I just love human nature. Obviously their loyalty must be in question as it well should be. In the meantime their families are getting educated elsewhere and coming back means giving up a meaningful privilege which will be only briefly thwarted overseas. After all, just who do you hire to interface with Chinese officials anyway?
The Chinese reality is that a Western education is the best ticket to have in China itself. Think about that for a second. A Chinese education in the rest of the world is still dead on arrival and that will not change for a long while.
The long truth remains that China is catching up two centuries of exponential Western development that itself has not slowed down. Asserting leadership ambitions is nice and welcome for internal consumption but can never be sustained as the rest of the world is well embarked to also catch up. At the best that will represent a large community among equals as will we all be.
China’s ‘Naked Officials’ Not so Naked Anymore
By Lu Chen, Epoch Times | June 17, 2014
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/740989-chinas-naked-officials-not-so-naked-anymore/
Over 1,000 Chinese communist officials in the prosperous southern
province of Guangdong had a stark choice recently: be demoted, or call
their families back from overseas to China.
Nearly 90 percent chose the former.
The anecdote was relayed in Chinese state media reports recently, as
the regime’s leadership continues to wage a campaign against corruption
in the Party.
“Naked officials,” as they are called, have for some years been the
most potent symbols of a government so bereft of legitimacy that its own
officials choose to move their families and their assets overseas.
The reports from Guangdong recently appear to be the first time that
state-run media has provided hard, local data on the phenomenon.
But the new openness does not mean the problem is going away.
Given three choices by the Guangdong government—to recall their
family members from abroad, be transferred to another position (often a
demotion), or retire early—866 of the roughly 1,000 naked officials
chose to be transferred. Only 200 or so elected to have their families
return to China, according to the state-run Beijing News. Beijing News
did not identify the precise number of officials, but said it was around
1,000.
Having family members overseas gives Chinese officials a convenient
way to transfer money out of China, and means they can quickly escape
the country if they spot any political difficulties—like an
anti-corruption investigation—on the horizon. Once they are in the
United States or Canada (two common destinations) the officials can
begin procedures for investment or family immigration.
“Naked officials have become the ‘reserve corps’ for corrupt
officials that want to flee,” said Li Chengyan, director of the Clean
Government Research Center at Peking University, in an interview with
Beijing News.
By 2011, China had at least 4,000 corrupt officials escaping China,
according to a report by the China Academy of Social Sciences, China’s
top official research institute. They took over $50 billion with them,
close to $16 million each on average, according to the Central
Commission for Discipline Inspection, the Party’s anticorruption
watchdog.
The rampant growth of the phenomenon probably lies behind the current
crackdown. The 2014 “Rule of Law Blue Book,” released recently by the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said that strengthening control over
naked officials is a lynchpin for anti-corruption efforts.
The very existence of this class of officials shows a loss of
confidence in the Chinese Communist Party and its prospects, experts
say. “These members of the elite do not have faith in the long-term
future of the Communist Party,” said Willy Lam,
a veteran observer of the Chinese political scene and a professor at
the Chinese University of Hong Kong, in an interview with Associated
Press.
“So along with money,” Lam said “they also take along with them state
secrets or intellectual property rights regarding high technology and
so forth.”
Professor Frank Xie Tian, in the business school
at South Carolina University, remarked that: “The behavior itself of
naked officials is already a direct vote of no confidence in the Party’s
system. They’ve prepared an escape route in advance.”
While the current crackdown on corrupt officials will have some
near-term impact, analysts said that the nature of how power is wielded
in China means that the problems that give rise to corrupt officials are
not going to go away anytime soon.
“China’s corruption is too severe,” said Xu Lin, a writer in
Guangzhou who keeps a close eye on developments in the Chinese political
system. “As an authoritarian state, China has no better way to stop
official corruption than to try to control naked officials.”
“Democratic countries don’t do this, because they have an electoral
system, multiple political parties, an independent media, a separation
of powers, and so on—a series of mechanisms to avoid official corruption.”
Along with spot inspections of officials, the Communist Party has
also begun pilot programs in a few areas of making public the assets
held by officials.
Guangdong Province initiated a pilot of this kind in May, randomly
selecting newly promoted officials to query them on their incomes,
properties, family members’ immigration statuses, and career paths.
There is also talk of having a list of sensitive positions that “naked officials” will be barred from.
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