China | Reform in China

This week China could rethink its economic policy

The minutes of a party meeting show voices in favour of bolder reform

Photocomposite illustration of a weathervane with a chinese dragon on top
Illustration: Carl Godfrey
|HONG KONG

In politics, fringe ideas can become mainstream and vice versa. The “window of political possibility” can expand or move, as Joe Overton, an American political analyst, once put it. The same is true even in communist China. In 1978, for example, the country’s Overton window made a momentous shift. Two years after the death of Chairman Mao Zedong, it became possible for the party to acknowledge that the great helmsman was not infallible. This pragmatism paved the way for faster economic reform and for Deng Xiaoping to become China’s paramount leader. The change was sealed at a landmark meeting of the party’s central committee: the “third plenum” of December 1978.

Explore more

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “Blowing against ill economic winds”

From the June 29th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from China

Illustration of a translation app translating between Chinese and US english, the text says "this is a" with the options "negotiation", "argument" and "battle" in both English and Chinese

America and China are talking. But much gets lost in translation

How linguistic differences complicate relations between the great powers

A traditional fortune teller waits for customers in his shop in Beijing, China

It’s a good time to be an astrologer in China

In the face of hardship, the country’s youth are embracing superstition


A container terminal in Qingdao, China

The early days of the Trump administration, as viewed from China

A good start, but it could get worse quickly


How (un)popular is China’s Communist Party?

As the economy falters and the social compact frays, Xi Jinping wants to know

An outrage that even China’s supine media has called out

Anger is growing over a form of detention linked to torture and deaths

Why foreign law firms are leaving China

A number of them are in motion to vacate