The Great Chinese Exodus Many Chinese are leaving for cleaner air, better schools and more opportunity. But Beijing is keeping its eye on them.
A recent report showed that 64% of China's rich are
either migrating overseas or have plans to leave the country. Political
scientist James To, who has written a book on the subject, tells the
WSJ's Deborah Kan how the Chinese government is using propaganda
campaigns abroad to ensure loyalty from overseas Chinese.
Even when the emperors did their
utmost to keep them at home, the Chinese ventured overseas in search of
knowledge, fortune and adventure. Manchu Qing rulers thought those who
left must be criminals or conspirators and once forced the entire
coastal population of southern China to move at least 10 miles inland.
But
even that didn't put an end to wanderlust. Sailing junks ferried
merchants to Manila on monsoon winds to trade silk and porcelain for
silver. And in the 19th century, steamships carried armies of "coolies"
(as they were then called) to the mines and plantations of the European
empires.
Today, China's borders are wide
open. Almost anybody who wants a passport can get one. And Chinese
nationals are leaving in vast waves: Last year, more than 100 million
outbound travelers crossed the frontiers.
Most
are tourists who come home. But rapidly growing numbers are college
students and the wealthy, and many of them stay away for good. A survey
by the Shanghai research firm Hurun Report shows that 64% of China's
rich—defined as those with assets of more than $1.6 million—are either
emigrating or planning to.
To be sure,
the departure of China's brightest and best for study and work isn't a
fresh phenomenon. China's communist revolution was led, after all, by
intellectuals schooled in Europe. What's new is that they are planning
to leave the country in its ascendancy. More and more talented Chinese
are looking at the upward trajectory of this emerging superpower and
deciding, nevertheless, that they're better off elsewhere.

Visitors to Tiananmen Square struggle with Beijing's polluted air, Nov. 5, 2013.
Agence France-
The decision to go is often a mix of
push and pull. The elite are discovering that they can buy a comfortable
lifestyle at surprisingly affordable prices in places such as
California and the Australian Gold Coast, while no amount of money can
purchase an escape in China from the immense problems afflicting its
urban society: pollution, food safety, a broken education system. The
new political era of President Xi Jinping, meanwhile, has created as
much anxiety as hope.
Another aspect of
this massive population outflow hasn't yet drawn much attention.
Whatever their motives and wherever they go, those who depart will be
shadowed by the organs of the Leninist state they've left behind. A
sprawling bureaucracy—the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office of the State
Council—exists to ensure that distance from the motherland doesn't dull
their patriotism. Its goal is to safeguard loyalty to the Communist
Party.
This often sets up an awkward
dynamic between Chinese arrivals and the societies that take them in.
While the newcomers try to fit in, Beijing makes every effort to use
them in its campaign to project its political values, enhance its global
image, harass its opponents and promote the use of standard Mandarin
Chinese over the dialects spoken in Taiwan and Hong Kong.
Politics,
though, isn't the most important issue on the mind of Ms. Sun, a
34-year-old Beijing resident who's bailing out. (She requested anonymity
because she doesn't want publicity to spoil her plans.) The main reason
she's planning to pack up: Her 6-year-old daughter is asthmatic, and
Beijing's chronic pollution irritates the girl's lungs. "Breathing
freely is a basic requirement," she says. The girl also has a talent for
music, art and storytelling that Ms. Sun fears China's test-driven
schools won't nurture.
Recently, Ms. Sun
flew to San Francisco to shop for a school for her daughter, browse for
property and handle the paperwork for permanent U.S. residency. She
insists that she's not leaving China forever—a sentiment expressed by
many on their way out who see a foreign passport as an insurance policy
in case things go badly wrong in China.
"I'm just giving my family another option," she says.
A
college professor, who insisted on anonymity altogether ("Just call me
an intellectual," he says), takes a darker view of China's prospects as
he prepares to emigrate to the U.S., joining his two children, who both
have postgraduate degrees from U.S. colleges.
Like
many Chinese academics, the professor has a business or two on the
side, although he hardly looks the part of an executive, unshaven and
with crumpled pants riding 6 inches above his open sandals. In China, he
pronounces, "Once you get rich, they arrest you."
That
is an exaggeration, of course, but there is a propensity for
entrepreneurs who appear on lists of the richest Chinese to end up in
jail.
His real concern is that to get
ahead, he's had to make compromises with his principles (he doesn't say
bribes, but that is what he means). "I've been forced to prostitute
myself," he says, and now he worries that it could all be snatched away.
In China, a weak, corrupt legal system may sometimes work in favor of
entrepreneurs while they're clawing their way up, cutting corners along
the way, but it is almost always a liability once they've made it.
First-generation
businessmen—the ones who powered China's economic rise—now dream of a
secure retirement. That means legal safety in places like the U.S. and
Canada.
The professor is also a fan of
U.S. technology. One of his companies sells environmental equipment, and
he's hoping that by living in America, he'll find ways to enhance his
products and develop new ones—which he hopes to continue to sell in
China, the biggest market. He holds up his Apple iPhone. "How many
shirts do you think we Chinese have to export to buy one of these
phones?" he asks.
China, he concludes, is still "a very backward country."
The
flight of the rich recalls similar outflows from Hong Kong before the
1997 handover of the then-British colony to China and from Taiwan in an
earlier period when its own future seemed imperiled. In those cases,
businesspeople parked their families in places like Vancouver and
Seattle and shuttled back and forth to Asia for business.
That
is often the strategy in today's China, which has entered an uncertain
transition. The economy is off the boil; property prices are sliding.
Mr. Xi has amassed more power than any Chinese leader since Deng
Xiaoping and is using it to crack down on corrupt officials while going
after human rights lawyers, bloggers and civil society activists. That
is ridding China of the kind of individual its government doesn't want
but is also scaring away the creative types it needs.
Last
year, the U.S. issued 6,895 visas to Chinese nationals under the EB-5
program, which allows foreigners to live in America if they invest a
minimum of $500,000. South Koreans, the next largest group, got only 364
such visas. Canada this year closed down a similar program that had
been swamped by Chinese demand.
Some of
the wealth sluicing out of China is undoubtedly ill-gotten gains. The
Chinese central bank estimates that corrupt officials may have siphoned
off as much as $123 billion since the mid-1990s.
In
his book "Restless Empire: China and the World Since 1750," the
historian Odd Arne Westad writes that overseas Chinese "were, and are,
the glue that holds China's relations with the world together, in good
times and bad."
That explains why
Beijing takes an intense pastoral interest in the Chinese diaspora. It
has some 48 million members—about double the number of Indians living
outside their country—and wherever they alight, they tend to rise to the
top, be it Silicon Valley or the high-tech corridors of Southeast Asia.
Beijing
makes a crucial distinction between ethnic Chinese who have acquired
foreign nationality and those who remain Chinese citizens. The latter
category is officially called huaqiao—sojourners. Together,
they are viewed as an immensely valuable asset: the students as
ambassadors for China, the scientists, engineers, researchers and others
as conduits for technology and industrial know-how from the West to
propel China's economic modernization.
In
1989, when the Tiananmen Square massacre triggered an outflow of
traumatized students and shattered the Party's image among overseas
Chinese communities, the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office kicked into
high gear with a propaganda campaign to repair the damage. It proved
highly successful.
The political scientist James Jiann Hua To, the author of "Qiaowu: Extra-Territorial
Policies for the Overseas Chinese," says that the campaign "turned
around the way most overseas Chinese look at China." (Read a Q&A with James Jiann Hua To.)
The
effort continues. It is subtle—a hearts-and-minds campaign that works
through overseas Chinese newspapers, websites (digital "New Chinatowns,"
in propaganda-speak), schools, youth groups and church organizations.
The
results show up in "patriotic" street activities. In 2008, for
instance, well-organized Chinese students guarded the Olympic torch as
it went around the world ahead of the Beijing Games, attracting raucous
protests from Tibetan independence activists and other hostile groups.
The following year, Chinese students disrupted the Melbourne Film
Festival when it screened a movie about the life of exiled Uighur leader
Rebiya Kadeer, whom Beijing accuses of stirring up separatist agitation
in its Xinjiang region. Similar protesters dog the footsteps around the
world of the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, whom Beijing
also accuses of "splittist" activities.
Foreigners
sometimes have a hard time understanding why Beijing expends so much
effort countering threats, real or imagined, from Chinese opponents
overseas, including the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement. But
China's leaders are haunted by history. To an extraordinary degree, the
destiny of modern China has been shaped by the Chinese who left. The
overseas Chinese of Southeast Asia provided critical support for Sun
Yat-sen's 1911 revolution, which toppled the Qing.
The
dynamic works the other way too. When Deng needed money and expertise
to unlock the entrepreneurial energies of China in the early 1980s, he
first tapped the mega-rich Chinese tycoons in Hong Kong, Thailand and
Malaysia, whose factories populated his Special Economic Zones.

A Chinese tourist poses in front of the Sydney Opera House in Australia, June 18, 2013.
Reuters
But China's cross-border political
activities are creating unease. Consider Australia—one of the most
popular destinations for Chinese students, emigrants and tourists, and a
country where Mandarin Chinese is now the second-most widely spoken
language after English.
"Chinese
Australians are being lectured, monitored, organized and policed in
Australia on instruction from Beijing as never before," wrote John
Fitzgerald of Swinburne University of Technology, one of the country's
foremost China experts, in an article published by the Asan Forum, a
South Korean think tank.
In the U.S., a
vigorous debate has broken out in academic circles about the role on
American campuses of Confucius Institutes, which are sponsored by the
Chinese government and offer Mandarin-language classes, along with rosy
cultural views of China. Critics say these institutes threaten academic
independence; supporters say they offer valuable language training that
would not otherwise be available. In June, the American Association of
University Professors stepped into the controversy and recommended that
universities "cease their involvement" with the institutes unless they
can gain "unilateral control" over them.
China
must be exceedingly careful not to leave too many fingerprints on its
political activities offshore. For a start, it has an official policy of
noninterference in the internal affairs of other countries. But it also
puts established overseas Chinese communities at risk by raising the
issue of their national loyalties. That is particularly true in
Southeast Asia, where the Chinese of a previous era were often viewed
with suspicion as a communist fifth column.
Still,
the sheer volume of China's outbound travel these days, and its massive
economic impact, gives it new leverage. In the global market for
high-end real estate, Chinese buying has become a key driver of prices.
According to the U.S. National Association of Realtors, Chinese buyers
snapped up homes worth $22 billion in the year ending in March.
Australia
called a parliamentary inquiry to find out whether local households
were being priced out of the market by Chinese money. (The conclusion:
not yet.)
Without fee-paying Chinese
students, many colleges in the postrecession Western world simply
wouldn't be able to pay the bills. Chinese students are by far the
largest group of foreign students on U.S. campuses, and their numbers
jumped 21% last year from the year before—to 235,597, according to the
Institute of International Education. Their numbers are increasing at a
similar pace in Australia. In England, there are now almost as many
Chinese students as British ones studying full-time for postgraduate
master's degrees.
Tourism is booming
again thanks to China. The Chinese have overtaken Americans to become
the world's biggest tourist spenders—and they're rapidly moving
upmarket. Mei Zhang, the founder of Beijing's high-end travel operator
WildChina, offers family holidays to destinations such as Kenya,
Patagonia and Alaska at $10,000 per head. Chinese are now the
third-largest group of nationals landing in Antarctica, where tourists
zip around the ice floes in Zodiac inflatables to watch penguins.
The
international hotel industry is increasingly tailoring its service to
Chinese tastes. Among the required extras these days: teapots and
toothbrushes. Russell Brice, the founder of the expedition firm
Himalayan Experience, says that he packs duck and chicken feet—Chinese
delicacies—along with the climbing gear for his Chinese clients. "A few
little things like that make it special," he says.
And
the outflow has only just begun. The Hong Kong-based brokerage firm
CLSA forecasts that departures from China will double to 200 million by
2020.
In education, the next big wave
coming from China is high schoolers. Rich parents are opting out of an
education system that prepares children to take high-stakes tests for
college entrance but neglects the creative side. Besides, once they've
been through the mill, the students have a tendency to kick back when
they get to college.
Xie Li, a manager
at a Beijing telecommunications company, says that she tried to push her
16-year-old son to go to high school overseas, but he couldn't bear to
leave home so early. He's a star pupil at the middle school attached to
Beijing Normal University, which First Lady Michelle Obama visited
recently.
Still, the boy is being
groomed for college overseas and an international life. At 13, his
parents packed him off to spend six weeks with an American family in
Virginia. They've taken family breaks in exotic places like Tanzania.
And now, to his mother's delight, he's set a goal for himself to study
chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Ms. Xie recognizes that he might never come back but says, "His heart will always be with his family."
The
Chinese government has no desire to slow the flow of students. Its
attitude is simple: Why not have the Americans or Europeans train our
brightest minds if they want to? President Xi's own daughter went to
Harvard.
As always with China, the
numbers awe. In his memoirs, Zbigniew Brzezinski, the former national
security adviser, recalls a meeting between President Jimmy Carter and
Deng. Human rights were on Mr. Carter's agenda, and he started needling
the Chinese leader about Beijing's tight emigration policies. "Fine.
We'll let them go," Deng snapped. "Are you prepared to accept 10
million?"
Not even Deng could have
imagined the human torrent his "open door" reforms would eventually
unleash.
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