Opening the National People's Congress in Beijing last Saturday, Prime Minister Li Keqiang set China's growth target for the coming year at 6.5-7 per cent, the lowest in decades. Only two years ago, he said 7 per cent was the lowest acceptable growth rate, but he has had to eat his words. He really isn't in charge of very much any more.
The man who is taking charge of everything, President Xi Jinping, is now turning into the first one-man regime since Deng Xiaoping in the 1980s. The "collective leadership" of recent decades has become a fiction, and Xi's personality cult is being vigorously promoted in the state-controlled media.
Xi has also broken the truce between the two major factions in the Chinese Communist Party, who might be called the "princelings" and the "populists". Xi, as the son of a Communist Party revolutionary hero who ended up as Vice-Premier, is princeling to the core. His centralising, authoritarian style is typical of this privileged breed.
The populists, such as Li Keqiang, are generally people who grew up poor, usually in the interior, not in the prosperous coastal cities. They rose to prominence more by merit than by their connections, and are more alert to the needs of vulnerable social groups like farmers, migrant workers and the urban poor. Most of them have risen through the Communist Youth League, and are known as tuanpai ("the League faction").
Frightened by the non-violent protests that challenged the Communist Party's monopoly of power in 1989, for almost three decades these two factions have carefully shared power and never attacked each other in public. Xi has now broken that pact, authorising open attacks on the "mentality" of the Communist Youth League in the media.
The friction between the factions has grown so great mainly because the Chinese economy is stumbling towards a crisis. Neither faction has a convincing strategy for avoiding the crisis, but each has come to believe that the other's political style - authoritarian for the princelings, populist for the tuanpai - will make matters worse.
The Communist Party's dictatorship is founded on an unspoken contract with the population: we will provide constantly rising living standards, and in return you will not question our authority. But no economy can grow at 10 per cent a year forever, or even at the currently advertised rate of 6.5-7 per cent.
In fact, China's growth rate actually collapsed about seven years ago, but that has been hidden by a binge of debt-fuelled investment. When most of the world went into a deep recession after the 2008 financial crisis, the regime artificially kept the growth rate up by raising the proportion of GDP devoted to investment in infrastructure to 50 per cent.
To finance all this, the Government let the country's debt burden explode, from about 125 per cent of GDP in 2009 to 220 per cent.
In the next five years, China built a new skyscraper every five days. It built more than 30 new airports, subway systems in 25 cities, the three longest bridges in the world, more than 10,000km of high-speed railway lines, and 40,000km of freeways. Tens of thousands of high-rise residential towers went up around every city.
But the new towers remain largely empty, as do many of the freeways. These are investments that produced jobs at the time, but will not produce an adequate return on investment for many years, if ever. And to finance all this, the Government let the country's debt burden explode, from about 125 per cent of GDP in 2009 to 220 per cent now.
All of this investment has been counted in the GDP figures, but up to half of it, or maybe even more, is bad debts that will eventually have to be written off. If only half of it is bad debts, then China's GDP growth in the past five years has really been about 2 per cent, not 7-8 per cent.
The crisis can be disguised for a while by printing more money, which the regime is doing. But that puts downward pressure on China's currency, the yuan, now over-valued by about 15-20 per cent.
Devaluation would give a temporary boost to China's exports, but it could also trigger an international trade war that would drag everybody's economy down.
So China is spending $90 billion in foreign exchange each month to keep the value of the yuan up, but even with its huge foreign exchange reserves that is an unsustainable long-term policy. Sooner or later there will be a "hard landing", and the regime's very survival may be at risk.
There is no evidence Xi has a better strategy for mastering this crisis than the rival faction, but the storm is approaching and he is battening down the hatches.
In his view, that means taking absolute power and building a personality cult of a sort not seen in China since Mao Tse-tung died. He is certainly not a vicious megalomaniac like Mao, but he clearly believes he will need total control to get through the storm without a shipwreck.
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