China is a country that has experienced both of them in the past century. In Mao's China, workers and students were very devoted to the welfare and sufficiency of the state (I mean, Mao). The collectivist mindset that was encouraged during this time period created a generation of Chinese that was readily sacrificing crop yields to the state. It also created a generation that was almost blindly patriotic to the Communist Party, believing that it was an obligation to dutifully meet expectations set by the Party in order to please Beijing and Mao Zedong.
When Deng came into power, trickles of Capitalist reform were introduced, making China a developing nation following the American model, resulting in an Individualization of China. With an influx of Capitalist ideas, Chinese cities began seeing foreign investment as well as small groups of people becoming richer than the rest. Deng was famous for saying that "being rich is not a sin". Under this new leadership, large scale migrations from villages to cities began to increase noticeably. Money became the primary desire of many, and the people who earned their wealth were respected by the people around him.
Had Mao been alive, he would have not considered China the moving-toward-socialism country that he envisioned. China today is as Capitalist, if not more capitalist, than the United States. It is where the cheap goods it manufactures are exported worldwide. Its cities are commercial hubs. China is indeed, the centers of the commercial world today that is run by a Communist government.
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| In Capitalist China... |
Two, very different Chinas - their similarity is that they are both the "People's Republic of China". The previous China strived for unity in times of hardship, equality and the elimination of class struggles. The latter has created a "Generation ME", full of Chinese youths aspiring to be actors, CEOs, simply trying to find what's best for themselves.
In my opinion, Chinese collectivism, which had created miracles during the Five Year Plan, yielded great results in the Korean war - that China that Mao believed would continue to prosper, is now history, if not dead.

Commented on Buo's blog here:
ReplyDeletehttp://thewonderfulhistoryofchinab3.blogspot.com/2011/12/weekly-blog-4-reforming-china-into.html?showComment=1323393239842#c7220438609402796672
I found it extremely interesting how you decided to start off by describing Communism and Capitalism as collectivism and individualism, thereby emphasizing their main focuses.
ReplyDeleteUpon learning (from your blog) that Deng was famous for saying that “being rich is not a sin”, it makes a lot more sense as to Deng’s motivation for reforming China into a capitalist economy. Also, I definitely agree with you that if Mao were alive, China would have stayed a Communist society and never transitioned into one of the economic superpowers of our work today. However, considering the fact that the vast majority of world’s former Communist ways of governing have failed, I think that if Deng Xiaoping wasn’t the one to aid China in the transition to capitalism, someone else definitely would.