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Why China Can’t Pick Good Leaders

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Why China Can’t Pick Good Leaders
June 28, 2012
By Minxin PeiAbout the author


China’s next generation of leaders are expected to be chosen later this year. But factional strength and patronage may well trump talent.
Why China Can’t Pick Good Leaders
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As China’s top leaders get ready for their summer retreat in Beidaihe, the exclusive beach resort 225 kilometers north of Beijing, the rest of the world remains in the dark about the jockeying for power inside the world’s largest ruling party. By convention, the appointments for the party’s top positions are usually finalized when Chinese leaders escape the oppressive summer heat, pollution, and humidity engulfing Beijing to swim and relax toward the end of July in Beidaihe, known for its cool weather and clean air.

The ugly purge of Bo Xilai may have removed a lethal threat to leadership unity at the top for the moment, but that hasn’t ended the fierce competition for the most senior and desirable positions or reduced the uncertainty over the impact of leadership change on China's domestic and foreign policies. Compared with previous leadership transitions, the impending shift is perhaps among the most significant in terms of scope and timing.

Of the nine members of the Politburo Standing Committee (PSC), seven will retire. There will be seven new faces if the party decides to maintain the PSC’s current size. Should the party reduce the size of the PSC to seven, a move that may streamline decision-making, five new members will be chosen at the next party congress scheduled for the autumn. While analysts have focused most of their attention on the leading contenders for the PSC, the party's most powerful decision-making body, it’s worth noting that the 25-member Politburo itself will have at least 15 fresh faces. Of these, two or three new members under the age of 52 will likely be strong contenders for the party’s top two positions in five years. In other words, this transition will select not just the next generation of leaders, but also identify the promising candidates to succeed Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang, respectively the incoming general secretary of the Communist Party and the premier of the State Council.

In terms of timing, the transition is taking place at a critical juncture of the party’s rule. Economically, the much-hyped “China Model” is seen as exhausted. Economic growth is slowing, due to slumping exports and weak final domestic demand. Huge risks in the financial system are piling up. The real estate sector is on the brink of a spectacular bust. Most sensible people, including those inside the government, have realized that growth driven by investment and export can no longer continue. Difficult structural reforms await the next leadership.

Politically, the Bo affair has revealed the deep rift within the ruling elites over the distribution of power and protection of their private interests. Elite unity, the glue holding together the regime, has shown signs of fraying. Chinese citizens increasingly want to have a say in how the country is governed. Despite the party’s costly censorship system, the spread of the information revolution, particularly Weibo, the Chinese version of the Twitter, is challenging the authority of the party. Dissidents have become more defiant, as the example of Chen Guangcheng’s daring escape from illegal house detention in late April shows. Calls for democracy and political reform, long suppressed by the party, have resurfaced in the Chinese media. These are the warning signs that the post-1989 political paradigm, which combines selective repression with promises of ever-rising standards of living, is about to unravel.

So the question is whether the new leaders are up to these challenges?

In the eyes of most Western elites, businessmen and politicians alike, Chinese leaders are practically synonymous with “smart, capable, dynamic, decisive, and forward looking.” Many of them are impressed, usually after relatively brief meetings, by the perceived sophistication, intelligence, and leadership skills of Chinese officials.

Why China Can
 
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china has her own system

every leaders have to experience many basic works from the bottom of this system

only the best one is allow to reach the top

if the evaluaton of this system works well , of course there will come out a good leader

the problem is how to keep the system being fair ,honest and efficient

though some problem such as corruption and unfair has been found in the system

next generation of leadership seems not to be polluted yet

but no one can ensure the next next generation still keeping clean
 
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China can not picked good leaders just because what they are [Wu-Tang Clan] and who they are [Wu-Tang Clan]. With the highest IQ from Chinese they will understand what exactly I am talking about.

In China, Jet Li only 1 but [Wu-Tang Clan] is a lot. [Billion could counts]
 
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China can not picked good leaders just because what they are [Wu-Tang Clan] and who they are [Wu-Tang Clan]. With the highest IQ from Chinese they will understand what exactly I am talking about.

In China, Jet Li only 1 but [Wu-Tang Clan] is a lot. [Billion could counts]

sorry

i think majority of chinese don't know what are you talking about

what is [Wu-Tang Clan] and Jet Li

i will not ask you to speak chinese

at least using english here
 
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China can not picked good leaders just because what they are [Wu-Tang Clan] and who they are [Wu-Tang Clan]. With the highest IQ from Chinese they will understand what exactly I am talking about.

In China, Jet Li only 1 but [Wu-Tang Clan] is a lot. [Billion could counts]

Sorry, I can't understand what you want to say, even trans this into Chinese, are all meanless and can't be understood
 
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Are you kidding me? CCP leaders for China seem to be 100 times better than the deranged sickos that we have.
 
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Could any one tell me difinition of good leader? It is relative, and it also be hard to define, it has times!
EX PM, Mr Zhu is good leader, although he have many worker lay off, but save the state-run economy, let china economy move faster and longer forward, it influence china much, even now!
Now, Mr wen do distribution of wealth work, it will alleviate the social contradictions, and sustain the economy development and social development!
It hard to judge them, let history and people judge them. whatever are them, the question is they do realistic work for their country and people. Don't like some country, their leader just know jump out then talk big, altough be elected by their people, but can't change the lives of their people, and talk big all the day, do less action. take the bribe, after 60 years from independence, they don't change much, include their big mouth.
 
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When I read the author's name, I didn't bother to read the article.
This guy and gordan Chang have an agenda against china.

这家伙我以前在国内就认识,没有交情,从来就是月亮也是外国的圆那种东西。
 
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EVERY Chinese leader after Mao did their job nicely,it's been a long way for China and Chinese people to have achieved this status,we used to be in abject poverty some 30 years ago.our thanks go to our great leaders,especially Deng Xiao Ping.

a great Chinese leader who changed China and the world.

dengxiaoping84-1.jpg


Could any one tell me difinition of good leader? It is relative, and it also be hard to define, it has times!
EX PM, Mr Zhu is good leader, although he have many worker lay off, but save the state-run economy, let china economy move faster and longer forward, it influence china much, even now!
Now, Mr wen do distribution of wealth work, it will alleviate the social contradictions, and sustain the economy development and social development!
It hard to judge them, let history and people judge them. whatever are them, the question is they do realistic work for their country and people. Don't like some country, their leader just know jump out then talk big, altough be elected by their people, but can't change the lives of their people, and talk big all the day, do less action. take the bribe, after 60 years from independence, they don't change much, include their big mouth.

Deng xiaoping,Zhu rongji,Hu jintao,Wen jiabao are all great leaders,great leadership and efficient system combined together carried China to today's status.personally I don't like Jiang zeming and Lipeng.
 
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Let put it this way our bad leaders had make us into the world second most powerful economy in just 2 decades, god save america if we can pick good leaders
 
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The US is so deceitful in always finding a Chinese person (no affiliation to China) to write these anti-China articles, must be their sick sense of humor but then the US is the master of propaganda.

I notice they do the same when badmouthing India too.
 
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