What’s Wrong with The Economist’s “Angry China” Article?

I just read The Economist’s lead article this week titled “Angry China”. I came away from it disappointed, and I would like to explain why.

The main gist of the article is that the Chinese government should be worried about the rising tide of Chinese nationalism because a great deal of the anger now directed at western policies and interests are in fact, anger at Chinese government policy. Handled the wrong way, this tide of Chinese nationalism could very well turn against the Chinese government, leading to unpredictable consequences.

Here are the money quotes:

China’s rage is out of all proportion to the alleged offences. It reflects a fear that a resentful, threatened West is determined to thwart China’s rise. The Olympics have become a symbol of China’s right to the respect it is due. Protests, criticism and boycott threats are seen as part of a broader refusal to accept and accommodate China.

There is no doubt genuine fury in China at these offences; yet the impression the response gives of a people united behind the government is an illusion. China, like India, is a land of a million mutinies now. Legions of farmers are angry that their land has been swallowed up for building by greedy local officials. People everywhere are aghast at the poisoning of China’s air, rivers and lakes in the race for growth. Hardworking, honest citizens chafe at corrupt officials who treat them with contempt and get rich quick. And the party still makes an ass of the law and a mockery of justice.

This is a classic “bait-and-switch” argument. The anger directed at the west is in fact domestic Chinese anger at Chinese government policies, according to this thesis. This is a dismissal of any anger at the west as an argument completely without merit, and an attempt to shift all of the blame onto the Chinese government.

It is exactly this kind of argument which Chinese see as western hypocrisy and double standards. Of course there is anger at some Chinese government policies, but these are a separate issue. Please don’t try to change the subject!

Sure, there are some aspects of Chinese government policy which Chinese citizens would like to see change. But the pro-Tibetan independence folk have committed the sin of lumping Chinese citizens together with the Chinese government in their criticisms. To the Chinese, it seems like a classic attempt to hijack the Olympics, something which almost all Chinese are truly proud of, and to turn it into a bully pulpit for their claims of Tibetan independence.

What angers both the Chinese government policymakers and people is that while the country has developed in economic terms and yes, even in human rights terms, that has not been recognized in the west. Instead, there continue to be politicians and media figures who continue to hector China, and play a leading role in shaping western opinions and political policy about China. To the Chinese, it seems like no matter how hard they run to the finish line, there is always someone out there moving the finish line even further away while they are running the race.

Trying to steal the Olympics and letting the Chinese have their day in the sun would be very similiar to insulting an American simply because George W Bush is his president. This is exactly what the pro-Tibetan independence supporters, and the China media critics have done.

Why should these people, who have little deep understanding of China and the Chinese (or Tibetans for that matter) have such an influential role in shaping opinion about such an important relationship as the west’s relationship with China, and be given so much ink and free air time? In light of this, why shouldn’t Chinese get angry about this very unfair and one-sided view which is put forward in much of the western media, and then passed off as the truth? And why doesn’t the western media instead reach out to westerners who have lived in China, and maybe, even speak the language in order to get a deeper understanding of the country?

Is this fair?

The real reason many Chinese are angry is not redirected anger at Chinese government policies, it is a genuine anger at a very biased and one-sided view about China which casts it as irresponsible, selfish, oppressive and wrong, and then throwing all Chinese citizens into the same basket.

The Economist is, generally speaking, a fair and open-minded newspaper, and usually presents well thought-out positions and arguments . It should look deeper than dismiss all of the Chinese anger out of hand.

If this lead article is the best that they can do, then I’m not optimistic about relations between China and the west.

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Chinese-Language Search Grows, and the Mobile Internet…

Rupert Murdoch and wife

Everything else being equal, it is safe to assume that human language-specific search should closely map to populations. For example, the US population is 300M, Canada’s is about 30M, the UK is about 60M, and Australia is about 15M and New Zealand is about 4M. These are the main English-speaking populations, and they total about 4.1B, and make up most English-language search. Of course, there are many other English speakers living in other countries, and there are many non-native speakers who also choose to search in English for their own reasons.

Most of them use Google as their leading search engine.

There are about 1.3B Chinese who use Chinese as their language of choice for search; for the most part, they use Baidu.

If the Chinese searched as much and as frequently as Americans, Canadians, Britons, Australians and New Zealanders combined, it is safe to assume that Baidu’s Chinese-language search would have about three times the volume of Google’s English language search.

This has not happened yet, but this report shows that the growth trend for Baidu’s Chinese language search is beginning, since it has already overtaken Microsoft, according to this report from Techcrunch. In China, Baidu commands more than 60% of the search market share, while Google’s Chinese-language search in China has only 20+%, and the gap appears to be growing…

In the US, Google is putting its efforts into the mobile Internet, and sees the mobile phone as soon replacing the PC-based Internet as the access device of choice for most people, even in the US. In China, South Korea, Japan and Europe, the mobile phone already is the access device used by most people, which accounts for the huge volume of SMS traffic.

Google Android is the major part of Google’s effort to define a mobile platform for communications. Since the Chinese carriers, especially China Mobile, and Baidu, have not yet defined an SDK for the mobile platform, many assume that Google will soon have a mobile strategy in China which will turn the tables on its Chinese competitors.

My answer to this: “Dream on…”

China Mobile has a well-deserved reputation as a very tough company to deal with in China, but they are not stupid…

The Economist has an excellent article on Rupert Murdoch which is in fact a review of a book titled: “Rupert’s Adverntures in China: How Murdoch Lost A Fortune and Found A Wife”.

All’s well that ends well…

It makes me wonder if the presence and performance of many western companies in China can be explained as company-financed executive wife searches?

Maybe Google should take heed.

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