China’s Elite Loves Trump, Says Researcher

China’s Elite Loves Trump, Says Researcher

BY JENNIFER ZENG

January 20, 2019 Updated: January 20, 2019

WASHINGTON—China’s elite loves President Donald Trump and hopes that he can put useful pressure for moving China’s reforms forward, a top American researcher said recently.

William Overholt, a senior research fellow at Harvard University’s Asia Centre, said, “The Chinese elite loves Trump.  And one professor said to me two weeks ago, the United States elite hates Trump, and the masses love him. He said in China, the elite loves Trump. And the masses hate him for nationalistic reasons. They like him because he is pushing on [Chinese leader] Xi Jinping.”

Overholt told The Epoch Times, “[China’s elite] are afraid that somethings are being moved backward. They think some foreign pressure could be very helpful.”

Overholt said the situation was similar to what once happened in Japan: Japanese “would wait for Americans to push them to do things that they needed to do anyway.”

“I think there are many people in China, especially among academic elites who see it that way,” Overholt said. “They hope for more reform and opening. It is what Xi Jinping says he wants. But to many people in China and many people outside of China, it looks more like very, very slow reform and substantial closing.”

Overholt commented on China’s elites at the Center for Strategic and International Studies on Jan. 15, while talking about his new book “China’s Crisis of Success.”

Overholt argues in his book that “China has reached a threshold where success has eliminated the conditions that enabled miraculous growth. Continued success requires re-invention of its economy and politics. The old economic strategy based on exports and infrastructure now piles up debt without producing sustainable economic growth, and Chinese society now resists the disruptive change that enabled earlier reforms.”

Overholt discussed the emergent economic weakness China is now facing. The problems include collapsed productivity growth, high debt, plateauing of property prices, the starving and cannibalization of private sectors, and the state no longer gaining control through its ownership of industry.

He also discussed emerging political weakness, which includes the alienation of broad segments of the Chinese people, while the Chinese regime fights to retain control.

“What we are seeing is a party that is grasping for every little lever of political control, everything,” Overholt said.

William Overholt, author of "China's Crisis of Success," speaks at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington on Jan. 15, 2019. (Wu Wei/NTD)

William Overholt, author of "China's Crisis of Success," speaks at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington on Jan. 15, 2019. (Wu Wei/NTD)

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