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Democratic Management in the Rural Communes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Extract

At the lowest level of state administration in China some direct popular control of government is formally sanctioned. It is, therefore, at this level that the apparent conflict between the Chinese Communist Party's desire for mass participation in government and Party leadership over policy formation and execution can be analysed. The rural communes serve as a logical point of departure in this analysis. When formed in 1958, the rural communes replaced the hsiang as the basic unit of government administration for roughly 80 per cent, of the population. At the same time “democratic management,” a Party term for all kmds of mass political activity was emphasised, and by the autumn of 1958 a movement for the “Democratisation of Management” was under way. By December of the same year, however, the Central Committee of the Party warned that “militarisation of organisation” (another battle cry of that period) must not be used as a pretext to impair “democratic life” in the communes. From then on, the rural communes have been, in effect, a testing ground for the Party's policy towards popular participation in government.

Type
The Rural Communes
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1963

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References

1 “Resolution on Some Questions Concerning the People's Communes,” Sixth Plenary Session of the Eighth Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1958), pp. 4344.Google Scholar

2 A summary of changes in commune organisation up to July 1962 is found in China News Analysis (Hong Kong), No. 429 (07 20, 1962).Google Scholar

3 People's Daily (Peking), 08 29, 1959.Google Scholar

4 At the two higher levels a supervisory committee, elected by the members' congresses, supposedly oversees and audits the work of other commune organs, hears complaints, etc. As it is responsible to the local people's procuratorato and has little contact with the masses it will not be discussed in this article.

5 Illustrations of commune management structure can be found in: “Wei-hsing Jen-min Kung-she Shih-hsing Chien-chang, Ts'ao-an” (Experimental Charter of Weihsing People's Commune, Draft), People's Daily, 09 4, 1958Google Scholar; Lun Jen-min Kung-she Yü Kung-ch'an Chu-i (The People's Communes and Communism), ed. by the Basic Marxism-Leninism Department of the Chinese People's University (Peking: Chinese People's University Publishing Co., 1958)Google Scholar; Wei, Tso, “Jen-min Kung-she Ti Tsu-chih Yüan-tse Shin Min-chu Chi-chung Chih” (The Organisational Principle of the People's Communes is Democratic Centralism), Workers' Daily (Peking), 08 4, 8, 1961.Google Scholar

6 “Chung-kung Chung-yang Kuan-yü Tsai Nung-ts'un Chien-li Jen-min Kung-she Wen-t'i Ti Chüeh-i” (Resolution of the CCP Central Committee on the Problem of Establishing People's Communes in the Villages), People's Daily, 09 10, 1958.Google Scholar

7 Jen, Wu, “Jen-min Kung-she Ho Kuo-chia” (The People's Communes and the State), Workers' Daily, 10 20, 1958.Google Scholar

8 The number of hsiang in China had been reduced from about 220,000 in 1956 to 80,000 in 1958. Hsiang were still being combined at the time the communes were formed, but there must have been an average of two or three hsiang for every commune. See Kuo-chun, Chao, Agrarian Policy of the Chinese Communist Party, 1921–1959 (London: Asia Publishing House, 1960), p. 214.Google Scholar

9 In cases where changes in personnel had to be made, the Party was prepared to make the decision. The Hopei Provincial Party Committee directed that, “cadres of a people's commune shall be suitably provided by the higher Party committee on the basis of cadres both within and outside the Party in the original hsiang and co-operatives,” See “Directive of the CCP Hopei Provincial Party Committee on the Building of People's Communes,” Red Flag, 1958Google Scholar, No. 8, translated in American Consulate General, Hong Kong, Current Background, No. 524 (10 21, 1958).Google Scholar

10 Han, Chao, “‘Ssu-hua’ Shih Min-chu Chi-chung Chih Ti Ti-hsien” (The “Four Transformations” Are the Embodiment of Democratic Centralism), People's Daily, 12 18, 1958.Google Scholar

11 Since elections in the production teams produce the greatest number of deputies and involve the greatest number of ordinary commune members, the election of deputies from other commune units, such as factories, mines, youth and women's organisations, etc., is not discussed here. According to an NCNA release of April 14, 1963, basic level elections in the rural communes were held again in the spring of 1963. See American Consulate General, Hong Kong, Survey of China Mainland Press, No. 2962 (04 19, 1963).Google Scholar

12 For a typical description of this procedure, see the report on an election in a production team in Kuyün Commune, Shantung; NCNA release from Tsinan, May 19, 1961.

13 Note the following examples: in one brigade of a Kwangtung commune, all 11 brigade cadres and 65 out of 68 team cadres were re-elected (People's Daily, 03 3, 1961Google Scholar); in one brigade of a Fukien commune, 81 per cent, of the 104 team and brigade cadres were reflected (NCNA, Foochow, 05 19, 1961).Google Scholar

14 Lun Jen-min Kung-she yü Kung-ch'an Chu-i, pp. 8889.Google Scholar

15 Ibid. pp. 82–83.

16 See the descriptions of commune and brigade congress meetings in People's Daily, 11 29, 1958, and 03 20, 1961.Google Scholar

17 Ibid. and People's Daily, Editorial, January 27, 1961.

18 For an example of a model commune congress that has met frequently and has reportedly overruled decisions of its management committee, see People's Daily, 05 6, 1961Google Scholar. The commune is Yangtien Commune in Yenan Hsien, Shensi.

19 Matters that could be handled within the production team, even before the retrenchment of 1962, are listed in Ti-hsin, Hsü, “Lun Hsien Chieh-tuan Nung-ts'un Jen-min Kung-she Ti Ken-pen Chih-tu” (The Basic System of the Rural People's Communes at the Present Stage), Red Flag, 1961, Nos. 15–16, p. 34.Google Scholar

20 Pang-i, Hsü, “Keng-hao Ti Fa-hui Nung-ts'un Chi-ts'eng Tang Tsu-chih Ti Ling-tao Ho-hsin Tso-yung” (Bring Into Fuller Play the Role of Rural Basic Level Party Organisations as Cores of Leadership), Red Flag, 1961, No. 21, p. 24.Google Scholar

21 Szeckwan Daily (Chengtu), 02 25, 1959.Google Scholar

22 People's Daily, 04 8, 1960.Google Scholar

23 Ch'ung-fa, Wang, “Tan-t'an Cheng-she Ho-i” (Discussing the Integration of Government and Commune Administration), Workers' Daily, 11 24, 1961.Google Scholar

24 “Ts'ung Huang-ts'un Jen-min Kung-she Ti Chien-li K'an Cheng-she Ho-i Ti Li-shih Pi-jan-hsing” (The Historical Necessity of the Integration of Government and Commune Administration as Seen in the Establishment of Huangts'un People's Commune), Hsin Chien-she, 08 7, 1959.Google Scholar

25 Pang-i, Hsü, op. cit., pp. 2122.Google Scholar

26 Ch'ung-fa, Wang, op. cit.Google Scholar

27 The CCP mass line is analysed in depth in Lewis, John Wilson, Leadership in Communist China (Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1963), Chap. 3.Google Scholar

28 ung-hsiang, Shin, “Pa Tang Ti Cheng-ts'e Chiao-kei Ch'ün-chung” (Hand Party Policies to the Masses), Red Flag, 1961, No. 2, p. 3.Google Scholar

29 Ibid. p. 1.

30 Ching, Tu and Hsien-ch'ao, Chang, “Chien-ch'ih ‘Ts'ung Ch'ün-chung Chung Lai, Tao Ch'ün-chung Chung Ch'ü’ Ti Ling-tao Fang-fa” (Insist on the Leadership Method of “From the Masses, To the Masses”), Red Flag, 1961, No. 14, pp. 12.Google Scholar

31 “Resolution on Some Questions Concerning the People's Communes,” op. cit., pp. 14, 2426.Google Scholar

32 T'ao, Ouyang, “A Preliminary Discussion on the Organisational Form of the Rural People's Communes,” Cheng-fa Yen-chiu, 02 22, 1959Google Scholar, translated in American Consulate General, Hong Kong, Extracts from China Mainland Magazines, No. 164 04 13, 1959).Google Scholar

33 People's Daily, 11 19, 1958Google Scholar. The Foreign Languages Press in Peking defines the talzupao as a “written opinion in big Chinese characters posted publicly for everybody to read.”

34 People's Daily, 11 13, 1960.Google Scholar

35 See the report on basic level cadre problems in Southern Daily (Canton), 06 12, 1962.Google Scholar

36 “Facts About the Basic Levels in Pao-An County,” Union Research Service, Vol. 27, Nos. 7, 8 and 9Google Scholar. This collection of documents from Paoan Hsien, Kwangtung, provides detail on all of the commune difficulties discussed in this section.

37 “Communiqué of the Tenth Plenum of the Eighth Central Committee of the Communist Party of China,” Peking Review, No. 39, 1962, p. 6Google Scholar. One of the first authoritative admissions of the presence of some popular dissatisfaction and some official incompetence was the report of the Central Committee's Ninth Plenum in January 1961. See Peking Review, No. 4, 1961.Google Scholar

38 Ching, Chang, “Pu-wei Nung-shih Shih Ling-tao Nung-yeh Sheng-ch'an Ti I-hsiang Chung-yao Cheng-ts'e” (Not Disregarding Agricultural Time Is an Important Policy in Leading Agricultural Production), Red Flag, 1962, No. 7.Google Scholar

39 The “Communiqué” of the Tenth Plenum of the Central Committee (op. cit.) called for the further consolidation of the collective economy, thus raising the prospect of a rapid return to the more highly collectivised commune system of previous years. See also Fu, Lin, “Further Consolidate the Collective Economy and Resolutely Embark on the Road of Common Prosperity,” Shih-shih Shou-ts'e, 1962, No. 20Google Scholar, translated in American Consulate General, Hong Kong, Selections from China Mainland Magazines, No. 344 (12 17, 1962).Google Scholar