How bad could it get? America’s ugly election



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The Economist - UK 2020-09-05

Young Thais mount a remarkable challenge to their government and their monarch

country, two systems” arrangement that

was supposed to pertain in Hong Kong un-

til 2047. That deal was a modified version of

one on offer to Taiwan. For a time, it

seemed China hoped Hong Kong might

serve as an advertisement to Taiwan of the

benefits of “peaceful reunification”. These

days Hong Kong is less an advertisement

than a grim warning. That is one reason to

worry that China might conclude that its

patient approach to Taiwan has failed.

Another reason is China’s concern

about America’s upgrading of its ties with

Taiwan, which China insists can only be

“unofficial”. Those fears have been espe-

cially acute under the presidency of Donald

Trump, who raised hackles in Beijing by ac-

cepting a congratulatory call from Tsai Ing-

wen, Taiwan’s president, after his election

in 2016. In recent weeks Alex Azar, Ameri-

ca’s health secretary, visited Taiwan and

met Ms Tsai (apparently provoking the big

war-game and the fighter-jet incursion).

America has also announced new high-lev-

el economic talks with Taiwan. 

All of this will annoy China, which will

complain loudly. But it is probably relieved

that the steps are so modest, and confident

that if the ambiguity is resolved under Mr

Trump, it will be in its favour. In a memoir

published this year, John Bolton, one of Mr

Trump’s discarded national security advis-

ers, speculates that Taiwan may well be the

next American ally to be jettisoned by his

former boss. As a G



lobal Times 

commenta-

tor put it this month: “Taiwan for the 

us

is



only a tradable chess piece.” After all, Mr

Trump has always put “America first”. Trade

concessions have always seemed to matter

more to him than alliances, or even the ab-

stractions Taiwan so proudly embodies, of

freedom and democracy.

7



46

The Economist

September 5th 2020

1

T



he largest

museum commemorating

the gruelling examination system Chi-

na used in imperial days to select civil ser-

vants opened in 2017 in Nanjing. It would

not seem an obvious destination for a fun

family outing in the eastern city. As visitors

walk into it down a grey ramp—130 metres

long to symbolise the test’s 1,300-year his-

tory—a sign tells them they will “experi-

ence the hardships of the journey to suc-

cess” for those who sat the 



keju

before its

abolition in 1905. Bamboo slips affixed to

towering walls represent the “myriad”

books that candidates had to read.

Yet on a recent weekday afternoon,

there were as many youngsters filling the

museum’s cavernous halls as there were at-

tentive adults. A mother from the city of

Xi’an, hundreds of kilometres inland, had

brought her four-year-old son in order to

inspire him. “He likes the dioramas,” she

said brightly, “even though he doesn’t

know what an exam is yet.” A coalmine en-

gineer from Ordos, a city in distant Inner

Mongolia, was there with his nine-year-old

son whose “fate” he hoped to alter through

their visit. “



Xiangshi, huishi, dianshi

,” his


son piped up, naming three levels of the

ancient test that inspired the creation of

civil-service exams in the West.

In terms of the awe it inspires, the 



keju

has a modern rival: the 



gaokao

, a punish-

ingly hard university-entrance exam

which is taken by over 10m students every

year. For those from poor families, a good

score is often their only chance to escape a

life toiling on farms or in factories. As a re-

sult, Chinese education has long involved

little more than rote learning, aimed pure-

ly at the 



gaokao

. Pupils attend late-night

cram sessions and shoulder twice as much

homework as the global average.

But the deep reverence for tests ex-

pressed by the museum and its visitors is

not shared by reformist educators and

some head teachers, who want to down-

play them. They have a radical vision—of

reducing study loads, expanding the curri-

culum and encouraging students to take up

hobbies. Nanjing, a former imperial capi-

tal, is the centre of their experiments.

In 2016 Nanjing Number One Secondary

School, the city’s oldest and among its

most competitive, began to let students

borrow points from a “marks bank” to

boost a low grade. These are repaid by de-

ducting points scored in a later test, or

earned from good classwork. The aim is to

take a bit of pressure off exams. At the

school, teachers and students are encour-

aged to be “on an equal footing”, an appre-

ciative former pupil wrote in an online fo-

rum. Nanjing Number One has a vibrant

student union, a literary society and other

clubs. Its university-acceptance rate this

year was 95%, a record for the school.

Yet the scene outside Nanjing Number

One in late July, soon after the 



gaokao

re-


sults were released, was not of jubilation.

Dozens of angry parents brandished plac-

ards demanding that the head teacher step

down. They blamed their children’s lower-

than-expected scores on what they saw as

his attempts to make light of tests. More

traditional schools in Nanjing, they noted,

churned out more top-scorers. Nanjing

Number One mollified the protesters by ex-

tending compulsory revision sessions to

10pm for final-year students. On social me-

Education reform




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