Here is a link to the pictures from the trip that I have put up so far: China Photos
Annnnd my thoughts ->
So, I really wasn't sure what to expect. Would people live in abject poverty a la dwellers in India? Was the newfound wealth visible past the shiny buildings in Shanghai? Did people live better than they used to? There are many more questions here, but that should give you a basic idea of my ignorance on all things China-related. Luckily, this trip would again quench my quest for knowledge and supply me with the answers I so desired.
Speaking of which, everywhere I traveled, I saw the same thing: desire. I saw it at every level of the social strata. Life was changing for the better and at a pace that was unprecedented. I don't believe I EVER saw a car that was more than five years old. Shops, restaurants, streets and buildings were all filled to capacity with citizens of all descriptions. I felt such chaos all around, but at the same moment, a deep sense of resolve and peace in the people. The world was changing, and, finally, it was for a better future. This was the theme; it was the overarching canvas on which Chinese life would be painted.. Growth, prosperity, and fear??
Fear. Yes, even in China. Housing and food inflation, the obvious and growing discrepancy between the coastal rich and the interior poor, government graft, and a faltering political regime have many worried that the worst could happen at any moment. The good times, the golden age, could be cut short by a structure that does not want to acknowledge opposition, does not want to include the people in decision making, does not want to champion free-will. An economic collapse / political revolution are not topics that seem so far from what could possibly take place in the near future for modern Chinese. Whether it was sitting on a train, chatting with a passenger on a flight or talking over drinks at an eatery, it always came up. Ordinary people have to run just to keep up with the massive growth that is sucking away the traditional pace that captioned life for so long. So, yes, fear.
But, fear withstanding, the China dream is fast becoming the symbol of new world growth. Export driven and capitalistic (not minding the many state run operations), China found its bearings by producing for the West. Now, it, too, is transforming into the consumer society it once fed. It is becoming a center of culture, political power and economic prowess opposite to the US and Europe. It yearns for its rightful place atop the world's governing bodies and is now finding those avenues open. An amazing run that has brought countless hundreds of millions of Chinese out of poverty and into the middle class, the Chinese growth story is captivating. It was definitely one of my top reasons for going; to actually make contact with this system and see it in the flesh, and to understand if it was sustainable.
So is it?... Yes! ?
Ha, that is the current state of the conversation. Wage growth vs. Inflation, Private companies vs. State companies, Individuals vs. Government, Interior vs. Coastal Cities, Chaotic growth vs. Stability. What wins remains to be seen?
t r a v e l b e a u t i f u l