People's Republic of China
| People's Republic of China 中华人民共和国 Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó | |
|---|---|
|
Anthem: March of the Volunteers (义勇军进行曲) | |
|
| |
| Capital | Beijing |
| Largest city | Shanghai |
| Official languages | Standard Chinese |
| Recognized regional languages | Mongolian · Uyghur · Tibetan · Zhuang · others |
| Mode of production | Imperialist capitalism |
| Government |
Unitary people's democratic republic (de-jure) Corporatocratic republic under a totalitarian fascist dictatorship (de-facto) |
• President and General Secretary |
Xi Jinping |
• Vice President |
Han Zheng |
• Premier |
Li Qiang |
| History | |
• Unification of China by Qin Shi Huang |
221 BCE |
• Founding of the Yuan dynasty |
5 November 1271 |
• Establishment of the People's Republic of China |
1 October 1949 |
• Rise to power of Deng Xiaoping |
1976–1978 |
• Rise to power of Xi Jinping |
15 November 2012 |
| Population | |
• 2020 estimate |
1,463,140,000 |
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC),[a] is a fascist and social-imperialist state located in East Asia. It is one of the largest countries in measures of population, land, and economic power. It represents one of the major imperialist powers in the modern day.[1][2]
The modern Chinese state was founded in 1949 during a New Democratic revolution led by the Communist Party of China under the leadership of Mao Zedong following the defeat of the Kuomintang. The PRC under Mao would institutes a number of policies in the course of its socialist construction, such as the Great Leap Forward and later the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. Following Mao's death in 1976, a social-fascist clique led by Deng Xiaoping would seize control of the government, dismantle socialism, and establish an openly capitalist despotism which continues to this day under the policy of "reform and opening-up."[3] By the rise to leadership of Xi Jinping in the 2010s, the People's Republic of China had become a contemporary social-imperialist state and superpower while maintaining its repressive fascist rule with a corporatist economic model.[4] The regime is actively pursuing hegemonic projects such as the Belt and Road Initiative.[5]
The People's Republic of China is a member or associate of multiple neoliberal and imperialist associations such as the World Trade Organization, BRICS, and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. It is currently leading the Eastern camp of imperialism alongside the Russian Federation.
History
Socialist era (1949–1976)
Foundation
The People's Republic of China was proclaimed on October 1, 1949 in Beijing. China had previously been engaged in a civil war against the reactionary Guomindang since 1927, although a temporarily alliance was declared in response to the invasion by Japan between 1937 to 1945. At exactly 3:00 pm Beijing Time on October 1, 1949, Mao announced to the nation from the top of the Tiananmen Gate:[6]
"Fellow countrymen, the Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China was established today!"
The Republic of China retreated to the island of Taiwan by December 1949, where it persists into the present day. Shortly after the proclamation occurred, the Soviet Union and other socialist states were the first to recognize the PRC. Moreover, many Western countries, including the United States, initially continued to recognize the move of the ROC to Taiwan as the legitimate government of China. Following the proclamation, the PRC moved quickly to consolidate its power from the ROC and began nationalizing industries.
Politics
Fascist rule
The People's Republic of China, although nominally a socialist state, operates as a fascist dictatorship of the bourgeoisie which lacks most elements of even bourgeois democracy. It is ruled by the Communist Party of China, a class collaborationist association of the Chinese bourgeoisie which openly allows capitalists and other exploiting strata into its membership.[7]
Totalitarianism
The People's Republic of China represents a modern totalitarian state where most political freedoms found in other bourgeois states are almost or completely absent for most citizens. With mass surveillance initiatives such as Operation Sky Net and the Social Credit System, the Chinese bourgeois state, through its secret police arm known as the Ministry of State Security, maintains detailed observations on all of its citizens' lives and status, rewarding ones which are servile to the state while blacklisting and punishing those who are rebellious.[8]
Police state
While under Mao Zedong, police were being made a thing of the past and even completely abolished in certain areas such as people's communes and large cities,[9] police were restored to their past role in China after the restoration of capitalism in the 1970s. As of 2025, the Chinese bourgeois government maintains a large police force, the Ministry of Public Security, which employs over 1,900,000 sworn members. The police in China serve multiple functions similar to other capitalist countries, including strike-breaking and repression of the workers.[10][11]
Economy
Corporatism
The People's Republic of China operates on the basis of a corporatist (via the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce), state-monopoly capitalist system in which wage labor and private ownership dominates. Since the 1980s, mass reversals of collectivization has taken place in all economic sectors and the vast majority of the Chinese economy is directly under private ownership with even the "state-owned" enterprises functioning under capitalist principles.[12] Similarly, levels of income inequality are very high, with China having the second most billionaires in the world.[13] Market and other private forces are decisive in allocating resources within the Chinese economy.
"Both theory and practice have proved that the allocation of resources by the market is the most effective means to this end. [...] Positioning the market as playing a 'decisive role' in resource allocation is conducive to establishing the correct notion of the government-market relationship in the whole Party and the whole of society, and conducive to transforming the economic growth pattern and government functions, as well as reining in corruption and other forms of misconduct." —CPC General Secretary Xi Jinping, The Governance of China
Labor movement
Despite constant repression by police and other state agents, there is an active labor movement in China which stands outside of the corporatist and state-operated All-China Federation of Trade Unions. Starting in the 2010s and 2020s, strikes increased massively, with most happening in coastal regions. According to the China Labor Bulletin, there were 434 factory strikes in 2023, compared to 37 in 2022 and 66 in 2021. The strikes were generally caused by poor working-conditions, low pay, and immense exploitation, all of which were amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic.[14]
Foreign relations
Social-imperialism
The People's Republic of China represents a modern social-imperialist power which imperializes less developed countries abroad. Through policies such as the "Going Global" strategy and more recently the Belt and Road Initiative, China engages in the large-scale exportation of capital and loans in countries throughout Eurasia and Africa. The PRC has furthermore allied itself with the imperialist Russian Federation against the Western imperialists.[15]
Support for reactionary regimes
The People's Republic of China willingly maintains diplomatic and economic relations with a number of other reactionary capitalist states. China has provided military equipment to the governments of the Philippines, Nepal, Israel, and other countries to combat revolutionary movements within those countries and maintain their imperialist exploitation.[16][17]
See also
References
- ↑ China: A Modern Social-Imperialist Power (2017).
- ↑ Charles Andrews (February 10, 2024). "China’s Stock Market: A Lesson on What Socialism Is Not". New Worker.
- ↑ Eli Friedmanon (September 24, 2020). "Why China is Capitalist". Spectre.
- ↑ Bai, R. (2011). The Role of the All China Federation of Trade Unions: Implications for Chinese Workers Today. WorkingUSA, 14, 19-39.
- ↑ N.B. Turner (March 9, 2014). "Is China an Imperialist Country?". red-path.net.
- ↑ Proclamation of the Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China (1949).
- ↑ Charles Wolf Jr. (August 13, 2001). "China's Capitalists Join the Party". The New York Times. Archived from the original.
- ↑ Hou, R., & Fu, D. (2022). Sorting citizens: Governing via China's social credit system. Governance, 37(1), 59–78. https://doi.org/10.1111/gove.12751
- ↑ Rajani X. Desai (2002). The Himalayan Adventure: India-China War of 1962 — Causes and Consequences, Part 2: "Convergence of interests of the ruling classes of India, the USA and the USSR". Available on the Marxists Internet Archive.
"Burchett and Alley remarked that 'One thing that strikes even a casual visitor [to the communes] is the absence of the normal attributes of state power. Although there is a People’s Militia, there is no army, no police and no courts or gaols.'"
- ↑ "The Liaoyang Protest Movement of 2002-03, and the Arrest, Trial and Sentencing of the 'Liaoyang Two'" (20 July 2003). China Labour Bulletin. Archived from the original.
- ↑ Wu, Yuning, Ivan Y. Sun, and Rong Hu. "Cooperation with police in China: surveillance cameras, neighborhood efficacy and policing." Social Science Quarterly 102.1 (2021): 433-453.
- ↑ "In China, Capitalism is Being Consolidated, Not Socialism" (April 6, 2018). The Red Phoenix.
- ↑ Chase Peterson-Withorn et al. "World’s Billionaires List". Forbes.
- ↑ Simon Han and Jessica Song. "The Return of Strikes in China" (June 4, 2024). Asian Labour Review. Retrieved August 5, 2025.
- ↑ "Inter-imperialist Contention: China vs the United States" (March 3, 2023). The Red Phoenix.
- ↑ "China gives guns to Philippines to show it's a friend, not a foe" (October 5, 2017). Reuters. Retrieved May 17, 2025.
- ↑ "Chinese 'deliver arms to Nepal'" (November 25, 2005). BBC. Retrieved May 17, 2025.
Notes
- ↑ Chinese: 中华人民共和国; pinyin: Zhōnghuá rénmín gònghéguó.