The arch unrepentant
capitalist-roader in the Party Teng Hsiao-ping made many absurd statements about
economic construction. In a nutshell, his economic ideas are essentially those
of the comprador bourgeoisie. Domestically speaking, he represented the
bourgeoisie and wanted to seize the leadership over the national economy from
the proletariat and turn China’s socialist economy into a bureaucrat-monopoly
capitalist economy. In foreign affairs he practised capitulation and national
betrayal and attempted to turn China into a colony or semi-colony of imperialism
and social-imperialism.
Reimposing
“Direct and Exclusive Control of Enterprises by the Ministry Concerned”
After Teng Hsiao-ping
took up work again, he imposed without the knowledge and approval of the Party
Central Committee headed by Chairman Mao an economic administration system of
"direct and exclusive control of enterprises by the ministry concerned." This
means a few top persons in the central ministries concerned could directly issue
orders to enterprises in all parts of the country and exercise leadership over
them. Enterprises of the same trade thus formed into a seperate system operating
by themselves, thereby liquidating the controlling power of the Party Central
Committee and the local Party committees over the economy and negating the
unified leadership of the Party committees at various levels.
As early as 1956,
Chairman Mao pointed out that in order to consolidate the dictatorship of the
proletariat, strengthen the socialist economic base and build a strong socialist
country, it is necessary to handle correctly the relations between the central
and local authorities and "let the localities undertake more work under
unified central planning." This will bring the initiative of both the
central and local authorities into play. However, Liu Shao-chi and Teng
Hsiao-ping for a long time refused to implement this correct principle; instead,
they lauded the imperialist trusts to the skies.
The Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution smashed the two bourgeois headquarters of Liu Shao-chi and
Lin Piao. During the revolution, the masses and the revolutionary cadres rose in
revolt against "direct and exclusive control of enterprises by the ministry
cerncerned" and promoted the implementation of Chairman Mao’s correct principle.
China no longer has to ship grain from the south to the north nor coal from the
north to the south. Deposits of coal, petroleum and natural gas have been
discovered in the south. Small iron and steel, chemical fertilizer, cement,
machinery and hydro-electric power industries have mushroomed in the various
localities and output has multiplied, while many small and medium-sized cities
have developed into new industrial centres. All this shows the absolute
correctness of Chairman Mao’s instruction that "it is far better for
the initiative to come from two sources than from only one." This is of
great and far-reaching significance to developing the national economy with
greater, faster, better and more economical results.
After Teng Hsiao-ping
resumed work, he lapsed into his old ways. On the pretext of exercising
"centralized and unified," leadership, he wanted to "turn over to the higher
authorities" what he called "key enterprises which serve the whole nation and
require organized co-ordination on a national scale." If this policy had been
followed, most of the big enterprises and the lesser ones working in
co-ordination with them in all parts of the country would have been "turned
over." This would inevitably have undermined the imtiative of the localities and
the broad masses of the people and sabotaged socialist construction as a whole.
What Teng Hsiao-ping undertook to do fully shows that he was stubbornly opposed
to Chairman Mao’s principle of bringing into play the initiative from both the
central and local authorities, that he wanted to reverse the correct appraisal
of the Cultural Revolution, and that he wished to continue pushing the
revisionist line and take the beaten track of imperialist trusts.
The system of "direct
and exclusive control of enterprises by the ministry concerned" is diametrically
opposed to the Party’s unified leadership. It is splittism and advocates the
doctrine of "many centres" in opposition to the Party Central Committee; it is
despotism and bourgeois dictatorship over the localities and the masses. The
purpose of Teng Hsiao-ping’s reimposing "direct and exclusive control of
enterprises by the ministry concerned" was the liquidation of our socialist
economy through "rectification." This kind of "control" would inevitably divide
up the socialist economy of ownership by the whole people and turn it into the
"private property" of respective trades. And the various trades and departments
would become sharply opposed to each other. The overtly distinct division of
labour would lead to undermining each other’s work and the relations between
them would be turned into capitalist relations of competition.
Since "direct and
exclusive control of enterprises by the ministry concerned" disregarded
inter-departmental equilibrium in the national economy, it would inevitably
undermine the rational distribution of the national economy and the
multi-purpose utilization of resources and obstruct extensive socialist
cooperation.
Teng Hsiao-ping’s
"rectification" of the economy by means of "direct and exclusive control of
enterprises by the ministry concerned" was intended to bring about a capitalist
concentration of production and monopoly and enforce the revisionist practices
of running factories by relying on experts, putting profits in command, offering
material incentives, giving first place to production and putting technique
above everything else. It also aimed at negating Chairman Mao’s line and
policies,concerning the socialist revolution and construction, at expanding and
strengthening bourgeois right, at changing the socialist orientation and road of
our enterprises and turning the socialist economy into a bureaucrat-monopoly
capitalist economy.
Pushing the
Soviet Revisionist Managerial System
Resurrecting the
economic administration system of "direct and exclusive control of enterprises
by the ministry concerned" and introducing the Soviet revisionist managerial
system in the enterprises to exercise bourgeois dictatorship over the working
class are two aspects of the bureaucrat-monopoly capitalism Teng Hsiao-ping
worked for. Chairman Mao pointed out in 1964: "Management itself is a matter
of socialist education. If the managerial staff do not join the workers on the
shop floor, can live and work with them and modestly learn one or more skills
from them, then they will find themselves locked in acute class struggle with
the working class all their lives and in the end are bound to be overthrown as
bourgeois by the working class." Teng Hsiao-ping always acted in
contravention of Chairmin Mao’s instruction that we must wholeheartedly rely
on the working class, and obstinately tried to push his revisionist line
characterized by hostility to the working class. He openly declared that
"reliance on the workers, peasants and soldiers is relative," categorically
refused to regard the working class and the poor and lower-middle peasants as
masters of the state, and denied that they had right to control the economy. He
showed the utmost hatred for the revolutionary action of the working class
during the Great Cultural Revolution in criticizing the capitalist and
revisionist managerial principles, rules and regulations, and he lost no time in
mounting a vengeful counter-attack the moment he came into office again. He not
only brought out again the set of rules aimed at "controlling, checking and
repressing" the workers, but clamoured for dealing with them "as strictly as
possible." This proves to the hilt that he was indeed the general representative
of those bourgeois elements sucking the blood of the workers whom
Chairman Mao had scathingly criticized.
Which political line
is followed and which class wields the power of leadership in an enterprise are
factors determining which class actually owns it. If Teng Hsiao-ping had been
allowed to carry on with his revisionist line, the leadership of the enterprises
would inevitably be seized by the capitalist-roaders, the bourgeoisie in the
Party, who would use the power in their hands to embezzle and squander huge
amounts of wealth created by the working class and ride roughshod on the backs
of the workers. In that case, the socialist enterprises would exist only in name
and would be turned into bureaucrat-monopoly capitalist enterprises.
What Teng Hsiao-ping
pushed was merely a carbon copy of the so-called "economic reforms" introduced
by Khrushchov and Brezhnev. To develop bureaucrat-monopoly capitalism the
Soviet revisionists energetically pushed what they called a "new economic
system" with material incentives and putting profits in command as the core.
They gave top priority to expertise and relied on specialists to run the
enterprises, and the bureaucrat-monopoly capitalist class completely controlled
the leadership over the national economy. The rules and regulations of their
enterprises stipulate explicitly that the managers are vested with the power to
sell, transfer or lease any part of the enterprises’ means of production, to
recruit and fire workers at will and to do whatever they like to the workers,
that is to say, exercise bourgeois dictatorship over them. The Soviet
revisionists exercise vertical leadership over the enterprises through the
two-level organizational system of "ministry-production combine enterprises" or
the three-level system of "ministry-industrial combines-production combine
enterprises." These combines which are large in scale have centralized
practically the managerial functions of the enterprises. By pushing this "new
economic system" the Soviet revisionist renegade clique has intensified its
monopoly and control over the enterprises throughout the country.
The reality of the
Soviet Union is a mirror. It helps us to see clearly that once the socialist
economy turns into a bureaucrat-monopoly capitalist economy, it will bring
disaster to the labouring people. Powerless politically and exploited
economically, the working people of the Soviet Union today are having a very
hard time. The Ninth Five-Year Plan, decked out by the Soviet revisionists as a
"Welfare plan," has gone bankrupt; the rate of industrial growth is constantly
diminishing; agriculture is in a hopeless mess; there are serious disproportions
between the various departments of the national economy; and the contradiction
between the worker-peasant masses and the handful of bureaucrat-monopoly
capitalists is sharpening with each passing day. All this is steadily
aggravating the political and economic crisis of Soviet social-imperialism. Teng
Hsiao-ping’s attempt to follow in the footsteps of the Soviet revisionists could
only lead to a serious disruption of China’s socialist relations of production
and superstructure and destroy the socialist economy.
“Major Policy”
of Capitulation and National Betrayal
Chairman Mao has
pointed out that under China’s historical condition, those who stubbornly choose
to take the capitalist road are in fact "ready to capitulate to imperialism,
feudalism and bureaucrat-capitalism." This was the case with Teng
Hsiao-ping. In his eyes, the Chinese people were no good at carrying out
economic construction or bringing about the modernizations of agriculture,
industry, national defence and science and technology, nor, for that matter, was
the socialist system of any help. The only feasible way to "speed up the
technical transformation of industry and raise labour productivity" is to
"import foreign techniques and equipment." For this purpose he put forward a
so-called "major policy" under which China would sign "long-term contracts" with
foreign countries, with the foreign capitalists supplying the "most up-to-date
and the best equipment," to be "paid for" by China with its mineral products.
This "major policy" was purely a policy of out-and-out capitulation and national
betrayal.
In economic
construction, whether to rely on the strength of our own people or worship
everything foreign and rely on foreign countries represents two diametrically
opposed lines. Chairman Mao has taught us: "Rely mainly on our own efforts
while making external assistance subsidiary, break down blind faith, go in for
industry, agriculture and technical and cultural revolutions independently, do
away with slavishness, bury dogmatism, learn from the good experience of other
countries conscientiously and be sure to study their bad experience too, so as
to draw lessons from it. This is our line." Teng Hsiao-ping completely
betrayed this line advanced by Chairman Mao. His socalled "major policy"
actually opposed putting China’s economic construction on the basis of the
strength of the Chinese people and advocated instead "importing foreign
techniques and equipment."
Whether or not to
adhere to the principle of independence and self-reliance is not only an
economic question but, first and foremost, a political one. An important means
employed by imperialism and social-imperialism to control and plunder other
countries is to monopolize advanced techniques and equipment and use their
economic strength to check the other countries’ development and carry out
extortion, infiltration and expansion. In the world today, if a country is not
independent and self-reliant economically, it cannot become politically
independent or cannot consolidate its independence and is liable to fall under
the control of one or the other superpower.
We hold that, under
the guidance of the principle of independence and self-reliance, it is necessary
to import some foreign techniques and equipment on the basis of equality and
mutual benefit and in accordance with the needs of our country’s socialist
revolution and construction. But we absolutely cannot place our hopes for
realizing the four modernizations on imports. If we do not rely mainly on our
own efforts but, as Teng Hsiao-ping advocated, rely solely on importing foreign
techniques copying foreign designs and technological processes and patterning
our equipment on foreign models, we will for ever trail behind foreigners in our
country’s development of technology and even its entire national economy will
fall under the control of foreign monopoly capital.
Some economists of
the monopoly capitalists allege that industrially backward countries can only
"take off" by relying on the techniques of imperialism. That Teng Hsiao-ping,
with the label of a Communist Party member should chime in with such nonsense
was a big irony indeed! This of course was not a mere coincidence. It showed
that Teng Hsiao-ping’s economic concepts fully met the needs of imperialism.
The Soviet
revisionists’ newspaper Pravda had advocated mortgaging Soviet resources to
bring in foreign capital and experience and using part of the products turned
out by the factories to be built to pay back the debts some time in the future.
Teng Hsiao-ping’s "major policy" is of the same stuff as that of the Soviet
revisionists. The essence of this "policy" is to ask for foreign loans by
selling out China’s natural resources and state sovereignty.
Teng Hsiao-ping
shamelessly asserted that his "major policy" had three "advantages," namely, the
policy made it possible for China to export, to promote technical transformation
and to absorb labour power. What kind of "advantages" are these? They mean
nothing but this: the foreign monopoly capitalists would contribute money and
equipment while China would supply the necessary labour power, thus the doors
would be thrown wide open for the imperialists to plunder China’s natural
resources and bleed its people. The Chinese people had more than enough of such
"advantages" before liberation. If this capitulationist "major policy" of Teng
Hsiao-ping’s were followed, China would be reduced step by step to a raw
materials supplying base for imperialism and social-imperialism, a market for
their commodities and an outlet for their investments. And not only would the
fruits of socialist revolution be forfeited but those of the democratic
revolution would also be brought to naught. This fully reveals the ugly features
of Teng Hsiao-ping who worked as a comprador for the imperialists and
represented the interests of big foreign capitalists.
Historical
Experience Merits Attention
Historical experience
over the past hundred years tells us that it is but an illusion to think that
China can become strong and prosperous by depending on imperialism for
techniques and loans to develop its economy. In the latter half of the 19th
century, advocates of the "Westernization Movement" of the late Ching Dynasty
stressed the need to "accept loans to develop the country." They considered that
China’s only "chance of making progress" and "way of survival"' was to use the
country’s natural resources as mortgage to borrow large amounts of money from
the imperialist countries and to "copy" foreign techniques to build up an
industry. Things turned out to be just the opposite. It was these
capitulationist ideas which suited the imperialists perfectly, to dump their
surplus goods, export capital and carve up China. The "Westernization Movement"
drained China’s resources day by day and deepened her national crisis.
In the semi-feudal
and semi-colonial old China, there were some people enthusiastically advocating
"saving the country by industrialization." They deemed that the root cause of
China’s poverty and backwardness was her underdeveloped industry, and they
believed that China would become strong and prosperous by developing industry
and commerce on a large scale. They did not have the courage to launch a
thoroughgoing struggle against imperialism and feudalism but harboured the
illusion that China could develop a capitalist industry without overthrowing
imperialist rule. However, under the dual oppression of the imperialists and
their lackeys, the destiny awaiting those advocates of "saving the country by
industrialization" was either failure, with all their illusions rising in
bubbles, or throwing themselves into the embrace of the imperialists and ending
up in the same way as comprador capitalists. During his youth, Teng Hsiao-ping
had cherished the idea of "saving the country by industrialization." In the
decades that followed, his bourgeois stand and world outlook had not changed a
bit. As the revolution develops in depth, his reactionary bourgeois nature
became more and more exposed. From opposing the socialist revolution and
attempting, to restore capitalism to taking even the mantle of the comprader
capitalists and practising capitulations and National betrayal, Teng Hsiao-ping
could not but end up in the same ignominious way as compradors in China’s
history.
Chairman Mao has
pointed out: "Only socialism can save China." This is the historical
conclusion arrived at by the Chinese people after protracted revolutionary
struggles. Departing from Chairman Mao’s revolutionary line, from the
dictatorship of the proletariat and from the socialist road, it would be wishful
thinking to hope for China’s independence and prosperity and the Chinese
people’s freedom and happiness. Revolution is changing and can change
everything. So long as we firmly implement Chairman Mao’s revolutionary line,
persevere in taking class struggle as the key link and adhere to the principle
of independence and self-reliance and resolutely rely on and bring into full
play the enthusiasm and creativeness of the broad masses of people, we will
surely be able to build China into a powerful socialist state with modern
agriculture, industry, national defence and science and technology before the
end of this century and continue to advance towards the great goal of communism.
— From Peking Review No. 35, August
27, 1976
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