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Maoist view of success of south Korea and Taiwan
Now we will return to the subject of Korea. South Korea
is very important because it is an exception in the post-
World War II period. It has been a Third World country
that has successfully developed. People should realize that
the "four tigers" or "little dragons"--Korea, Taiwan, Hong
Kong and Singapore are exceptions in the history of
developing in the dependent capitalist orbit. Even if
capitalism "worked" for these four, it would not prove anything
about the possibilities for development under imperialism.
The reason is that you would have to count all the failures
that went with the successes. And as we have already documented,
those failures account for massive starvation death and
inadequate health care that amounts to a virtual genocide
for "low-income" countries where most of the human-race lives.
(Ask us for the posts on this if you missed them.)
At least 22 capitalist-dominated countries have suffered an
actual decline in per capita income in recent years according
to the U.S. Statistical Abstract. The imperialists can still
exploit most countries mercilessly, so a few exceptions
are allowed by the system to develop while other countries
decline in the international capitalist sweepstakes. The
winners and losers change from time to time, but the system
stays the same.
OK, but south Korea is an exception. Why? The reason is that
the United States and East Asian capitalists jumped on the
bandwagon of class struggle at a crucial point at the
completion of World War II and the Korean War. Without much
fanfare, these capitalists and the United States had the
sense to copy what Mao was doing in China wholesale.
What did they copy? They copied land reform. Why did they copy
it? Because the communists had just kicked capitalist ass in
China and were starting to do the same in Korea and Vietnam.
The capitalists learned their lesson and when they got the
chance, they ditched their landlord oppressor partners.
The reason Korea and Taiwan succeeded while the rest of the
Third World also worked hard at development without succeeding
is that communist class struggle gave the capitalists the
chance to get rid of the strong influence of the landlord class,
an influence which continued in India, El Salvador, the
Philippines and the Third World generally which still desperately
needs the destruction of the landlord class's power--the
destruction of semi-feudalism.
Korea
As most people on this net probably know, the communists came
very close to winning the civil war in Korea by sweeping south
before the United States troops landed in the Korean War. There
was really only a toehold for capitalism left on the very southern
tip before the U.S. landed.
The nearly complete communist victory gave the U.S. imperialists
and southern capitalists their chance to leave their landlord
partners in the dust, historically speaking. Listen to the
bourgeois economists lump South Korea in with the communist
countries for copying land reform: "The best-known successful
land reforms have commonly involved little or no compensation
for confiscated assets of landlords. Such was the case in Russia
after 1917 and China after 1949, as well as in Japanese and
South Korean reforms after World War II." (Malcolm Gillis,
Dwight Perkins, Michael Roemer, Donald Snodgrass, Economics
of Development (NY: W.W. Norton & Co., 1992), p. 499.
Japan
One reason that land-reform was acceptable even in bourgeois
circles pressed by the communists is that the landlords
in East Asia were on the wrong side of the war. In China
they lined up with the Japanese, often serving as Japanese
occupation government officials.
Of course, Japan was quite developed already earlier this
century so Japan is not relevant to our development discussion
here, but Japan is relevant in its role in the war and class
struggle. Again in Japan, we see the United States copy the
communists; although no one would know it based on how little
attention the issue of land reform gets. "The Japanese land
reform that followed World War II was different in important
respects from the Chinese experience. Land reform in Japan was
carried out by the U.S. Occupation forces. The Occupation
government believed that the landlord class had been an
important support of the forces in Japanese society that
brought about World War II. . . .Since the Americans had won
the war, Japanese landlords were not in a position to offer
resistance to reform, and a thoroughgoing reform was carried out.
Compensation for landlords was provided for in legislation,
but inflation soon had the effect of sharply reducing the real
value of the amounts offered. As a result Japanese land reform
also amounted to confiscation of landlord land with little
compensation." (Ibid., pp. 497-8)
In contrast, land reforms in places like India failed. The political
mechanism was not there. (Ibid., p. 498) Basically, the communists
in India did not succeed well enough to do all the work for
the capitalists.
Taiwan
People on this net probably realize that when the Guomindang
moved to Taiwan, it was uprooted from its land on the Mainland.
In this case, exile by the Maoist communists was the best
thing for these ex-landlords. Having had their ties to the land
cut, these people could now take up a new life.
In their new home, the Guomindang, again with U.S. backing, learned
their lessons. They did not allow the old patterns of landlord
domination to occur in Taiwan and in fact they saw to a very
high level of income equality generally. The gini coefficient in
Taiwan is one of the lowest--.326. (Ibid., p. 76)
The U.S. role in backing landlord-regimes
The U.S. foreign policy is basically opportunist but consistently
pro-U.S. interests. When the United States needs stable allies
it allies with landlord-dominated regimes--like El Salvador or
Marcos/Aquino in the Philippines.
When the United States and its ruling class friends get their
butts kicked, then the U.S. gets on the bandwagon. In El
Salvador and the Philippines, the United States lacks both
the will and power to force real land reform through.
In East Asia though, the balance of power was basically set
by the communists, so the United States could choose to do
without the landlords in some cases. In both East Asia
and the rest of the world, narrow geopolitical (imperialist)
interests prevailed but with different results reflecting
differing balances of power.
The United States will never act as a real agent for modernization
in the Third World. It chooses not to rock the boat, because
it seeks landlord-dominated regimes as allies. The U.S. imperialists
have no inherent interest in land reform like communists do.
If landlord and bureaucrat-capitalist Somoza can get the job
done of backing the United States, assuring resources etc. then
Somoza will get U.S. aid. It is U.S. support to landlords and
capitalist-bureacrats in the Third World that Mao dubbed
"compradors" that makes the United States the number one prop
of "order" and the number one public health menace.
East-West comparisons
One remaining problem is why did Taiwan and south Korea diversify
and industrialize more successfully than China and north Korea?
We will leave out issues like south Korean massacres in Kwangju
and the mass starvations that didn't happen in the north. What
about the economy?
People will recall that we Maoists have had doubts about north
Korea. We don't believe it is socialist and few people have much
real information about it.
Still, it is clear that north Korea did not have the option of
export-led development to the world's largest economy--the United
States. The same is true of China.
China, Taiwan and Korea were predominantly agricultural societies,
but the United States and ruling classes copied the communists
on agricultural issues. Hence south Korea and Taiwan garnered
the benefits of intense class struggle led by communists.
What south Korea and Taiwan had that China and north Korea did
not have is the world's largest industrial market available.
Indeed, China and north Korea had to devote large resources
to defending themselves against U.S. imperialism.
Had the United States been a socialist country, the story would
have been different. Then China and north Korea would have
had the same chance as Taiwan and south Korea.
This points to the serious duty of U.S. residents to bring down
U.S. imperialism, so that all countries can be brought together
in a cooperative world economy, not just the ones favored
by U.S. imperialist circles.
In conclusion:
1. Where there is no land reform (the breaking of the
landlord class), there is no development.
2. The communists have been the single most important
force for land reform. The success of the "little dragons"
is due to socialism.
3. The rest of the world can develop quickly if we can break
the alliance between the imperialists and landlords and
open the Western economy to cooperation with the Third World.
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