How China combined authoritarianism with capitalism to create a new communism
Abstract
After the 1989 fall of communism in the Soviet bloc, five self-declared communist states remain today: China, Cuba, Laos, North Korea and Vietnam. Belarus and Venezuela can also be added to the mix as they fulfil the criteria of a communist state – even though they do not officially invoke the ideology. So, at present, the number stands at seven. The question is, now that capitalism is the engine of China’s economy, what is communism today? And if the number of communist states is poised to grow in the near future, as some predict, what does this prospect mean for democracy?
Citation
Kamusella , T 2021 , ' How China combined authoritarianism with capitalism to create a new communism ' The Conversation . < https://theconversation.com/how-china-combined-authoritarianism-with-capitalism-to-create-a-new-communism-167586 >
Publication
The Conversation
Type
Journal article
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