My initial reply was too hastily written, and I made crucial errors due to the urgency with which I was writing. You have rightfully pointed out some inconsistencies. I will attempt to resolve them with my reply. However, a crucial one - your claim that China isn't deviating from Marxism-Leninism: I will try to resolve this one through a continous line of argument. I think that deviation is essential for China's development, but correction is crucial for its future.
Corruption and market forces existed pre-Deng. Deng did not introduce them. Class struggle continues under socialism, and you cannot instantly go from an underdeveloped, agrarian focused economy to a publicly owned and planned economy overnight.
I didn't argue that they didn't exist before. I argued that the influx of money ushered in by Deng and his economic advisors was meant to stabilize growth, where growth of the economy was and is inherently pinned to China's position in the global production and value chains. The policies suceeded by moving China from a steadily peripheral to a semi-peripheral country in terms of world production. However, I think that expansionist strategy itself failed to successfully understand the logic of contradictory capitalist expanse with the falling rate of profit co-existing with rising organic composition of capital.
That is, Chinese expansion is understandable when we look at it in terms of "development". Of course, Maoist china couldn't catch up to Deng's reforms in terms of the rate of development of the productive forces. What I argue is that the Reform and Opening up ushered in capitalist ownership to accelerate the rate of development - with a crucial blindspot with regards to China's position itself: a position where expansion itself is contradictory, as the limits to growth are dictated by the Imperialist forces of the global north. China cannot become the core. China cannot become the imperialist. China will, as long as capitalism persists, never seriously challenge the global North. [Good source on the topic: https://vuir.vu.edu.au/37770/]
But, Dengist policies were an attempt to do exactly that. Therefore, the capitalist road was taken, where expansion has to come through exploitative, extractivist relations with some portions of the global south. That in itself is the price of capitalist development of a peripheral state.
China has been systematically overinvesting to avoid the same modulation of this "developmental path" that led to US's balooned national debt (which in itself is only sustainable by having an imperialist position). So, the answers were: overinvestment, a trade surplus, etc.: all but bandages to this problem. Do you believe they are sustainable? I believe that the only solution is the acceleration of full nationalisation of not only key, but also investment portions; and the full abandonment of profit incentive. [Good source on the topic: https://monthlyreview.org/articles/surplus-absorption-secular-stagnation-and-the-transition-to-socialism-contradictions-of-the-u-s-and-the-chinese-economies-since-2000/].
Minqi Li writes:
By the mid-twenty-first century, the rapid decline of China's labor force could drag China's economic growth rate down to zero. If that happens, China's rate of return on new investment is likely to be so low that private capitalist investment will completely collapse. Only much larger state sector investments can help stabilize the disposable capitalist surplus. Eventually, society may find it desirable to intentionally lower the disposable capitalist surplus until it is eliminated. This would necessitate the transition to socialism, because only socially owned means of production can operate sustainably in an economy with zero profit. In such a socially owned economy, all economic surplus would be appropriated by the society as a whole and used for purposes determined by democratic decisions.
I think this claim is indicative of the party's contradiction:
BRI is not extractive, it’s a form of mutual development.
BRI in itself is not set up as an extractive policy. That is correct. The schema infrastructure-for-minerals, for example, is in theory exactly that - mutual development. But it is exactly due to the fact that private investment is an integral part of BRI, that the schema leads to unsatisfactory arrangements. In practice, infrastructural agreements aren't materialized, projects are underfunded or done slopply - to maximize profit for the private investment front. For example, the 2024 Sicomines renegotiation was a huge concession to China, as now, royalties have to be paid and further investment is pegged to the prices of copper. This renegotiation was inevitable becuase the infrastructural projects were not on time, on target, and were underfunded. Thus, private sections of investment strategies lead to balooning of costs for China's crucial mineral and rare-earth processing value chain. In my view, that is a fundamental error - let alone for how the DRC feels. On the other hand, the SOE elements of BRI have consistently displayed desire for mutual development by writing off debts and reinvesting, and that is a positive countertendency in terms of that policy - but again, indicative of a strategic overinvestment.
China is deviating from Marxism Leninism by following an unsustainable development path that is hitting the limits of the capitalist world system. This is indicative of secular stagnation. Capitalism generates more surplus than it can profitably reinvest. This is not a conjunctural crisis but a systemic overaccumulation problem. Maoist China did not have the same issue - because capital was not the dominant form of production. Here, about the role of money: https://monthlyreview.org/articles/renminbi-a-century-of-change/
I also do not share your opinion that the CPC is not vigilant enough, the presence of contradictions and anti-corruption campaigns does not mean that the anti-corruption campaigns are insufficient or failing.
The US will not go peacefully, and China will not "carry out socialism" in the existing configuration of the global economy by remaining passive and reactive. Its role is not predetermined, It can still turn to socialism, but it will not be a passive process because the tendencies of capital are too strong. It has to be combated. Socialism has to be the path of active political decision.
This article goes into detail. https://monthlyreview.org/articles/on-the-nature-of-the-chinese-economic-system/
It is essentially correct with regards that cadres with capitalist investment at stake have strong roles in the party. That doesn't mean that the bourgeoisie holds political control - it doesn't. The PRC is esentially handling it, as you point out with the anti-corruption campaigns. But internal dynamics of the Party are not as linear as we would hope. A lighthearted joke would be that this is Mao's ontological error - not all contradiction is infinite. It is capital that displays this, with its active negation.
Both are proceeding steadily. This gradual transformation is one that proceeds dialectically, and contains contradictions, yes, but these contradictions do not mean China is at odds with Marxism-Leninism.
I believe they are not proceeding steadily. I think that essentially multipolarity was always present under a veener of "peaceful hegemony" of the US. The US is sliding into fascism, but that doesn't mean that its power is steadily diminishing, or that its imperialist grip is lessening. It is precisely here that the transition from Deng to Xi must be situated: an effort to reassert state control over capital after marketization had fulfilled its developmental function. The presence of private capital itself under these conditions does not by itself indicate its political dominance - however, it points to the limits imposed by China’s continued integration into the global capitalist economy. It can only proceed by shifting away from capital.
Thank you for your time, your in-depth reply and your contribution to the debate. Some of my key ideas were addressed, and I will take time to study this issue further.