Several years ago, irritated by the glowing infrastructure-and-skyscraper stories brought home by visitors to Shanghai, I had written an article entitled “Looking for Shanghai’s soul” [November 2004]. Well, I spent a few days there recently and I’m here to report that Shanghai’s soul is alive and well in the
What a city! On the last day, I blurted out, “It’s better than New York!”
And as I commiserated with myself over that gaffe, I realised that the truth is that New York, exciting as it is, has, over the years, acquired the patina of an older European city — it’s slick, it’s got a lot of places to go and things to do, it’s exciting, but it’s losing its edginess. There are fewer and fewer neighbourhoods where you would get mugged — not that that’s a good thing — less and less variation between different parts of town, and, with real estate prices driving everything, less and less stylistic and, dare I say it, cultural, variation between New Yorkers.
Of course, not speaking Mandarin, my feel for Shanghai was very superficial and it’s possible — indeed, likely — that the edginess and excitement I felt was simply because it was all new.
But there’s no doubt that it’s a great city. And, make no mistake, the Chinese miracle — granted I only went to Shanghai — is real.
Like a lot of other analysts and observers, I had felt that the Chinese economy is poised for a post-Olympic slowdown, which would impact commodity prices and world growth quite severely. And, while this is still possible — indeed, likely — I now believe that the Chinese will come out of it stronger than before and stronger even than BRICs or even more optimistic forecasters.
In the words of another amazing woman I met (this one from Malaysia), “Communism is good. The government speaks with one voice, and things get done. What it says changes from time to time, as circumstances and citizens’ needs change.”
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But what about human rights, censorship and so on?
Well, I must say, people — at least in Shanghai — seem to be quite happy. And I remember reading a report about a global survey by Pew, which showed that of all the countries in the world, the Chinese were the happiest (by an astounding margin) with their government. Well, it certainly appears to be delivering the goods.
And, returning to my Malaysian dragon lady, “What do they know about freedom? In Asia, we are freer than anywhere else. As women, for instance, we don’t have to burn our bras — we know who we are, we run the family, we manage businesses, we control things. The first female political leader in the world was …where?”
And, you know, she’s right — at least about freedom. The art queen I met said the same thing in a different context. She said that India, China and Iran are the oldest civilisations in the world, but for the last 200 years (or so), we have prostituted (my word) our cultural energy aping the West, a culture that is, no doubt, rich in many ways, but also carries some horrifying demon seeds, which result, for instance, in every so often someone bursting into a schoolroom and killing dozens of children — for no reason. That’s the unacceptable side of Western — well, American — culture.
So, while I’m not sure if I agree wholeheartedly with the “communism is good” view, the energy I tasted in Shanghai felt strongly like the world is on the cusp of a new Enlightenment, this one driven from the East.
In the words of the sage of somewhere or another, “Aa jaon maidan mein!”