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Dealing with the wealthy
What
can we see from the annual sessions of the National People’s Congress (NPC)
and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC)?
Having watched them year after year ever since the meetings were put
back in shape around 30 years ago, one thing that particularly intrigues
me is what people there, those who are comparing notes about policies in
the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, are thinking about the rich.
Getting rich was once a unifying force for Chinese society. Now views
are diverging. It is obvious that debate is going on in society as well
as among those meeting in Beijing regarding how to deal with the wealthy
group that economic reform has created.
But debating is not enough. Nor is it useful to come up with an
across-the-board solution to either tighten or loosen controls. Before
letting the issue degenerate into a divisive force, China will have to
update its policies toward citizens’ attempts to get rich by
differentiating the good from the bad, and by encouraging the former
while containing the latter.
One thing to do now is to levy a tax on individuals using excessive
natural resources. One main reason for the mindless management in safety
standards, and in pollution control, is that so little is being charged
to the mining companies for using our resources.
Fines to polluters are still not heavy enough to deter them from
repeating their sins.
For some time now, the press and the public have been pouring scorn on
the so-called “Shanxi mine bosses”, a name given to rich but uncouth
people, driving in chauffeured cars to take their government friends to
extravagant banquets or spas.
Many leading Chinese economists, including Justin Yifu Lin, the newly
appointed chief economist of the World Bank, have aired their concerns
about the abnormal profit margins of certain industries, particularly
mining.
The profits of these industries reflect little the productivity, and,
even less, responsible corporate governance. It only reflects how
cheaply some have managed to obtain contracts for the use of land.
The contracts are based on terms drawn up during the era of planned
economy when all mines belonged to the State. So the profits arising
therefrom has nothing to do with entrepreneurship; it entirely comes
from a legal loophole.
That is also why the phrase “Shanxi mine bosses” more often than not
refers to a rather dumb, instead of an intelligent, person, and why its
name is tagged to a place like Shanxi, a province rich in coal
resources, rather than say Shanghai.
The very existence of these types of business owners is a national
laughing stock and an insult to the market economy. It will continue to
poison relations between the rich and poor if the government does not
take timely action to phase out this sort of fake entrepreneurship.
The same market economy rates should be applied to State-owned companies
using our resources to prevent them from growing into arrogant
monopolies habitually ignoring their environmental responsibilities.
At a time of high inflation - and hence the credit crunch - it will be a
test of the government’s courage to revise the resources tax for the
long-term health of the economy and society, and to prevent the “Shanxi
mine bosses” from having more cash and spending it in ways that are
offensive to the public.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |