Yes, but it’s an uphill battle. You’re fighting against the best Harvard-trained economists who already have their own set of ideological beliefs.
The easiest way to describe this to a poster is like being mass downvoted in reddit. You can post information with evidence attached, but if it challenges their beliefs, they’re not going to listen.
Thanks. I believe that the best countermeasure against Western propaganda is to actually understand the complexity of the Chinese system itself - all its strengths and deficiencies, not blindly regurgitating both the pro/anti-China propaganda points, because you really cannot “defend China” nor are you qualified if you don’t even know how the system works. I am sharing these posts as I am learning about the many intricacies that I never even thought about before too.
Yes, the infrastructures are all amazing, but how many people know what it’s like to work and live there as an average Chinese worker (not a foreigner “expat” who is employed in foreign multinational corporation that pays very good salary with full welfare and employment benefits)?
Like, how are you going to answer if met with “sure, but I don’t want to work 12 hours for 26 days a month with no annual leave”?
How well do you know about the system to defend against arguments like that? What percentage of the Chinese working class have more than 4 off-days per month? Do you know the answer? How does the labor law work there? What legal recourses do one have if being unreasonably terminated? Are there unemployment benefits? Are there legal protections for workers against exposure to environmental pollution at workplace? How does the medical insurance work over there? What happens if one gets sick and have to miss work? Do employers contribute to pensions? How many Chinese people have pension and insurance?
I guarantee you that 95% of the Westerners who are “amazed” at China’s rapid development do not think about these questions, because they assume that the same level of hard-fought welfare in their own country (which is being deteriorated by their own governments’ neoliberal policies) also exists in China and that they will be employed at a high salary job if they ever move to China (which is probably true for a foreigner with advanced degrees).
This is why most of the pro-China propaganda focuses mostly on technology and industries (preceded by many industrial economies such as Japan and South Korea), because they cannot say China is a workers state like the USSR. The labor law in China is actually worse than many developing countries such as Vietnam and Brazil, which many Chinese businessmen are learning the hard way as they shift production sites overseas. It’s actually hilarious to see these people (both pro and anti China online accounts) painting themselves into corners with increasingly bizarre mental gymnastics to “explain” why China “cannot do this or that”.
You’ll notice on the other hand, that I focus a lot on socioeconomic issues, because as a socialist, that’s what I am most concerned about. And it is these issues, such as wealth distribution, that will dictate the principal contradictions of the Chinese economy as we move past the export-led and infrastructure-led investment growth phases.