this post was submitted on 16 Mar 2025
27 points (100.0% liked)
Ask Lemmygrad
918 readers
111 users here now
A place to ask questions of Lemmygrad's best and brightest
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
By Xi Jinping's predecessor, who do you mean exactly? Hu Jintao, Jiang Zemin, Zhou Enlai? I know that Jintao was Xi's immediate predecessor, but I think it can be argued that it was more of a team effort that paid the way for Xi Jinping.
I'm not saying that you aren't saying it wasn't a team effort, I just mean specifically in this context.
I agree that idealizing the Maoist era isn't a good or helpful thing, and there were a lot of problems. And as I said, I don't know if there are actually more poorer people in modern China than during the Mao era, but I find it incredibly hard to believe that the modern era isn't the best of China's history, and I figure that for over 80 percent of the countries' population, their living standards are at their highest point in all of history.
Maybe i shouldn't have made that offhand comment about his predecessor because now i risk exposing a gap in my knowledge, haha...
What i meant was, as far as i know, and i admit my knowledge on this subject is not the best, but i've heard that the turn toward addressing the most glaring problems such as corruption and inequality that were caused by the economic reforms in fact began already in the later part of Hu Jintao's term.
I just wanted to make it clear that it is not solely a Xi Jinping achievement, it was clearly something that the CPC as a whole understood needed to happen.
I'm 99 percent sure you didn't mean it in the sense that Xi Jinping is solely responsible for China's success, and yes, I can see that Jintao seemed to crack down on excessive capitalist elements.