Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Moving Around (2025)

Book Review from the September 2025 issue of the Socialist Standard

Private Revolutions: Coming of Age in a New China. By Yuan Yang. Bloomsbury £10.99.

The author was born in China but moved to the UK with her parents. She worked as a journalist for the Financial Times in London and Shanghai, and is now a Labour MP. Here she looks at the lives of four women born in China in the 1980s and 90s, their struggles with traditional ideas and the changes in Chinese society. In this review we will focus on the general points made, rather than discussing the individual cases.

One important issue is the hukou system, a household registration system related to a person’s place of birth. This enables them to access local services, such as education and healthcare, but without a local hukou they can face real problems. They may have difficulty getting their children into a suitable middle school, but can try relying on ‘friends of friends’ to influence headteachers to relax the rules. This system is presumably intended as a way of controlling workers, especially, but not only, those who move from the countryside to cities in search of work. Children are often sent to live with their grandparents and so gain access to a school that way.

The possibility of factory work did lead to many people migrating from rural areas, but the numbers often exceeded the jobs available and working hours could be very long. One factory was seen as improving conditions by capping overtime to 9pm and guaranteeing one day off a week. Many migrant workers preferred short-term contracts so they could avoid abusive bosses. But, partly because of Covid, the job market contracted, and by the middle of 2020 one-tenth of urban residents had lost their jobs. Yang says that southern China had industrialised and then de-industrialised within four decades.

The most common problems workers faced were ‘too much overtime, unpaid wages, workplace injuries and being without a labour contract’. There were no effective trade unions, but there were community-based ‘labour NGOs’, providing legal assistance and so on. But such NGOs could find themselves evicted from their offices, and activists were sometimes arrested; some responded by going abroad to study.

For a while, the online forum Utopia (sometimes seen as part of the Chinese ‘New Left’) supported the system under Mao Zedong, before the market reforms of Deng Xiaoping, a time when the welfare system was allegedly better. In 2018 fifty students who had supported workers in an electronics factory who wished to organise their own union were arrested: ‘China’s biggest student crackdown since Tiananmen Square’.

The book provides both general and particular views of what one document on social media in 2012 quoted here described as ‘China’s path towards globalised capitalism’.

Perhaps publishers these days find it hard to provide helpful things like a table of contents.
Paul Bennett

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