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Andrew Murray:Chinese socialism has now officially outlasted the Soviet Union
     Release time: 2024-01-12

  A landmark in socialist history passed largely unremarked this month.

  The Peoples Republic of China (PRC) has now lasted longer than the USSR did, counting the latters lifespan, as one reasonably should, from the October Revolution of 1917 rather than the actual formation of the USSR in 1922.

  Such milestones may mean little in and of themselves, but this one carries a freight of historical significance.

  It is emblematic of the shift of the leading edge of human development from Europe and North America to Asia and the Pacific, as the depredations wrought by 300 years of imperialism are gradually undone.

  But that is only one side of the issue. Chinas rise, after a century of violent interruption by Western aggression, would have significance.

  It has additional, and greater, importance in the world because the PRC places its advance within the framework of the worldwide movement for socialism as well as Chinas tortured history.

  The two revolutions were intimately connected. The Chinese communists are fond of saying that the salvoes of the October Revolution brought Marxism to China.That is indeed true; before Lenin and the Communist International, there was no Marxism and no Marxist party in China, unlike in Europe where existing Marxist traditions flourished before the First World War.

  It was Soviet Marxism that initially shaped the Communist Party of China (CPC). And without the CPC, the struggle for Chinas freedom from imperialism would have remained in the corrupted and compromised hands of the Kuomintang.

  It is doubtful that this counterfactual China could have ever established a genuine unity and independence from foreign hegemony, prerequisites for the huge economic advances of the last 45 years in particular.

  In that sense, perhaps the most enduring legacy of the Russian Revolution in world history has been the Chinese Revolution. As to why and how socialist China has lasted longer than its Soviet progenitor, that is a very complicated question.

  The reasons for the Soviet collapse of the 1980s have been endlessly chewed over. But there is probably a consensus that one cardinal factor was the unyielding pressure from Western imperialism on the Soviet state, ultimately beyond what its economic system could readily sustain.

  That is a problem China seems to have cracked. Its accelerating economic strength has not merely guaranteed its independence—Soviet socialism established that too—but it has been able to reproduce itself at more advanced levels, to the point where being broken by economic coercion, expressed through an arms race or otherwise, seems all but impossible.

  The connections between the two great revolutions of the 20th century should not blind us to the discontinuities, however. The CPC may have taken the Cominterns Marxism-Leninism as its foundation, but its work, since 1935 at any rate, has turned on trying to integrate those principles with a reality very different from the one that originally produced Marxism.

  For example, Lenin told the victorious Russian communists that they stood on the shoulders of the experience of the Paris Commune and of pre-1914 German social democracy.

  Such points of reference meant little in China. The CPC was, however, the inheritor of indigenous revolutionary traditions, like the 19th-century Taiping Rebellion, a decade-long insurrection animated by a sort of quasi-Christian utopian peasant communism which dwarfs the Paris Commune in duration and bloodshed.

  The history of Chinese socialism needs to be read as much or more against this background as it does against the more familiar—in the West—narratives of the international communist movement of Lenin, Stalin, and beyond.

  The CPC describes its long struggle to make Marxist politics suitable to the different conditions of China as the localization of Marxism. It is also, however, a dialectical step in the universalization of Marxism, a doctrine first developed in industrializing Western Europe from sources which included Hegelian philosophy and French understandings of socialism.

  That such a doctrine could remain the same as it extends its reach across the world, to countries with very different civilizational roots, philosophical traditions, and specific histories of class struggle, is a massive implausibility.

  It should be neither surprising nor alarming that Chinese Marxism is refreshed from a variety of sources of which Marx and Engels knew little or nothing. That is the inevitable interplay of the development of a methodology which aims to encompass the totality of social experience across the world.

  And that should inform the debate as to whether or not the PRC is today authentically socialist. Socialism and capitalism are terms with universal application, but to expect them to retain the same precise definition over the passage of centuries and the sweep of the world is in a sense to deny Marxism itself.

  The CPC, unlike the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) for a good chunk of its history, makes no claim to have developed a model for all countries to follow, nor to have spoken the last word on Marxism. Other peoples and movements will bring something to the common cause too.

  So Chinese socialism is very different from Soviet socialism, in good and bad ways. On the positive side, it has endured, with astonishing benefits to the Chinese people from sustained economic growth. And as China has stood up, so too has the global South, forming a loose pole of opposition to imperialism, albeit not in its 20th-century form.

  Chinese communists have, been quite consistent in arguing that the transition to a socialist society is the work of centuries, not the relatively quick sprint imagined in Soviet times.

  That is perhaps a hard concept to embrace. After all, socialists would like to see their efforts for a better society consummated within their own lifetime. Moreover, the menace of climate change and catastrophic war may make a perspective of such protracted progress an unaffordable luxury. Nevertheless, it is not unrealistic, based on the evidence.

  And while one may regret that the CPC does not see itself at the heart of the world revolutionary movement in the same way that the CPSU once did, it is inarguable that the perspective of socialism in the world today rests heavily on Chinese shoulders.

  Editor: Zhong Yao、Liu Tingting

  From: https://www.peoplesworld.org/article/chinese-socialism-has-now-officially-outlasted-the-soviet-union/(2023-11-30)

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