Brian Holmes on Wed, 8 Oct 2014 06:48:52 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> From Deng & Thatcher 1984 to the Hong Kong 2014 OCCUPY |
On 10/07/2014 11:52 AM, dan s wang wrote: >I hope young HK activists are thinking about long term strategies for >bridging differences between themselves and their mainland >contemporaries. After all, the Gini Coefficient in the PRC has become >much steeper than that of HK. (Not accepting the figure cited by >Brian.) > >http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/28/china-more-unequal-richer > > But for that to happen, they first have to recognize the limited > relevance of their democratic aspirations. This is a harsh thing to > say after people put their lives on hold and bodies on the line for > days on end, but the considerable tensions between HK and mainland > peoples (meaning those that even care about HK) -- natural allies, one > might think given their shared subjection -- will never be resolved > otherwise. When enough people in HK see that the mainland folks are > not simply unengaged politically but rather inhabit a permanent space > of uncontrollability, and that the central government fears the vast > population surrounding every ministerial office and every police > station on the mainland far more than they do the Occupy activists, > perhaps a shared accounting of discontents could begin. But that > requires an acknowledgement that they and the mainlanders exist > commonly under one government, and under one logic, that of capital. This is a profound remark, Dan. Given that there is basically no chance of the Xi Jinping govt backing down on the policy of managed elections, it may well be that the present movement will mark a generational turning point, exactly in the sense that you indicate. In the aftermath it will become clear that, financial hub or not, Hong Kong is part of the PRC. Given that the city, despite its colorless business ethic, has long been the observatory from which locals and mainlanders in exile monitored and denounced the various labor, environmental and corruption abuses of the PRC, it will be interesting to see what this new consciousness produces. Since the Cultural Revolution, it would seem that both Hong Kong and the mainland have been controlled by the enticing chance to get rich, balanced against the fear of police repression and also of the adverse consequences of widespread unrest. Now the downsides of highly unequal wealth distributions become evident on both the island and the mainland. That could be the departure point for a much more interesting dialectic between the two. (Point of detail: the Gini coefficient of 0.73 quoted in the Guardian article is to do with property ownership and overall wealth, not income distribution, which is typically what's measured. The Guardian blundered that one. On the wealth measure HK is basically the same as China, 0.74. And the US is at 0.80 - just behind Switzerland, Denmark, Zimbabwe and Namibia!) I disagree with your notion that Hong Kong's financial function will shift to the mainland. The PRC's currency and asset markets are state controlled and thereby insulated from global financial shocks, a situation that has served the party (and arguably, the country) so well that it is not likely to change in the near future. For that reason, Hong Kong's role as the mediator between global and Chinese capital will likely be preserved. I would add that the return of Hong Kong in 1997 may have been a detail, but the process leading there was not. The money capital sunk in Shenzhen and other coastal cities during the course of the Nineties by Hong Kong - and by multinationals operating through Hong Kong - was necessarily accompanied by complex machines and the expertise to work them. (Taiwan is very important in this story too.) In the case of contemporary finance, something so insanely intricate cannot be learned overnight, much less just invented. Access to Hong Kong and its human and machine capital was crucial for the takeoff of China's brand-new new financial sector. In this process, Shenzhen -- which now has the world's 11th largest stock exchange -- was clearly the stepping-stone. Synchronization names the gradual absorption, naturalization and reproduction of selected fractions of foreign capital, whether it's money or machines or cognitive skills of all kinds. For sure, Shanghai is now the 7th largest stock exchange by market capitalization, just behind Hong Kong which is number 6. And Shanghai is certainly much more important than Hong Kong in terms of culture, research, education and governing techniques, not to mention manufacturing. The synchronization is now complete, to the extent desired -- which was my point and perhaps it's also yours, just with a different emphasis. Nonetheless, the specific role of Hong Kong as financial mediator for the state-controlled PRC economy remains more or less intact until further notice. And that matters to the situation at hand, because the role of a hub in the transnational financial network requires free information and the ability to freely process it. The question for Beijing is how to maintain economic freedom while curtailing political freedom. The question for the people of Hong Kong is, can they live with that curtailment? Where we agree 100% is that these things are worth discussing, because the evolution of China since 1989 is world-historical. The way that Tiananmen was dealt with - the repression of political expression compensated by the generalization of Deng's experimental free-market reforms - has been absolutely crucial to the unfolding of neoliberal globalization as a whole, and it has given us the political economy of the present. Any fundamental change in Chinese social relations would now affect the entire planet. Such a change has been proposed - however briefly, however precariously - on the streets this last week. That's why I'm so interested in it. What happens on that level, matters. best, Brian # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org