Just How Stable Is China Right Now?By JIM GERAGHTY
July 15, 2022
This is more Jimmy Quinn’s territory, but I look at recent headlines like . . .
* “Chinese Homebuyers Across 22 Cities Refuse to Pay Mortgages”
* “China tries to stem growing anger over frozen bank deposits”
* “Xi Visits Xinjiang Region After Extended Absence from Public Eye”
* “China’s economy shrinks 2.6% during virus shutdowns”
* “China Is Giving Off Strong Lehman Brothers Vibes”
* “China will fare the worst if stagflation strikes, says S&P Global Ratings”
* “China Sees Most Covid Cases Since May as Lockdowns Spread”
* “Shanghai fears new lockdown as millions test for Covid amid sweltering heat”
. . . and wonder just how stable the Chinese economy and Chinese government are these days. The Chinese government, like all authoritarian regimes, requires a narrative of universal competence and wisdom in its leaders, which means the regime can never openly admit a mistake. Everything is always going according to the five-year plan, the state is always right, the leaders are always all-knowing and all-seeing, and any corruption, failures or incompetence that gets exposed is always isolated incidents involving rogue low-level employees.
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A few days ago, former Pentagon strategist Elbridge Colby shared an unnerving thread laying out why he is “more and more alarmed about a PRC invasion of Taiwan.” You should read the whole thing, but the short version is that Colby sees the motive, means, and opportunity aligning for China. But the window of opportunity may be closing in the long term, as U.S. defense upgrades come on line and an anti-China defensive alliance takes hold in the Pacific.
It is possible that economic and domestic instability make Xi Jinping less likely to pull the trigger on an invasion of Taiwan; Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is demonstrating that the conquest of a long-coveted neighbor can be more difficult — a lot bloodier and messier and more geopolitically isolating — than expected. If your country is facing a tall stack of worsening problems, a major war against a foe determined to resist is likely to just make everything worse.
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Source:
https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/just-how-stable-is-china-right-now/