{"id":121301,"date":"2011-05-24T15:41:55","date_gmt":"2011-05-24T22:41:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=121301"},"modified":"2011-05-24T15:42:27","modified_gmt":"2011-05-24T22:42:27","slug":"in-china-middle-class-affluence-not-political-influence","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2011\/05\/in-china-middle-class-affluence-not-political-influence\/","title":{"rendered":"In China, Middle-Class Affluence, Not Political Influence"},"content":{"rendered":"
China has a burgeoning middle class with growing purchasing power. Political power and influence is still out of reach, though, for the Chinese middle class.<\/a><\/strong> For many middle-class Chinese, being wealthy and being politically active are seen as a give-and-take trade-off of economic modernization.From Christian Science Monitor:<\/p>\n Money, he believes, is the only possible passport to some sort of personal autonomy in the absence of political freedom.<\/p>\n “The current political situation means that ordinary people have no influence,” Liu says. “For my parents, so long as their interests are not violated they don’t care who is in charge. But we are different.”<\/p>\n That does not make Xu hopeful, though. “We’d like more influence, but I don’t think it’s going to happen in China,” she laments.<\/p>\n “In theory, the Constitution gives everyone the right to vote; but in reality, the law is not enforced,” adds her husband. “Nobody has ever asked me to vote, and I’ve never even seen a ballot paper. Even my class monitor in elementary school was not elected.”<\/p>\n But even if they have little faith in government accountability, they do have faith in the power of\u00a0the yuan to ensure well-being. Two years ago, Liu recalls, thousands of Chinese infants were poisoned by adulterated locally made baby formula. “Middle-class people could afford to buy imported formula. Ordinary people had to use the poisoned stuff. If you have money, you can have a better life. We can only try to earn as much as possible to reduce the government’s influence over our lives to a minimum,” he explains. “All we can do is earn a lot of money to avoid harm.”<\/p>\n Thinking about anything else of more social or political import, Liu sighs, “is useless. I forget all of it when I work. The only thing we can do is to busy our heads and earn money.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n