Gu Zhun
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Gu Zhun 顾准 (1915-1974) was an intellectual, economist and pioneer of post-Marxist liberalism. A victim of "anti-Rightist" purges he spent his later life in prisons and reeducation centres.
The recovery and publication of Gu's prison diaries and theoretical writings caused a sensation in intellectual circles when published in the mid 1990s. Having spent his life as a highly trained economist with Marxist convictions and heroic career as a revolutionary, his fall from grace and savage punishment led him to develop an authentic and deeply personal conversion to the values of liberal democracy. Cut off from the mainstream of 20th century Western thought, he in a sense "reinvented the wheel" of liberal theory. While certain critics have disparaged his ideas as "laughable if translated into English," from a Chinese liberal perspective he represents a rare case of authentic invention of liberalism, relatively free of suspect foreign influences.
Gu was an accountancy expert in his youth, joining the underground Communist Party in Shanghai in the late 1930s, and later appointed to leading roles in the post-Liberation Shanghai tax administration. However, having given outspoken and unwelcome advice to senior cadres, he was in 1952 charged with counter-revolutionary tendencies, demoted and sentenced to "remoulding."
In each of the succeeding cycles of Leftist-inspired purges Gu's "Rightist" label was reimposed and his punishments renewed. Rehabilitated in a brief period of political relaxation in the early 1960s, he was rescued from his pariah status by the economist Sun Yefang, with whom he had been associated in the Shanghai underground movement. Sun arranged a research position for Gu in the Institute of Economics of the Philosophy and Social Science Section (Xuebu, 学部)of the Chinese Academy of Science (CAS). The Xuebu was to form the core of the Chinese Academy of Social Science (CASS) when it was split off from CAS in 1977. Many senior figures in CASS, such as the economist Wu Jinglian, were formatively influenced by Gu Zhun during this period.
The Cultural Revolution once again submerged people with Rightist backgrounds. Gu was again subjected to harsh punitive treatment, losing contact with his wife and children. His main contact with the outside world was with his brother Chen Minzhi (陈敏之) (1920-).
Contemporary intellectual historians like Zhu Xueqin have hailed Gu Zhun's oeuvre as a major resource for contemporary Chinese liberal thought. Li Shenzhi, a Vice-President of CASS and noted liberal activist, wrote of Gu Zhun as a man who "set himself ablaze to illuminate others.” Critics decry this as exaggeration, pointing to the limits of Gu's intellectual range.
[edit] Main economic thought
(Most of his works were written in 1973 and 1974.)
☞He put up many questions that his contemporaries did not dare to and also he tried to give some tentative answers. In this process,he was gradually far away from the idealism-the doctrine of the communism and approximated to the liberty based on empiricism in Britain and American.
●He was the first one in the world who declared that there should market economics in socialism at the time when the dogma of communist was predominated. Accordingly, there must be laws and constitutions for the market economy, which has compassed the meaning of ‘to be good market economy but not bad one”.
●In 1965, Gu Zhun was forced to work in Xinyang, Henan province. During Mao’s period, some 200,000 people died of hunger in that region. There were even cases of cannibalism. Gu was greatly shocked by what he had seen. He began to think: How could the idealism of the communism be the doctrinal source of such horrors? How can such tragedy be avoided in future? He wrote,
“…, today people turn idealism into doctrines in the name of revolution, hence I am turning absolutely to empiricism and pluralism, and democracy.”
●In his article "On Commercial Production and the Theory of Value under Socialism" (1957),he insisted that it is market not planning that should be responsible for variations in production. Planning cannot compass everthing, and should not interfere in detail with processes of production and transfer, and cannot do everything absolutely accurately. The new model of planning which he opposed to orthodoxy was a big shock. At that time, had an ordinary person been reported to have raised such ideas, they woud have be put into prison, even executed. (At that time, Karl Marx and Maozedong were thought of as God and everything that Marx and Mao said is absolutely right which cannot be changed and nobody was allowed to question that). His views enlightened later key economists in China, such as Sun Yewang and Wu Jinglian (pioneer and designer of China's market economy).
☞Why did capitalism arise in Britain?
●Britain inherited technologies accumulated from the Renaissance onward, gathered experience in management , navigation developed in 16th century, trade,and the advantageous consequences of colonization.
● a United Kingdom was founded whose basic policy was to protect the expansion of commercial interests
● The United Kingdom expanded immensely through colonization. However, the goal was not to establish a Roman style empire like Napoleon, but to establish a Greek style colonial order which was relatively independent of the mother country.
● Business adopted the form of monopolistic companies (the East Indian company, the South China Sea company, etc.), consisting mostly of entrepreneurially-minded aristocrats. In the mid 19th century, Mill emphasized in his works that it was not appropriate for the state to manage business directly. These had in fact been standard British government views since 17th century.
● (China was just the opposite, with monopolies in salt and iron from the Han Dynasty to the Qing Dynasty. Traditionally, all these enterprises were controlled and managed by the central government).
● The effects of different approaches to war. The Napoleonic war, won by England and lost by Frnace, was Gu Zhun's example. France, whose historical heritage was in many ways similar to Britain's, adopted standard dynastic policies. VBirtually without exception these led to the suppression o development. In Britain, on the other hand, wars led to the accumulatof wealth, leading ultimately to the industrial revolution.
☞Imperialism (the "highest level of capitalism," according to Lenin) failed to follow the path predicted by Lenin, just as capitalism had not developed according to the predictions of Karl Marx.
●Marx had predicted inevitable demise of capitalism, on the grounds that:
(1) The core of capitalism ⇒ multiplication of capital ⇒ high profit ⇒ lower wages ⇒ insufficient consumption ⇒ creates panic;
(2) Moreover, when the organic composition of capital increases, the commensurable surplus value performance for the increasingly lowed capital profit margin. Thus, the margin profit on capital tends to zero: capitalism cannot persist in the long run and will die eventually;
(3)In social structural terms, capital tends to be centralized. As more and more capitalists are deprived, contradictions between capital and private ownership will increasing. Socialism will finally only require a slight effort.
(4)These predictions were belied by the realities of the early 20th century, making it necessary for Lenin to offer a modified theory. Unfortunately, this too failed to be confirmed. The Great Depression that followed the economic crisis of 1929 (the third "international" general crisis of the the 1930s) encouraged a rediscovery of Marx. Now 40 years have gone by (i.e to the time Gu Zhun's writing),but no repeat of the Great Depression has taken place and it is unlikely that it ever will. Why?
The reason for capitalism's great vitality is (apart from new technology, productsand materials; and big companies, governmenta and trade union; and in addition to its pluralistic philosophy, academic freedom and democratic politics, is that it did not limit, but tried to develop critique. Capitalism may be a pile of evil, but this fact is constantly exposed, and given unceasingly attention. Improvements great or small can thus be made. Hence, capitalism was enabled to continue; "…I see that the capitalism cannot be extinguished through violent revolution, because of its improvement through critique . …"
[edit] Sources
Yinhang kuaiji [Banking Accountancy] Shanghai: Commercial Press 1930. 《银行会计》
Chuji shangye buji jiaokeshu [Elementary commercial bookkeeping textbook]《初级商业簿记教科书》 Buji chujie [Elementary bookkeeping] 《簿记初阶》
Gufen youxian gongsi kuaiji [Limited company accounting] 《股份有限公司会计》
Zhonghua yinhang kuaiji zhidu [Accounting systems of Chinese banks]《中华银行会计制度》
Suode shui yuanli yu shiwu [principles and practice of income tax](所得税原理与实务》
Zhonghua zhengfu kuaiji zhidu [Accounting systems of Chinese government]《中华政府会计制度》
Chen Minzhi, Wo yu Guzhun [Gu Zhun and me], Shanghai: Shanghai Wenyi chubanshe,2003 (陈敏之: 《我与顾准》) 上海:上海文艺出版社).
Luo Yinsheng, Gu Zhun huazhuan [Illustrated biography of Gu Zhun], Beijing Tuanjie chubanshe 2005 (罗银胜, 《顾准画传》, 北京:团结出版社).
Gu Zhun quanji [Complete works of Gu Zhun], Guiyang: Guizhou People's Press, 1994 ((《顾准全集》, 贵阳:贵州人民出版社)。
Gu Zhun riji [Diary of Gu Zhun], Beijing Jingji ribao chubanshe 1997 (《顾准日记》,北京:经济日报出版社,1997
"试论社会主义制度下商品生产和价值规律" [On commercial production and the theory of value under socialism] ((《经济研究》[Economic Research] 1957, no. 3) "社会主义会计的几个理论问题" [Several theoretical problems of accounting under socialism] (1978) "《从理想主义到经验主义》" [From Idealism to Empiricism] (1974) 《希腊城邦制度》"The city-state Constitution of Greece" (written 1974? Published by Chinese Social Science Press 1982) Translation: Joseph Schumpeter,Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy(Commercial Press 1979)
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