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China to be stabilizing power in new era

By Andrew Moody | China Daily | Updated: 2018-05-26 07:30
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The 55-kilometer-long Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge that connects Hong Kong on the east of the Pearl River Delta with Macao and Zhuhai on the west is set to be world's longest cross-sea bridge. [D.J. CLARK/CHINA DAILY]

"People outside of China are waiting to see the ideas that underpin it and what will be the substantial parts of the new era from China's side that will affect them," says Rana Mitter, director of the Oxford University China Centre. "Those outside of China are much more aware of the Belt and Road Initiative."

A number of analysts, however, believe that the new era is important because the whole world is having to accommodate China. "If China has a new era then the world is going to have a new era because of the way China impinges on that new world," said Kerry Brown, director of the Lau Institute at King's College London. "China has become this very prominent geopolitical actor in a short space of time."

All the indications so far are that China is going to be a very different geopolitical actor than the US, certainly one less inclined to make unilateral military interventions. The Belt and Road Initiative and the setting up of institutions such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank may be more the templates of China's global involvement.

"It is not going to be like the United States in its prime. It is going to be much more collective in its approach and more of a stabilizer on the world stage," added Brown.

One of the essential messages of the new era is about winning the battle against poverty, which Xi throughout his career has always seen as a scourge since he was Party chief of Ningde prefecture in Fujian province 30 years ago and implemented a series of poverty-reduction policies.

This is why the new era has so much resonance in Africa, in particular, where 400 million people still live below the poverty line. For some people, this could be the essential lesson of the new era for the rest of the world.

"Britain's legacy to the rest of the world was the concept of the rule of law," says Hugh Peyman, author of China's Change: The Greatest Show on Earth. "The great American legacy was modern management systems, and the essential legacy of China's could be on how to handle laggard communities, what we now call the left-behind and now a phenomenon in the West again."

For those who live and work in China, there is a sense of a society not only just moving but looking forward. This is no longer the case in the West with many countries' incomes stagnating and living standards falling 10 years after the global financial crisis.

"There is an important shift that has taken place in China as a result of new era," said Martin Jacques, author of When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order. "There is a new atmosphere, a certain exuberance, self confidence and élan that you can see among the Chinese population that you no longer get in the West."

This might yet prove the essential legacy of the new era-the time when China had the confidence to face the world on its own terms and not on those dictated by others.

The author is a senior writer with China Daily. andrewmoody@chinadaily.com.cn

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