‘purchasing power parity’. So what would the Chinese make of my argument that
the underlying realities are that the U.S. still holds an important lead in the
international economy? Given the importance China places on forging “a new kind
of great power relations” with Washington, given their increased willingness to
put military weight behind their interests in the East and South China Sea, what
would they make of an argument that the United States, and its alliance system,
still constituted the essential pillar of a stable international
system?
I spent the last week in Beijing, finding out.
It’s worth
highlighting here that life in Beijing these days is far more similar to life in
Washington than the mythology suggests—that is to say, there’s deep debate, not
monolithic opinion, within China. So there’s no simple way to characterize
Chinese opinion on anything, let alone a topic as broad and sensitive as U.S.
leadership of the international system.
But if there’s a Friedman-esque
short-hand here, it’s this: the more senior the interlocutor in China, the more
frank they are in acknowledging that the U.S. still holds a major lead in
economic, political and security affairs. In a way, that’s obvious on military
issues. What was striking was how widespread this recognition was even in
economic affairs.
With both scholars and with officials, I found a
consistent recognition that the PPP measure of the Chinese economy is unreliable
at best. Taking into account both real GDP, the major lead that the U.S. has in
technology and innovation, the still huge gap in per-capita GDP, the Chinese
economic and business establishment are perfectly clear-eyed. As one of my most
senior interlocutors put it, there’s a “huge gap” between Chinese economic
strength and that of America. China has an aspiration, widely shared, to join
what they describe as the “50% club”—that is, those states who enjoy a per
capita GDP at or just below 50% of that of the United States. China’s economic
managers are well aware that the United States is the richest of the large
economies (the highest per capita income of countries over 20 million)—a major
accomplishment that China aspires, over time, to meet part way. For now, and for
at least a couple of decades, China will have to strive hard to reach that 50%
goal. And what’s more, China’s current suite of reforms are premised on a
recognition that the only pathway to that goal is through deeper integration
with the global economy—including cooperation and mutual investment with the
United States. China may call for a shift from the dominance of the U.S. dollar,
but it has yet to take the tough internal reforms to its currency that would
make it able to press a credible case—and even then, it’s not clear that it
would have many takers.
Engagement in Iraq?
When
it comes to political and security affairs, the issue was dramatized by the
deteriorating situation in Iraq. Whatever the debate in Washington is about
whether the U.S. should re-engage militarily, there’s exactly no question that
China could (or should)—and that’s despite deep oil interests at stake. We can
celebrate or bemoan the Administration’s decision to move slowly (or hesitantly
or prudently, depending on where you sit) on military support to the Maliki
government in confronting the ISIS, but no one serious would even raise the
question of what role China should play. Asked the question about whether China
is ready to take on greater responsibility on international crisis management,
the answer within Beijing is uniform: we have neither the capacity nor the
interest to take on shared responsibility, in the near to medium
term.
Granted, there’s a certain sense of ‘I can insult my brother, but
you’d better not’ here. Better for a Chinese state manager to acknowledge the
continuing gap, than for the Americans to insist on it. But the irony is that
China’s managers and scholars are more realistic about the continuing gap
between China and the United States than many of America’s home-grown
declinists. Time for a rethink in the U.S.
Bruce Jones is a senior fellow
and the director of the Project on International Order and Strategy at Brookings
and a consulting professor at the Freeman Spogli Institute at Stanford
University. His research focuses on U.S. policy on international security,
global order, international conflict management and fragile states. His most
recent book, Still Ours to Lead: America, Rising Powers, and the Tension between
Rivalry and Restraint, was released in March 2014.
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