Legal
GUEST OPINION: China Needs Rule Of Law To Take Root For Sustainable Growth - Matthews Asia

While it might sound an abstract, dusty issue, the importance of objective, robust laws to protect property and contracts cannot be overstated. For all its prowess, China needs to embrace it.
A clear and reliable legal system, particularly around
enforcement of contract and property rights is a bedrock of a
successful economy and yet for large parts of the world,
ill-defined, or non-existent, property rights and robust legal
structures are a serious barrier to growth. The Peruvian
economist, Hernando de Soto, for example, in his book The
Mystery of Capital, famously highlighted the crucial need
for robust property rights. In China, a country that is still
under Communist rule, an important question for its future is how
to ensure legal protections develop in a way that can be trusted
by domestic and foreign investors alike. In this article, Andy
Rothman, who is investment strategist for Matthews Asia, the
US-headquartered firm, gives his views. The article has been
republished with the firm’s permission.
China’s rulers recently missed an opportunity to begin dealing
with what I consider the most important long-term obstacle to the
country’s continued growth and stability – the rule of law. A
recent meeting of senior Communist Party officials concluded with
lofty rhetoric about the rule of law, but did not alter a system
that still places the Party above the law.
Why the rule of law is important
Regular readers of Sinology know that I am optimistic about
China’s medium-term economic prospects, within the context of
expecting gradually slower year-on-year growth rates. This
optimism is based in large part on the continuing evolution of
government policy designed to embrace private enterprise and
markets. My biggest concern, however, is that there has been
little parallel evolution in China’s governance and
institutions.
China’s economy and society are increasingly based on property
rights: private companies employ 80 per cent of the workforce,
create almost all new jobs and are responsible for most
investment and industrial sales; entrepreneurs and artists are
creating new intellectual property daily; 85 per cent of urban
families own their home; and farmers have land-use rights. Yet
the country lacks the rule of law, which is needed to effectively
protect these property rights and ensure a fair, rules-based
commercial environment.
This is already the source of many of problems. Corruption,
weakness in industries dependent on intellectual property rights
and the widespread theft of land from farmers - the main cause of
protests across the country - are all consequences of the lack of
rule of law.
In the near term, China can continue to thrive, as people find
ways to navigate corruption and the opaque system, and as the
[Communist] Party works to reduce interference in the legal
system by local officials. But as the pace of economic growth
inevitably slows over the coming decades, China’s unique form of
authoritarian capitalism is unlikely to provide the necessary
institutional support for a modern, market-based society.
What is the rule of law?
There are many definitions of the “rule of law,” but the World
Justice Project provides one based on four principles: the
government, as well as individuals, are accountable under the
law; the laws are clear, stable and just, are applied evenly and
protect property rights; the law-making and law-enforcement
processes are accessible, fair and efficient; and justice is
delivered by competent, ethical and independent authorities.
“In a society governed by the rule of law, the government and its
officials and agents are subject to and held accountable under
the law,” according to the World Justice Project. “Modern
societies have developed systems of checks and balances, both
constitutional and institutional, to limit the reach of excessive
government power . . . These checks and balances take many forms
in various countries around the world: they do not operate solely
in systems marked by a formal separation of powers . . . What is
essential, however, is that . . . no single organ of government
has the practical ability to exercise unchecked power.”
I would summarise the rule of law as such: Rather than being a
power to be wielded by officials, the rule of law is a structure
designed to limit the power of officials.
Embraced by the party, at least in theory
The Communist Party has, in theory, embraced the concept of the
rule of law. Several years ago, then-Premier Wen Jiabao said,
“The most important aspect of building a harmonious society is
strengthening democracy and the legal system to promote social
fairness and justice.” And last month’s Party meeting endorsed
the concept of “ruling the country according to the law”.
The Chinese constitution already calls for a system of rules and
procedures to make the government accountable to the people.
Article 5 of the constitution states: “No organisation or
individual may enjoy the privilege of being above the
Constitution and the law.” It is, however, clear that in
practice, the law is a tool the Party uses to achieve its
political objectives.
One key aspect of the rule of law is an independent judiciary,
and Article 126 of the constitution calls for the courts to
exercise judicial power independently and without interference by
the Party. But the high degree of Party interference in the
criminal justice system, and the almost complete absence of due
process, is illustrated in Criminal Justice in China, a
detailed study led by Mike McConville, a law professor at the
Chinese University of Hong Kong, and published in 2011:
“In China’s criminal justice system, the verdict of those cases
which are prosecuted in court is never in real doubt. There may
be an occasional finding of not guilty, but we did not encounter
any such case and reports of such events are rare. Courts operate
on a presupposition of guilt based upon the prosecution case
file. What happens in the court hearing is largely incidental to
verdict and the ‘trial’ is a trial in form only or, occasionally,
functions to serve a wider social or political purpose,” it
said.
Progress but not fundamental change
The recent Party meeting was billed as an opportunity to advance
the rule of law, and there was one significant step in that
direction. China’s leaders pledged to reduce corruption and
interference by local Party officials in the judicial system. I
do expect to see progress here, which should make resolution of
basic civil cases more transparent and equitable, reducing the
risks of near-term instability.
But the Party leadership also reaffirmed the primacy of the Party
over the legal system, meaning that in any case, civil or
criminal, Party leaders in Beijing will continue to have the
power to intervene to achieve their political aims.
A communique summarising the results of last month’s meeting
stated that “the leadership of the Party and Socialist rule of
law are identical. . . We must strengthen and improve Party
leadership over the rule of law work . . . [and] construct a line
of Socialist rule of law work teams who are loyal to the Party,
loyal to the country, loyal to the people, and loyal to the law.”
It was not random placement that “loyalty to the Party” came well
before “loyalty to the law” in that sentence.
Does China need the rule of law?
“Countries with greater constraints on politicians and elites and
more protection against expropriation by those powerful groups
have substantially higher income per capita, greater investment
rates, more credit to the private sector relative to GDP and more
developed stock markets,” according to a study by economists
Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson.
But this conventional wisdom among political scientists and legal
scholars is challenged by the extraordinary success of China’s
authoritarian capitalist system. Without the rule of law, the
Chinese have experienced rapidly rising income growth, booming
investment, falling poverty, higher grain yields and lower infant
mortality.
“In sum, the experience of the reform era in China seems to
refute the proposition that a necessary condition for growth is
that the legal system provide secure property and contract
rights,” according to scholars Donald Clarke, Peter Murrell and
Susan Whiting. “Passably secure property rights . . . were a
product of the political-economic equilibrium, in which important
ingredients were the central government’s transparent desire for
a growing economy rather than class struggle . . .”
It is, however, far from certain that the status quo can survive
the challenges of a society that now enjoys greater personal
freedom and wealth, and is increasingly aware of how the rule of
law protects property rights in other countries. The current
system will surely be stressed by the continued deceleration in
economic growth rates, and that stress level will rise further
when China experiences its first recession to occur when most of
its people are working in the private sector and are homeowners.
While I do not believe that a recession is on the horizon, it is
inevitable over the long run.
As Acemoglu and Johnson point out, “When property rights
institutions fail to constrain those who control the state, it is
not possible to circumvent the ensuing problems by writing
alternative contracts to prevent future expropriation, because
the state, with its monopoly of legitimate violence, is the
ultimate arbiter of contracts.”
This problem is already visible in rural China, where local
officials often violate the property rights of farmers, leading
to frequent protests and periodic violence. Changing China’s
legal system and institutions to prevent this problem from
becoming more widespread, and to support continued economic
growth, is the Party’s chief challenge in the coming decades.
Will China get the rule of law?
There are, at this moment, no signs that the Party is preparing
to establish the rule of law. The Party appears to want to
continue to use the legal system to exercise its political
control over the population, rather than to move toward a system
that is designed primarily to protect the rights of individuals
by limiting the government’s power.
We do need to acknowledge, however, that back in the mid-1980s,
when I first worked in China, it was not apparent that the Party
was prepared to significantly relax its control over people’s
daily lives. But, a decade later, the Party stopped telling its
citizens where to live and what to farm. In the mid-1990s, we did
not expect the Party to dramatically shrink the state sector and
pave the way for private firms to become the engine of growth.
Private home ownership was not on the horizon. Today, most urban
Chinese work for private companies and own their homes.
During the past two decades, the Party has surprised in many
ways. It has taken a path that is unique among authoritarian
regimes: relaxing day-to-day control over people’s lives and
commercial activities while strengthening the Party’s control
over the political and legal systems. This is a key reason why
the Chinese Communist Party has outlived other authoritarian
regimes. Constant, pragmatic reform of economic policy is also
why GDP growth averaged 10 per cent for two decades before
cooling to an average of 8.5 per cent over the last four
years.
Establishing the rule of law would require the Party to take
another unique and dramatic step: to cede to its citizens some of
the Party’s control over the political and legal systems. Failure
to take this step is not a short-term risk for investors, but I
believe it will be key to China’s economic prospects over the
next 10 to 20 years.