TURBO CAPITALISM IN SHANGHAI
PART I: The Communist Business Environment
I first went to China in 1991 after attending a friend’s wedding in Hong Kong. At that time the streets of Shanghai were drab and impoverished, and tattered Mao suits and caps were still common dress for old people in the countryside. All but a few joint venture hotels had cigarette burns in the carpets and paint peeling off the walls, and when you walked the streets you would be harangued with shouts of “Hello! Hello!” the only word of English that the average Chinese person knew. If you answered them a crowd of silently staring pedestrians would gather behind you to hear your strange voice.
Business was conducted in the labyrinths of the Communist infrastructure. Dirty hulking factories were state-owned and run by managers who had no contact with the market and were forced to do their exports through government-appointed Foreign Trade Companies. These Foreign Trade Companies, conceived in the old Command Economy model, were also completely ignorant of any marketing expertise: their business education consisted mainly of filling out Letters of Credit and other trade documents, along with the occasional junket to Korea or Japan to “investigate markets.”
There was no such thing as a small businessman in this market, and no entrepreneurs. It was hardly worth the while of a state sponsored “businessman” to export quantities of $2000 or even $5000, quantities that are happily exported by small South American companies every day. All production went through huge factories, who would be happy to send you container-loads of silk shirts, but shrugged their shoulders at producing several hundred. There was never fabric in stock, never any samples, rarely a color chart: basic tools for an export business. Instead, hundreds of workers with lifetime jobs in state factories sat around drinking tea and playing mah-jong, waiting for that big order to come in.
In the odd cracks of this gray State monolith, a few small businessmen were beginning to emerge. I remember Mr. Zhang, a fifty-ish man with a quick manner and a constantly twitching sewing machine foot, who had somehow gotten control of a small factory and was producing and exporting hand-painted scarves. This was 1992, and he seemed exotic at the time, like a Chinese cowboy. Of the scores of businessmen I met all over China in those first few years, he was the only one eager to accommodate my small quantities. Others shrugged their shoulders, laughed at me to my face, or even got up and walked out of meetings. I remember a meeting in Inner Mongolia when my name was mentioned and everyone in the room started laughing.
Gradually, though, the Communist Party decided that the tea-drinking and mah-jong were over. Those companies that didn’t produce were allowed to fail, and gradually even the productive ones were sold off to their managers or to well-placed Communists. The Foreign Trade Companies were allowed to sink or swim, and they all sank, as factories were allowed to export directly to their clients. Before, 150 workers was considered a small clothing factory. Now their cashiered workers formed factories of 20, or 10, or even three.
By 2001 the Chinese had gone on-line with Alibaba.com, a vast electronic marketplace where anyone with an e-mail address and a little English can set themself up as a businessman. Fedex and UPS became established ways of doing business. One clothing agent joked that she could snap a photo of a blouse in New York, e-mail it to China and have a knockoff back in the United States the next day.
The China of Mao Suits has become a China whose exploding neon opulence stuns me every time I visit. Cars fill the streets and giant restaurants occupy entire city blocks, three stories high, with 100 cooks and 300 waiters. Miraculously, they are full every night. But it’s not the designer-clad elite of Shanghai and Beijing that amaze me, it’s that even the man in the street now has a cell-phone and an electric bicycle. Teenagers have money to spend, and shop with their friends in the city centers. The people who once shouted “Hello! Hello!” have learned a few more words and now try to sell you fake Rolexes on the Nanjing Lu. China has arrived. In fact, it’s pulling out again.
Next: Turbo Capitalism in Shanghai
Stuart Archer Cohen is the author of The Army of the Republic (St. Martin’s Press), a novel about an American insurgency. His previous novels have been translated into 10 languages. www.StuartArcherCohen.com





















Turbo China Indeed
Great stuff! Shanghai and especially its Pudong District are a modern miracle.
I just graduated with my business degree and have decided to pack my bags and head to China, just as Peter Schiff mentions in the last chapter of his latest book.
I was fortunate enough to visit China for the first time my sophomore year. I made myself available for travel to China again my following two spring semesters as well. As a young man who understands and loves free markets, I have nothing but the highest of hopes for the Chinese people.
I'm moving to the city of Xiamen. Actually a beautiful island, Xiamen is only a one hour flight just north of Hong Kong, directly across the Taiwanese Strait. Xiamen has a deep and interesting history. Early on during colinization, Xiamen island quickly became a favorite haven for foreign ambassadors and such. Being one of the earliest cities exposed to western influence, Christian missionaries also first took root in Xiamen.
I'm moving there January 15th, and plan to be reviving my travel blog for any who are interested in following a Ron Paul believer through life in China.
http://gottheworldonastring.blogspot.com
See ya'll in 2009, Viva Liberty!
Be apolitical
If you keep your nose to the business-only grindstone you'll do well. Most Chinese are interested in becoming rich and will be open to all kinds of business proposals as long as you have the "blessing" of a trusted source. You should seek official looking letters of introduction from every and any business you can in the US before you move there. They will come in handy as you try to open doors. I met an American guy who moved to Hong Kong for business not so long ago. He spoke Chinese fluently, and had a good understanding of how things worked (he was a manager and global sourcing professional), but he still faced limitations that come from being an outsider.
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Talk to someone new every day. You'll be surprised what you learn.
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"The main thing that I learned about conspiracy theory is that conspiracy theorists actually believe in a conspiracy because that is more comforting. The truth of the world is that it is chaotic..." —Alan Moore
Great story!
It inspires me especially because I am a clothing designer and am hoping to be able to make profits with my sewing machine and hopefully have other sewers, designers, patternmakers, etc.. work with me in a free market to become successful making products people need or want.
http://www.meetup.com/RP2012GrandJunctionCO
Fascinating writer
Stuart, your descriptive style is superb. I can't wait to get "Army of the Republic". Thanks for sharing.
Stuart
Sounds like you've really had the opportunity to see China transform over your 25 years of visiting there. Everytime I go I am more shocked and amazed than the last time, and the sheer momentum of the people rushing headlong into capitalism in it's current form is a wonder to behold.
I first visited in Christmas of 1999 as a tourist as was immediately struck by the widespread recognition of that holiday, despite being taught since childhood of the "godless" Chinese people. Everyone was very nice to the point of embarassment at times.
I've gone a number of times since, all on business, and have been both terrified and encouraged at many of the changes I've seen. My travels have taken me from Guangzhou, Ningbo and Shenzhen to Beijing and Shanghai. I've really taken a shine to Shanghai. I could almost see myself moving to China to live there in ten or fifteen years time.
I believe the people of China will eventually demand the government they want and will no longer remain satisfied with the one they have. Recent months have seen widely reported demonstrations and uprisings by angry workers and others.
The people of China are now an unstoppable force and they have tasted what it is to buy freedom. It won't be long before this economic freedom will lead to other kinds of freedom.
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Talk to someone new every day. You'll be surprised what you learn.
..................
"The main thing that I learned about conspiracy theory is that conspiracy theorists actually believe in a conspiracy because that is more comforting. The truth of the world is that it is chaotic..." —Alan Moore
Just fifty years ago, here in Los Angeles County
. . . that is, south county, near Orange County (orange groves everywhere) . . . . .
. . . we did not have "chain" grocery stores, and most everything was produced locally. There were many small farms that were overflowing ..with the finest produce, and free along the road or just ask, and they'd provide. Raw milk was available, and a pint free for the asking. Along the coast, steamer clams and the best fish just off shore . . . . free for the adventurous. We did not have to visit the store at all.
I too placed card board in my shoes. It was a time when something of very low quality, was made in China, almost a joke.
Jobs included wiping the windows on cars in a gas station, mowing lawns and helping in local farms.
Today, just fifty years later, none of the past exist. All replaced by condos. I am a mere "pet" being manipulated and collard today.
I miss those days. Imagine, our family had the only television on the block back in 1953. The only one!
And never forget, “Humans, despite our artistic pretensions, our sophistication and many accomplishments, owe the fact of our existence to a six-inch layer of topsoil and the fact that it rains.”