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  • KOPPEL: This is a program about China,

  • so why are we beginning in Rolla, Missouri,

  • showing you a bunch of middle-age blue-collar workers

  • wandering around a job fair?

  • Do you have any office positions open?

  • -Currently, no. -No?

  • KOPPEL: Because China is where their jobs went.

  • China -- which relates how, exactly,

  • to Mexican migrant workers

  • picking cotton in North Carolina?

  • Well, that's where the cotton is going -- China.

  • WOMAN: Sit down, please.

  • Boys and girls, l feel a little cold.

  • l think l need some clothes.

  • KOPPEL: Don't worry.

  • That North Carolina cotton will be back

  • as soon as Chinese workers have milled it

  • and cut it and turned it into...

  • CHlLDREN: ...a hat...

  • a T-shirt...

  • a dress.

  • KOPPEL: lt won't occur to these children for some years to come,

  • but they are being trained

  • to compete in the global marketplace.

  • l used to work at Briggs & Stratton

  • and l'm unemployed and l'm looking for a job.

  • KOPPEL: American unemployed, Chinese children,

  • Mexican migrant workers.

  • They don't know one another.

  • They may not even care about one another.

  • But as you'll see,

  • they're all having an impact on one another's lives.

  • WOMAN: A 7.9-magnitude earthquake hit

  • in midafternoon...

  • MAN: ...report that schools and dormitories have all collapsed.

  • WOMAN #2: ...puts the death toll at more than 55,000.

  • The spectacle of a profound national tragedy

  • has a way of erasing differences.

  • We can all relate to people who never had much

  • and who've lost what little they had.

  • "There but for the grace of God," we say.

  • The earthquake struck a region of China's heartland

  • that the government has targeted for growth.

  • All we've been seeing these last couple of months, though --

  • what has engaged our attention and compassion --

  • is the massive destruction --

  • the loss of so many homes, so many schools,

  • the death of so many tens of thousands,

  • so many children.

  • We look at these scenes,

  • and even those among us who feel no connection

  • or even kinship with the Chinese

  • can empathize.

  • "There but for the grace of God."

  • We are all vulnerable,

  • and these days, we are all interdependent.

  • We'd been working for months in southwestern China

  • near where the earthquake struck.

  • Our base was the biggest city

  • that most Americans have never heard of --

  • Chongqing.

  • That's where it is on the map, along the Yangtze River

  • about 1 ,500 miles southwest of Shanghai.

  • [ Horn honks ]

  • lt's a city with an attitude,

  • a place that has something to prove.

  • And once we've shown you

  • a few of the things that are happening in Chongqing,

  • you'll begin to understand why China and the United States

  • might have a very difficult time

  • getting along without each other anymore.

  • The signs of interdependence are everywhere.

  • The city is blossoming

  • with the icons of American brands

  • like Ford, Ethan Allen, and Wal-Mart,

  • and that's merely scratching the surface.

  • Love it or hate it,

  • our economic futures seem irrevocably linked.

  • lt's a reality. Get used to it.

  • Let me set the scene for you.

  • A downtown square in Chongqing ringed with upscale shops,

  • most of them selling products

  • that would be completely out of reach,

  • unthinkably expensive for most Chinese.

  • And yet there is a new and rapidly growing class

  • of Chinese who can and do shop here,

  • people for whom price is no object --

  • hundreds of thousands,

  • perhaps even millions of such people --

  • a huge, new, and expanding market

  • for high-end Western goods.

  • But China's new wealths and its growing middle class

  • are still dwarfed by its hundreds of millions

  • who live just at the edge of survival.

  • The brutal truth

  • is that China can barely take care of its people.

  • There are simply too many,

  • which is why you see murals all over the countryside

  • proclaiming the government's one-child policy.

  • That's been the law for decades now.

  • To this day, the government will impose a hefty fine,

  • sometimes amounting for the poor to half a year's salary or more,

  • on a couple that has a second child.

  • lf anything, that has made children

  • especially precious to the Chinese.

  • Perhaps the worst unintended consequence

  • of that one-child policy

  • is that the earthquake left so many families childless.

  • lf they're still young enough to have children

  • and if they can prove their loss,

  • those families will now be granted the right to try again.

  • [ Shouting in Chinese ]

  • They love children. They really do.

  • But their government is trying to cope

  • with the largest population in the world,

  • competing for very limited resources.

  • You need to be able to look past the images

  • of regimented youngsters wearing the symbolic red kerchiefs.

  • There are tens of millions of these children

  • and hundreds of millions

  • of their desperately poor adult relatives.

  • They all need to be employed and housed and fed,

  • and Communism didn't do it.

  • What's beginning to do the job is capitalism.

  • As for that massive population base of poor people,

  • they are China's weakness and its strength.

  • Call it the Chinese paradox.

  • CHlLDREN: A...

  • B...

  • C...

  • KOPPEL: They are little engines of ambition...

  • WOMAN: W...

  • X...

  • Y...

  • Zed.

  • Okay. Very good.

  • KOPPEL: ...all but vibrating

  • with the earnest desire to succeed.

  • And all over China, from earliest childhood on,

  • English and computer literacy

  • are being drummed into their little heads.

  • China has big plans for this generation.

  • Their skills will far exceed those of their parents,

  • but that's down the road.

  • For the time being,

  • China's most significant contribution

  • to the global economy

  • remains cheap, reliable labor.

  • Line 'em up, snap it on,

  • plug it in, check it out, send it off.

  • Snap it on, plug it in, check it out, send it off.

  • Snap it on, plug it in, check it out, send it off.

  • Snap it on, plug it in, check it out, send it off.

  • lt's an endless, mindless, bottomless pit of a job.

  • Anyone who's ever worked an assembly line

  • can tell you about the pressure and the boredom and the fatigue.

  • But if they don't like it -- and many of them don't --

  • there is a vast labor force of Chinese countrypeople --

  • peasants and farmers --

  • more of them than the combined populations

  • of the United States and all of Europe,

  • desperate to take their places.

  • And that is where it all begins.

  • CROWD: 5...

  • 4...

  • 3...

  • KOPPEL: ln November of 2007,

  • a demolition company in Las Vegas, Nevada,

  • fulfilled its contract

  • to bring down the old Frontier Casino and Hotel.

  • lt was done in quintessentially American style...

  • [ Alarm blaring ]

  • ...quickly, efficiently, totally,

  • the debris loaded onto trucks and headed for landfill.

  • [ Shouting in Chinese ]

  • What this is not...

  • ...is a simple demolition project.

  • This is a Chinese-style recovery operation.

  • Buried within each of these concrete beams

  • is a long, valuable piece of steel rebar...

  • ...that can be melted down, recast, and reused.

  • When labor is plentiful and cheap enough,

  • it makes good economic sense

  • to chip the mortar off each individual brick

  • so that it can be reused in the building of a new structure.

  • These women make the equivalent of $1 to $2 a day.

  • Chip off the mortar, gather up the bricks,

  • hoist them on your shoulder, dump them in the truck.

  • Chip off the mortar, gather up the bricks,

  • hoist them on your shoulder, dump them in the truck.

  • The men here make more than the women.

  • Still only $3 to $4 a day, but they consider that good pay

  • compared to what they can earn at home,

  • which is essentially nothing.

  • Most of these people were subsistence farmers

  • who just barely fed themselves and their families.

  • ln a good year, they might have enough food left over

  • to raise a pig or two

  • that they could slaughter or sell at market.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: lf l stay home working in farmland,

  • l won't make money.

  • KOPPEL: lf you're looking for a job in construction,

  • this is the place to be.

  • lt's estimated that 1 1/2 million people here

  • are working on construction-related jobs.

  • lt's already a big city -- about 13.5 million --

  • but it's part of an enormous municipality,

  • a region the size of Austria

  • with an overall population of more than 30 million people.

  • The goal over the next 10 to 15 years

  • is to expand the city out...

  • [ Horn honks ]

  • ...and draw the people in

  • until Chongqing is a megacity of 20 million,

  • with only 10 million or so people

  • left in the remaining countryside.

  • But the larger goal is to turn Chongqing

  • into an industrial hub,

  • an international center of industry and trade.

  • The city has already attracted significant American investment,

  • like this Briggs & Stratton plant,

  • where Chinese workers are now on the assembly line

  • building American engines.

  • WOMAN: This turned my life upside down.

  • l've got to look for a new career.

  • KOPPEL: Those engines used to be built here

  • at this shuttered Briggs & Stratton plant

  • in Rolla, Missouri.

  • l hate the fact that it cost me my job,

  • but, you know, businesses are out to make money.

  • We have a couple of openings...

  • KOPPEL: And while the move was good

  • for the corporate bottom line,

  • it badly hurt some of the workers,

  • especially the older ones who thought they'd retire at Briggs.

  • Now, like awkward teenagers at a prom,

  • they find themselves shuffling through a job fair.

  • lt's gonna be hard for me to get a job 'cause l'm 61 years old.

  • So far, every place l've applied for

  • has said l'm overqualified.

  • You know, the polite way of saying, "You're too old."

  • l'm Pam Leaser.

  • l'm a dislocated worker from Briggs & Stratton.

  • KOPPEL: Pam Leaser had been working at Briggs & Stratton

  • for almost 1 1 years.

  • She's clearly uncomfortable shopping for a new job.

  • She never thought she'd have to,

  • until the day a delegation from Chongqing, China, came calling.

  • They had a translator with them.

  • And my boss come up and he asks me

  • if l would care to explain to them

  • what my job was and how l did my job.

  • And l looked at him, and l told him, "No, l will not."

  • l just knew that down the road l was gonna be losing my job.

  • KOPPEL: Which is exactly what did happen

  • to about 480 Briggs & Stratton workers

  • on September 28, 2007.

  • Jim, l don't know

  • if you were kidding me before or exaggerating,

  • but you were talking at one point

  • about being the most hated guy at the home plant in Missouri.

  • True?

  • l think that "most hated" was a bit of an exaggeration.

  • KOPPEL: Jim Marceau runs Briggs & Stratton's operation

  • in Chongqing, China.

  • There are a lot of people who were concerned

  • with us building a factory in China,

  • that it would take jobs from the United States.

  • This plant was built so we could try to make engines

  • inexpensively enough where we could sell in the Asian market.

  • lt wasn't made to take jobs from the States.

  • KOPPEL: Which is true. That was the plan.

  • But the engines remain too expensive for China

  • and for the rest of the Asian market.

  • So now you've got Chinese workers

  • assembling the engines in Chongqing.

  • And even with the additional cost

  • of shipping them halfway around the world,

  • they're still a bargain in Europe and the U.S.,

  • where they're powering lawn mowers,

  • snowblowers, and generators.

  • What's involved is just a fraction

  • of the overall Briggs & Stratton operation,

  • but Chongqing's gain was Rolla, Missouri's, loss.

  • LEASER: Well, after our last engine was built,

  • everybody was gone.

  • l mean, people wanted to get out of there.

  • But l was one of them stayed till 3:00.

  • l thought, "They're paying me for my whole eight hours."

  • KOPPEL: $11.17 an hour is what Pam earned.

  • Not a ton of money in Rolla, Missouri,

  • or in the three other towns with Briggs factories,

  • but it's a living wage.

  • The fact is that Briggs & Stratton

  • has kept 90% of its manufacturing

  • in the United States,

  • and that profitable plant in Chongqing

  • is helping to keep the company competitive.

  • The labor is, you know, 5% of what it costs in the States

  • or 10% or 20%.

  • That's where you save your money.

  • Well, l thought l was really stable at Briggs & Stratton.

  • l thought l'd stay there the rest of my life

  • and retire there.

  • Well, now l'm 50,

  • and l have to start all over again looking for another job.

  • -Well, it's nice to meet you. -You too.

  • KOPPEL: What do you say to someone

  • caught in the backwash of the global marketplace?

  • You may want to try hiking. Have you done that?

  • KOPPEL: Or, for that matter,

  • to someone on the other side of world

  • trying to catch the next wave?

  • The basic equipment you need for hiking is a simple...

  • KOPPEL: Li Dun is 17 years old,

  • and her parents are peasant farmers.

  • Their combined annual income is less than $600,

  • roughly half of which goes toward the payment

  • of Li Dun's tuition, food, and housing

  • at this boarding school in Chongqing.

  • She is living the American dream

  • of a better life than the one her parents have known.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: This is the fabric room of one of America's

  • biggest and best-known furniture manufacturers.

  • But if you look closely,

  • you'll see that even Ethan Allen in Maiden, North Carolina,

  • has integrated Chinese-made components

  • into its supply chain --

  • thousands of rolls of fabric awaiting the day

  • when they will be turned into custom-made upholstery

  • made in China.

  • Made in China.

  • Made in China.

  • Very possibly, though,

  • spun out of cotton from here in North Carolina.

  • VlCK: All of our textile mills have moved overseas

  • either to South America or China.

  • KOPPEL: Linwood Vick is the foreman on his father's farm.

  • There are very few mills left in North Carolina,

  • so all of our cotton is now being exported.

  • KOPPEL: The cotton and the tobacco grown on this farm

  • are being exported,

  • and the labor force is being imported --

  • legal migrant workers from Mexico.

  • VlCK: We use migrant workers from Mexico

  • because they are a reliable workforce.

  • They do an excellent job.

  • Our local labor in North Carolina

  • does not want to work the hours or do the hard work.

  • lt's extremely hard work.

  • KOPPEL: That's your basic engine of today's global economy --

  • cheap labor.

  • Either it migrates to where the work is,

  • or the work migrates to where there is

  • an abundant supply of cheap labor.

  • What they are assembling at this Ethan Allen furniture plant

  • is what the company calls the Pratt Sofa.

  • lt's a pretty expensive piece of furniture --

  • costs a couple of thousand dollars.

  • And the base -- this part with the hand-turned legs --

  • is also made in China.

  • Anna Rockett, who's 23, does quality control.

  • ROCKETT: l'm an inspector here at Ethan Allen.

  • Basically, what l do is l clip strings,

  • make sure the piece of furniture looks perfect, you know --

  • doesn't have any holes in it, doesn't have any mishaps --

  • before we send it out the door.

  • KOPPEL: Anna earns about $20 an hour,

  • which is roughly what 17-year-old Moo Wan Ching

  • earns in a week,

  • doing essentially the same job -- quality control --

  • on these boom boxes which are bound for the United States --

  • Wal-Mart, to be precise.

  • What confuses Moo Wan Ching is that Americans

  • get to buy cheap imports

  • while she can't afford anything made outside of China.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: That's what she feels is the most unfair thing.

  • lt's very expensive here, but why is in America so cheap?

  • Because here in China, people work for very low pay.

  • Oh.

  • Do you guys get high pay?

  • Yeah. We get high pay, yeah.

  • How much?

  • Too much.

  • Maybe you should be a television reporter.

  • What do you think?

  • -She thinks yes. -Yeah.

  • Yeah. Because, you know, she says staying in this factory

  • is a waste of her talent, actually.

  • A waste of her talent. l like that.

  • KOPPEL: Which is pretty much the way Anna Rockett

  • back at the Ethan Allen plant in North Carolina

  • sees things, too.

  • lt's a bunch of different things that you have to look for.

  • lt's kind of almost a very tedious job at times.

  • KOPPEL: But here's the kicker --

  • the Pratt Sofa that Randy Smith is working on here --

  • that's headed to China -- Chongqing, to be precise.

  • China's growing middle class has got plenty of money,

  • and they appreciate good American workmanship.

  • SMlTH: l think it's wonderful.

  • As long as we manufacture the furniture here,

  • we can sell it to anybody we want to.

  • That's fine. l have no problem with it.

  • KOPPEL: The balance of trade, though,

  • between China and the United States

  • remains totally out of whack.

  • Americans buy vastly more from China than the other way around.

  • Moo Wan Ching's boss, the man who manages this plant

  • assembling tens of thousands of DVD players and boom boxes,

  • was born in Taiwan

  • and worked for 15 years in Orange County, California.

  • Matt Shaw's biggest outlet is Wal-Mart.

  • Why would Wal-Mart come all the way to China

  • to buy these things here?

  • Because what l can tell you right now is,

  • today, this type of DVD player we provide to Wal-Mart --

  • we have the lowest cost in the world.

  • -The lowest cost? -Yes.

  • l think that's the whole purpose.

  • So, the lowest cost

  • means you're paying the lowest salaries in the world.

  • lt means we have the lowest salaries.

  • lt means we have higher efficiencies.

  • KOPPEL: And few American firms understand those efficiencies

  • quite as well as Apple.

  • The company boosts its bottom line with the huge savings

  • that come with the label "assembled in China."

  • But it's the company's design prowess and marketing savvy

  • that motivates their consumers.

  • That's why, for example, every iPod box carries the words

  • "Designed by Apple in California."

  • When you buy an iPod for $299,

  • Apple makes a profit of $80.

  • The Taiwanese company that assembles the parts

  • in mainland China earns about $4.

  • The same dynamic that works for Apple

  • also works for Wal-Mart,

  • but on a much larger scale and at much lower prices.

  • ln fact, it's the Wal-Mart credo --

  • buy cheap, sell cheap.

  • And it's precisely what attracts these Mexican migrants

  • who work on the Vick family farm in North Carolina.

  • Every Saturday afternoon and Sunday,

  • they go to Wal-Mart and spend it,

  • whether they're buying their groceries,

  • their clothes, or the toys for their kids.

  • KOPPEL: Wal-Mart's slogan, "Everyday low prices,"

  • could almost serve as an anthem for the global economy.

  • These Mexican migrant workers are one strand

  • of a complex fabric that makes Wal-Mart possible.

  • On this trip, they're stocking up

  • in preparation for their return home to Mexico.

  • And if they take one of these boom boxes home as a gift,

  • it's a good deal -- only $19.98.

  • Remember that sassy 17-year-old

  • with a baseball cap and an attitude?

  • But she's certainly not making a whole lot of money.

  • And neither, for that matter, is her boss.

  • He understands that Wal-Mart has some major expenses to absorb.

  • They have to pay the shipping from Shanghai to L.A.

  • They have to pay their stores.

  • They have to pay their employees,

  • all their overhead, of course.

  • But if l said to you, "At the end of the day,

  • who makes more money on each of these DVDs --

  • you or Wal-Mart?"

  • Of course Wal-Mart.

  • KOPPEL: Moving manufacturing to China

  • also benefits Briggs & Stratton.

  • The company's doing just fine with its plant in Chongqing.

  • Of course that's no comfort to Pam Leaser,

  • whose job was outsourced to China.

  • We're gonna wind up having no jobs.

  • There's not gonna be nothing here in the United States.

  • lt's all gonna be overseas.

  • Okay. Thanks. Nice to meet you.

  • LEASER: l'm just hoping that the government wakes up

  • and starts seeing

  • what it's doing to United States citizens.

  • KOPPEL: Of course, even Pam Leaser shops at Wal-Mart.

  • LEASER: We shopped at Wal-Mart today in Rolla --

  • my husband and l did.

  • We can save money by shopping at Wal-Mart

  • instead of getting the items here in this little town.

  • WOMAN: So, in other words, the Wal-Mart's cheaper.

  • Yes.

  • KOPPEL: The reason that everything's so cheap

  • at Wal-Mart

  • is because things are made in China.

  • WOMAN: So, in a way, you benefit from it.

  • Yes.

  • So, how do you feel about that?

  • KOPPEL: lf Pam Leaser doesn't have an answer

  • for globalization's adverse effect on American workers,

  • well, no one else does, either.

  • At age 50, she is out of work and looking for a job.

  • You can hardly expect her

  • to be happy about the bargains at Wal-Mart

  • when those are largely the products

  • of cheap, foreign labor, especially from China.

  • After all,

  • that's how she came to lose her job in the first place.

  • Although it's still morning

  • and he has a field of lotus roots to harvest,

  • Li Ching Fu is slightly drunk.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: l'm so tired of him.

  • He's such a pain. He loves drinking.

  • KOPPEL: That's Mr. Li's wife, Ching Gong Lu.

  • lNTERPRETER: We don't have a good relationship.

  • We're staying together because of our daughter.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: lf the daughter looks slightly familiar to you,

  • you're right.

  • You saw Li Dun at school in English class.

  • Every weekend, she comes home to her parents' village.

  • At the beginning of every week,

  • she boards a commuter bus to another village

  • where she takes a tiny, three-wheeled taxi,

  • which bumps its way through farmland to another bus stop.

  • There she catches a Chongqing municipal bus,

  • which drops her at a stop near her boarding school --

  • a school which her father and his family think

  • is a waste of money.

  • lNTERPRETER: According to their view,

  • she should have stopped receiving an education

  • a long time ago.

  • They think it is useless for a girl to be schooled.

  • The son should be educated.

  • l feel it is really unfair.

  • KOPPEL: Everything that attracts foreign investment to China

  • rests on the foundation of cheap labor,

  • and Ching Gong Lu,

  • staggering under the weight of these lotus roots,

  • may be a perfect transitional figure.

  • Six and sometimes seven mornings a week during harvest season,

  • she carries 120 pounds of produce,

  • which is roughly what she weighs, to market.

  • She's happy if the day's work yields $3.

  • After all expenses are paid --

  • renting the land, buying the seed,

  • the daily bus fare to town -- the family nets $570 a year.

  • Half of that

  • goes toward Li Dun's expenses at boarding school.

  • 15-year-old Kellen Jang

  • lives a far more privileged life in Potomac, Maryland,

  • but she, too, has to cope with family separation.

  • Her father is often gone for long stretches.

  • Dr. Her Jang has moved back to China

  • after living in Canada

  • and then in the United States for 20 years.

  • For eight years, he worked as an AlDS researcher

  • at the National lnstitutes of Health.

  • Four years ago, Dr. Jang decided to establish his own lab.

  • He's still trying to find a more effective treatment for AlDS,

  • but now he's set up shop in Chongqing.

  • Early every morning,

  • he's on a conference call with his family.

  • [ Telephone rings ]

  • Hi, honey.

  • ln Maryland, it's late afternoon.

  • So, how are you guys doing?

  • KOPPEL: And his son and daughter are just back from high school.

  • Dr. Jang's AlDS treatment

  • has now entered the human-trial stage in China.

  • Between supervising those

  • and spending time with his family in Potomac,

  • he spends a lot of his life in airports

  • and making that long commute.

  • ln Chongqing, he pays 1/5 what he did in Maryland

  • for 10 times as much space.

  • lt's cheap labor, cheap facilities,

  • cooperation from the government,

  • and a huge base of people

  • who have every disease known to man.

  • Yes.

  • ln fact, the major pharmaceutical companies

  • are now in China building up their R&D center.

  • ls this good for America or bad for America?

  • l think, overall, in the long run,

  • it's good for everybody,

  • because the lower cost

  • eventually is gonna lower the medical care.

  • The drug price is gonna go down.

  • KOPPEL: And even with the pressure

  • to keep prices on exports down,

  • salaries for Chinese workers are going up.

  • And management?

  • Well, management is doing very nicely by anyone's standards.

  • Seen here driving a luxury car

  • through their gated community in Chongqing

  • and into the driveway of their elegant new home,

  • homemaker Zhang Show Jing,

  • her husband, Ding Ming,

  • and their 2-year-old daughter, Ding Sehan.

  • Mr. Ding is an executive at a thriving company

  • that makes electrical components

  • for motorcycle firms like Kawasaki and Suzuki.

  • But Mrs. Zhang is rightly proud of her role

  • in designing and decorating their new house.

  • From a pretty-in-pink room for her daughter

  • to the spacious family bathroom --

  • note the toddler's mini-toilet --

  • to the high-quality kitchen fixtures

  • and top-of-the-line American appliances,

  • it's a house fit

  • for one of China's new captains of industry.

  • Today is delivery day

  • for some long-awaited new furniture,

  • featuring both a red carpet

  • and white-glove delivery service, literally.

  • As for the couch being so meticulously unwrapped,

  • so gently -- dare we say lovingly --

  • moved and placed,

  • that's the very couch that was assembled

  • and upholstered in North Carolina,

  • where it was placed on the legs and base shipped from China.

  • And now here it is -- Ethan Allen's Pratt Sofa,

  • complete and in place at its final home in Chongqing

  • with Mrs. Zhang and Mr. Ding,

  • who know a nice piece of American craftsmanship

  • when they see it.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: American products always look good,

  • and the quality is always good, too.

  • And my first car was a Buick, which drove very well.

  • And our new American refrigerator

  • has big double doors, and it's really well built.

  • We're told you can even kick it.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: Yes, my father told me we can

  • pass this refrigerator down to our grandchildren.

  • Right.

  • Both the fridge and the couch

  • could be passed down through several generations.

  • And they match the style of our house.

  • That's why we chose them.

  • KOPPEL: Socialism's dream of a classless society

  • got lost somewhere between Mrs. Zhang's McMansion

  • and Ching Gong Lu's tiny farmhouse.

  • But China is becoming a place

  • where even gaps like that can be bridged.

  • lNTERPRETER: Life is hard. What can we do?

  • l'm planning to go out and look for a job

  • in January or February.

  • Does your husband know that yet?

  • [ Man speaks Chinese ]

  • No, he doesn't know.

  • What do you think will be better about life in the city?

  • All l know is that l want to work for myself.

  • l don't know how bright the future will be.

  • As long as l can make enough to support myself,

  • l'll be fine.

  • l really don't get on with him.

  • l'm so annoyed by him.

  • lf it hadn't been for my daughter,

  • l would have left him a long time ago.

  • KOPPEL: Ching Gong Lu's chances of getting rich

  • in her village of Dragon Spring or in the city

  • were always slim and none.

  • WOMAN: Go swimming.

  • KOPPEL: But China's experiment with capitalism

  • offers a genuine window of hope to Li Dun, her daughter --

  • the one with the education.

  • Chun Ji Ming is what is known in Chongqing

  • as a bang bang man.

  • ln another time and place,

  • he and his crew might have been called coolies.

  • When the riverboats churn their way up and down the Yangtze

  • carrying foreign tourists to and from the scenic Three Gorges,

  • Mr. Chun and the others carry their baggage

  • up and down the embankment here in Chongqing.

  • They don't know much about Americans,

  • but what they know, they like.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: Americans are great.

  • Because their economy is more developed,

  • they're more generous than the Germans and the French.

  • Do the Americans have lots of money?

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • Americans give good tips.

  • They are very generous.

  • Tell me what you know about America.

  • As far as l know, America is the most advanced

  • and also the richest country in the world.

  • KOPPEL: lt may have occurred to Mr. Chun

  • that Americans and Chinese, who have been enemies,

  • may one day be bitter rivals again.

  • And what about China?

  • Do you think the day will come

  • when China and America have to fight?

  • That is impossible.

  • The relationship between America and China

  • is pretty good right now.

  • That won't happen.

  • KOPPEL: Whether out of courtesy or intuition,

  • Mr. Chun understands mutual interests when he sees them,

  • as does American investment banker Simon Erblich.

  • America has to figure out what it wants to do here.

  • China is growing fast, and they're opening up their doors.

  • So, either China, in the long run,

  • is gonna be a competitor of America's or a partner.

  • -Both? -Or both.

  • 'Cause being a partner with China,

  • at the end of the day, is gonna be good for everybody,

  • both financially speaking, politically speaking,

  • from a humanitarian standpoint.

  • That is a win-win situation for everybody,

  • and you're not gonna be able to avoid

  • the efficiencies of market,

  • the cheaper labor that's gonna be available all over the world,

  • and you can't keep running away from that.

  • KOPPEL: Take silk-making for example,

  • an ancient Chinese industry.

  • These silkworm cocoons,

  • nurtured on thousands of acres of Chinese mulberry bushes,

  • are about to be relieved of their silken thread.

  • They enjoy, thanks to Simon Erblich,

  • a small, humble place on Wall Street --

  • another thread, if you'll pardon the pun,

  • in the fabric of Sino-American relations.

  • So, what do you know about silk factories?

  • To be honest, not much.

  • KOPPEL: But, then, it's not their expertise

  • on silk production

  • that makes Simon Erblich and his partner Dan Hirsch

  • interesting to the Chinese.

  • Simon and Dan find companies

  • that can be listed on American stock exchanges --

  • let's say an antiquated silk factory

  • that needs money to buy new technology.

  • Chinese entrepreneur takes American investment,

  • updates factory.

  • Chinese government provides incentives,

  • silk factory blossoms.

  • ln theory, everybody gets rich.

  • ERBLlCH: They were valued very low --

  • $1 million, $2 million -- here in China.

  • So, that's what you see as...

  • -An opportunity. -...shooting fish in a barrel.

  • -Win-win? -Win-win.

  • -For whom? -Everybody.

  • KOPPEL: Just as one day,

  • when millions of Chinese peasants

  • have been drawn into the cities,

  • the remaining farmers will start using engines,

  • perhaps even Briggs & Stratton engines,

  • to work larger plots of land.

  • MARCEAU: When you have less farmers

  • trying to do the same amount of work

  • without the actual people,

  • they're gonna have to start buying automated products

  • to help them.

  • lf l said to you, Jim, is there any way

  • of untangling the Chinese-American relationship --

  • Are we and the Chinese, for good or ill...

  • Oh, yeah.

  • l think it's meshed. lt's got to be meshed forever.

  • l mean, if you look at the amount of companies

  • in the United States

  • that rely on Chinese-made products

  • or Chinese-made materials,

  • if you try to pull that apart,

  • you would have so many companies

  • with a complete loss in supply of what they do.

  • So l think it's something that will only get --

  • We'll only get more involved with China as times goes on.

  • KOPPEL: The family-owned Bernhardt Furniture Company

  • in Lenoir, North Carolina,

  • moved some of its operations to China more than 25 years ago.

  • That, too, says CEO Alex Bernhardt,

  • has been a win-win proposition.

  • Work ethic comes to mind immediately.

  • The people are diligent and work eagerly.

  • They're eager to learn.

  • We've been able to instill in them

  • some of the quality aspirations and standards

  • that Bernhardt has.

  • So, clearly, today, it's the country of choice for us.

  • KOPPEL: Bernhardt explains to his American workers

  • that outsourcing to China

  • allowed him to keep plants open in the United States

  • while keeping his overall prices competitive.

  • lt's what he calls "That Wal-Mart thing."

  • BERNHARDT: l shop at Wal-Mart. l expect they do.

  • l expect we're all using televisions and shoes and belts

  • and cameras and clothing

  • that is made somewhere else in the world,

  • and they understand that the consumers today

  • want great design, great quality, and a great price.

  • And whether it's sad or just reality,

  • the country of origin is not of great importance

  • to consumers in America.

  • KOPPEL: Bargains for the American consumer,

  • quality exports for the growing Chinese middle class.

  • Remember Mrs. Zhang,

  • the woman who bought the Ethan Allen couch?

  • She drives a BMW from Germany,

  • wears a Burberry shawl from England,

  • and carries a Louis Vuitton handbag from France.

  • She's paying her weekly visit to Wal-Mart,

  • which, in Chongqing at least,

  • is one of the upscale places to shop.

  • There are delicacies to be found here --

  • chicken feet, far superior to the local variety,

  • imported from North Carolina.

  • lf you're trying to get a handle

  • on the Sino-American relationship,

  • Wal-Mart's not a bad place to start.

  • ln America,

  • where consumers are looking for cheap foreign imports,

  • and now in China, where the Wal-Mart name conveys

  • a totally different image

  • of quality and high-priced foreign imports.

  • lt's more than a toehold.

  • Capitalism, of all things,

  • has established a solid foothold in China.

  • How about that?

  • When the earthquake hit, China demonstrated

  • one of the strengths of an authoritarian government --

  • 100,000 troops mobilized and on the scene within hours,

  • and China's prime minister on hand

  • to oversee the situation.

  • Vincent Lo is one of China's billionaire developers.

  • Democracy. Of course, it sounds good.

  • But in practice, it doesn't always bring you the results.

  • [ Camera shutter clicks ]

  • KOPPEL: lf you listen to a young

  • Westernized fashion photographer,

  • the Chinese government's approach is working.

  • l have to say that l love my country,

  • but l don't love my government.

  • l trust my government.

  • KOPPEL: That, in our next broadcast.

  • KOPPEL: The superstitious --

  • and there are many of them in China --

  • believe that huge natural catastrophes

  • are always precursors of great change.

  • What must they be thinking?

  • A disastrous earthquake,

  • China, about to host its first Olympic Games,

  • and the entire world is watching.

  • Something strikingly similar happened before,

  • although there were no outsiders in China to record the event,

  • and very few pictures remain.

  • ln late July of 1976,

  • there was an even more catastrophic earthquake

  • in China.

  • More than a quarter of a million people died.

  • The Olympic Games were under way in Montreal,

  • and China played no part in them whatsoever.

  • ln those waning days of the Cultural Revolution,

  • China refused almost all contact with the outside world.

  • Mao Tse-Tung lay on his death bed,

  • and great changes were about to take place.

  • [ Anthem playing ]

  • Memories fade.

  • Even in China,

  • people under the age of 40 have no personal recollection

  • of the Cultural Revolution --

  • years when the thoughts of Chairman Mao

  • were memorized and treasured

  • as though they were biblical revelations.

  • Gems like this...

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: "lt is necessary for young intellectuals

  • to live and work in the countryside

  • and to be re-educated by the poor farmers."

  • [ lndistinct shouting ]

  • lf some German entrepreneur had opened a beer garden

  • on the outskirts of Munich,

  • dressed an actor up in an old S.S. uniform...

  • [ Man speaking Chinese ]

  • ...and then had him read excerpts

  • from Hitler's "Mein Kampf" into a microphone

  • while a couple of hundred nostalgic Germans

  • chowed down on bratwurst and sauerbraten --

  • if that had happened --

  • Well, it wouldn't. lt couldn't.

  • But this cheerful horde of Chinese diners

  • is embarking on a comparable evening of entertainment.

  • After dinner and a bracing quantity of adult beverages,

  • this crowd of nostalgia buffs

  • will spend the next couple of hours on hard wooden benches,

  • recalling the good old days of the Cultural Revolution.

  • [ Woman singing in Chinese ]

  • This strutting, stylized, fist-pumping,

  • flag-waving propaganda production

  • was the only kind of entertainment permitted in China

  • from the mid '60s to the mid '70s.

  • The Chinese had no choices.

  • All the while,

  • anyone even remotely suspected of harboring personal ambitions

  • or dreams of prosperity was harassed and tormented,

  • forced to wear dunce caps,

  • driven out into the poorest, most remote corners of China.

  • Creative thinking, ambition of any kind was stifled, smothered.

  • [ Mid-tempo music playing ]

  • And while this dinner-theater production

  • clearly does seem to elicit some pangs of nostalgia

  • among older members of the audience,

  • the younger people think it's a hoot.

  • [ Cheering ]

  • To many Chinese these days,

  • the Cultural Revolution is better mocked

  • than too carefully remembered.

  • You may, back then, have thought about getting rich,

  • but you didn't dare say it out loud.

  • Now it's all anybody talks about.

  • lt's a dog-eat-dog world.

  • Everyone's in competition with everybody else.

  • The woman sitting to my immediate right,

  • Madam Hu Yung Szu,

  • is one of the top dogs in Chongqing's booming economy --

  • rich beyond her own wildest dreams,

  • yet still a little nostalgic for the old days.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: ln those days,

  • people's thinking was very simple and humble, too.

  • People thought less than they do now

  • in these complicated times.

  • Yes, we knew very little,

  • but that doesn't mean our lives were worse.

  • KOPPEL: You can't miss Madam Hu's restaurant/hotel complex.

  • lt dominates the skyline of this boomtown,

  • carved into a cliff overlooking the Jialing River.

  • Like Chongqing itself, it's not subtle.

  • This city is all about big investment,

  • heavy manufacturing, massive construction.

  • Like Madam Hu's entertainment complex,

  • it's all about big dreams and instant fortunes.

  • lNTERPRETER: l am proud of being rich.

  • l made my money through hard work,

  • and now that l have it, l can help others become rich, too.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: ln Ming Shun, capitalism personified.

  • He is an automobile magnate.

  • He endured hard labor, exile to the countryside,

  • and starvation rations during the Cultural Revolution.

  • But when l mention that bizarre dinner show to him,

  • even he seems to get a little misty-eyed.

  • lt's almost as though they miss it,

  • as though they're nostalgic for it.

  • Explain that to me.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: First of all,

  • life in the countryside in the old days was very hard,

  • but at the same time, it gave us a good life experience.

  • Secondly, today's global competition is so fierce

  • and came so fast, it made all of us,

  • including myself, feel such heavy pressure.

  • When they remember the old days,

  • although life was very harsh, it was free.

  • They used to dance and sing all the time.

  • With the pressure you get today,

  • you realize life in the old days was very simple.

  • That is why some people even cry during that show.

  • KOPPEL: The best of times, the worst of times.

  • lf you've got money, you can buy almost anything --

  • drugs, women.

  • Just be discreet.

  • lf you're poor, there are more chances to make money

  • than anyone can remember.

  • lt's not perfect, but it's better than before.

  • And who's making it possible? The government.

  • [ Singing in Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: Political freedom, the right to dissent,

  • freedom for Tibet --

  • There are lines you don't cross.

  • Talk about anything you like, just don't get political.

  • Listen to the music.

  • Talk this way, walk this way

  • KOPPEL: The singer --

  • She's adopted a Western name, Bethany...

  • Talk this way

  • ...is the featured performer here at the Cotton Club.

  • Speaks good English,

  • but when the conversation gets complicated,

  • she'll answer in Chinese.

  • What is different in the Chinese social structure,

  • in the morality,

  • in a city like Chongqing that is growing so quickly?

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: Like any city that develops quickly,

  • people are more or less lost in the transition.

  • People become very shallow

  • and curious about anything from the outside,

  • and they often get confused.

  • Take drugs, for example.

  • Whenever there is a demand, there will be a supply.

  • You can get whatever you want, as long as you have money.

  • Some rich men don't have time to look for real love,

  • and still they need girls.

  • So they come pick them up like fast food.

  • And the pretty girls want a shortcut to get rich.

  • This is why China has so many problems.

  • Traditionally, homosexuality was illegal,

  • but now it's not difficult

  • for many people to accept such a thing.

  • KOPPEL: Open homosexuality in China?

  • Oh, yes.

  • And some highly popular gay clubs,

  • where it's celebrated by men who say

  • they don't think they will be gay forever.

  • We'll show you.

  • When night falls,

  • almost every public square in Chongqing

  • takes on a little magic.

  • [ Slow-tempo music plays ]

  • The music is piped in over speakers,

  • and because it's free,

  • which is the only price that everyone can afford,

  • and because there's very little land available

  • for any other kind of recreation,

  • thousands of people, mostly middle-aged women,

  • come to these squares and dance.

  • [ Dance music plays ]

  • lt is at about this time

  • that O Yung begins to prepare for work.

  • O Yung is a drag performer.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: When l had my first boyfriend,

  • my father asked me,

  • "Why do you have such a special relationship

  • with that boy?"

  • Of course he meant "gay relationship."

  • My father said, "lf this is an illness,

  • we will find a doctor to cure it,

  • but if this is what you are, that's okay."

  • KOPPEL: The Wu Yi Club is hardly the kind of place

  • you expect to find in China's heartland.

  • The club flourishes in the very heart of town

  • and is packed every night

  • with gays and lesbians and a few curious straights.

  • lt's pretty tame stuff, for the most part,

  • but for the past 60 years,

  • China's been a rigidly Puritanical country.

  • The mere fact that this club is permitted to exist openly

  • without police interference

  • is almost certainly due to regular payoffs,

  • but it's also a mark of China's changing values.

  • lNTERPRETER: When the bar started, it was difficult.

  • There was a lot of pressure from the cultural inspectors

  • and the police,

  • because this type of gay gathering was illegal,

  • and the officials judged our drag show

  • to be dirty and pornographic.

  • But society has become more and more tolerant

  • towards the gay community as a result of AlDS awareness.

  • KOPPEL: AlDS in China is no longer perceived

  • as only a gay disease,

  • and some forms of treatment are becoming increasingly available.

  • Anything, though, that even smacks of political expression

  • crosses the line.

  • ls there ever anything

  • like a gay-pride parade in Chongqing?

  • lNTERPRETER: So far in China, in Chongqing and other cities,

  • there is no gay-pride parade.

  • Society has not reached the level

  • where gay people can express themselves in that way.

  • Hi!

  • KOPPEL: ln China,

  • family and children take on added significance.

  • The young are expected

  • to eventually take care of their elders.

  • All men, gay or straight,

  • are expected to continue the family line.

  • And O Yung says that, at some point,

  • he, too, will return to the closet.

  • lNTERPRETER: China is a traditional country,

  • and all my family wants is for me to get married.

  • So l suspect that l will have to get married

  • after l turn 30.

  • This is a dilemma all Chinese gay men face,

  • and eventually most of us follow tradition.

  • KOPPEL: lt is as though coming out of the closet in China

  • is only a temporary stage of development,

  • a passing phase.

  • Everything we've been talking about here

  • would still come as a massive shock to most Chinese.

  • Especially among people in the countryside --

  • and that's a vast majority -- traditional values prevail.

  • Sex of any kind remains a very private matter.

  • But migrant workers,

  • the men and women who are flocking

  • to China's cities by the millions,

  • are, for the most part, young people --

  • young and single,

  • or young and separated from their families for long periods.

  • As in many places around the world,

  • the fact that they are also poor

  • simply means that there is a huge demand for cheap sex.

  • My colleague Nick Mackey, who lives in Chongqing,

  • drove us through the low-end red-light district.

  • lt may have existed before,

  • but now these storefront brothels

  • are all out in the open.

  • We saw a whole bunch of police

  • walking not far from here. Right?

  • lt's quite obvious what these places are.

  • lt's against the law, but it goes on.

  • MACKEY: Absolutely, and it does beg the question,

  • "Are these places paying some form of protection money

  • to the local police to actually stay in operation?"

  • Prostitution is illegal,

  • and these shops are fronts for prostitution.

  • KOPPEL: A product to suit every pocketbook.

  • [ Dance music playing ]

  • There's more available than just a sing-along

  • at Chongqing's karaoke clubs.

  • The more money a customer's got,

  • the more options he'll have to spend it.

  • The Chinese are caught between the glittering promise

  • of the future

  • and the comfortable patterns of the past.

  • For a few days every year during the Lunar New Year's holiday,

  • the past re-establishes its hold.

  • Tradition prevails throughout China.

  • Those who are not home go home.

  • By the hundreds of thousands,

  • they flood Chongqing's train and bus stations

  • and head for the villages where they were born

  • and where their ancestors are buried.

  • The young girl there, that's Li Dun.

  • She's home from boarding school,

  • walking up into the hills of her home village, Dragon Spring,

  • with her mother and father,

  • to visit the grave of her maternal grandmother.

  • [ Popping ]

  • Fireworks to frighten away evil spirits.

  • Tradition.

  • The mother, Ching Gong Lu, had told me last fall

  • that she was fed up with her husband,

  • that she would leave him right after the new year

  • and find a job in the city.

  • Her daughter Li Dun was horrified.

  • Warned her mother that she would leave school if that happened.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: My aunt says people in the city

  • look down on us villagers,

  • and l worry about the type of work there.

  • KOPPEL: Ching Gong Lu says there was never any love

  • between her and her husband.

  • His family treated her horribly, and he's often drunk.

  • lNTERPRETER: When Li Dun was born,

  • her father and his family were not pleased.

  • They hoped to have a boy.

  • My mother-in-law did not want us to stay at her home

  • because l gave birth to a daughter,

  • so we were thrown out.

  • That's typical of the older generation.

  • KOPPEL: But the biggest issue between them

  • was over spending the money to send Li Dun, a girl,

  • to boarding school.

  • Ching Gong Lu will endure almost anything

  • to keep her child in school.

  • She will even stay in Dragon Spring.

  • lndeed, she has found a second job working for a local caterer,

  • preparing banquets for wedding celebrations like this one.

  • The extra money will help pay the tuition.

  • The caterer wanted no part of her husband.

  • He drinks too much.

  • He works well enough for an hour or two,

  • but then, eventually, he passes out.

  • Ching Gong Lu keeps on working.

  • Her husband keeps on drinking.

  • lt's far from universal in China,

  • but under the old ways,

  • this kind of thing happened all too often.

  • But tradition is changing all over China.

  • That is exactly what Ching Gong Lu's sacrifice

  • is intended to achieve for Li Dun --

  • a complete break with precisely that kind of tradition.

  • Without such a head start, though,

  • a young woman's options in the city are limited.

  • What are these girls going to do?

  • Young girls -- Li Dun's age -- also from outside the big city.

  • They're nice girls. They come from good families.

  • [ Laughter ]

  • They could work on an assembly line.

  • Perhaps they'd earn $20 or $25 a week.

  • But they want to make a lot of money,

  • and all they've got is their youth and their good looks.

  • And so they come to work in a place like this,

  • where some of the girls can earn $20 in an evening.

  • [ Speaking Chinese in unison ]

  • KOPPEL: lt's a karaoke bar.

  • They tend to run the gamut from gaudy to tacky to sleazy.

  • This is one of the better ones,

  • somewhere between gaudy and tacky.

  • Jackie Li is only 25 years old,

  • but he's the manager of this KTV club.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: This is a business club.

  • Lots of businessmen come here.

  • They negotiate,

  • and many agreements are even reached here.

  • KOPPEL: That's true.

  • All kinds of agreements are reached in places like this

  • between businessmen or with a cop or local official

  • whose help on one project or another may be useful.

  • Many wheels are greased at karaoke clubs.

  • There's a lot of drinking and singing,

  • but at the center of it all...

  • [ Singing in Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: ...are the young women.

  • lNTERPRETER: What l see as the girls' job

  • is to cheer everybody up.

  • They can sing well,

  • they can drink a lot,

  • and they are very good

  • at improving the mood in the room,

  • because everyone comes here for fun.

  • KOPPEL: There's a boisterous public area

  • where the customers sit and ogle the young women.

  • Walking in the rain

  • KOPPEL: But the reason the girls wear numbers

  • is to advertise their availability

  • and to encourage the customers to rent a hostess

  • for the evening.

  • Ohh, ohh

  • Everybody in the house, come on

  • KOPPEL: Some of these karaoke clubs

  • are just thinly disguised brothels.

  • This place, says Jackie Li, is not.

  • "The first thing we do," he says,

  • "is spell out what the job involves."

  • lNTERPRETER: The second point we tell our girls --

  • our company's principle is "Treat our customers as God."

  • So we must provide good service.

  • KOPPEL: Off the main floor,

  • corridor after corridor of private rooms.

  • Field producer Jung Yung Ning takes me to VlP room 888.

  • 888. Luckiest number of all.

  • KOPPEL: And here, too, the girls parade in

  • until the customer finds what he's looking for.

  • [ Speaking Chinese in unison ]

  • KOPPEL: Most of them look terribly young and vulnerable.

  • And they are.

  • Do you recognize them?

  • Three of them -- and they come from the same town --

  • are the girls you first met when they were shopping.

  • They admit that it's a thin line in a place like this

  • between entertaining a customer and "entertaining" a customer.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: Some customers will always try to grope us.

  • KOPPEL: Do you think when they come here,

  • they expect that maybe some of you will go home with them?

  • lNTERPRETER: Yes, definitely.

  • KOPPEL: No girl from this club, they were quick to add, though,

  • would go home with a client.

  • ln some karaoke bars,

  • the girls go home with the customers, right?

  • lNTERPRETER: There are many, but l want to do what is right.

  • So, now that you think about it, was this a good idea?

  • Leaving your hometown and coming here?

  • lt's worth it.

  • No. l should be in school.

  • At the end of the year,

  • l will go home and go into the clothing business.

  • KOPPEL: Which is exactly what she did.

  • Bai Yin went home to the town of Tongliang

  • and is now working in a local clothing shop.

  • Working in a club like that,

  • it's very hard to remain respectable,

  • so it's probably better just not to be there.

  • KOPPEL: Her father has no idea

  • that she worked as a hostess in Chongqing.

  • Her mother clearly suspects something

  • and is adamant that her daughter

  • will not be returning to the city.

  • lNTERPRETER: We just want our family to be safe

  • and to live a simple life.

  • We want to keep to ourselves

  • because it's hard to tell who is good and who is bad.

  • [ Mid-tempo music playing ]

  • KOPPEL: This little town is famous throughout China.

  • [ Gong banging ]

  • This is where the Fire Dragon dance was born

  • about 2,200 years ago.

  • They perform it annually for the Lunar New Year.

  • lt's quite a tradition,

  • but tradition is about honoring the past.

  • The question is how a young person without an education

  • can build a future.

  • Well, why not?

  • The Great Wall as an extended,

  • essentially endless fashion runway.

  • Designer Karl Lagerfeld considers the setting enchanting

  • and entirely logical.

  • lt's better to be a runway, you know?

  • They don't have to fight against the Mongolians anymore.

  • KOPPEL: lt is certainly where LVMH -- owner of Fendi,

  • TAG Heuer, Louis Vuitton, Domrignon,

  • the biggest luxury-goods group in the world -- wants to be --

  • China,

  • this enormous potential marketplace

  • for all things Western.

  • 40% of LVMH's world sales are generated in Asia,

  • and right now what defines luxury in China

  • is an expensive import.

  • Quality, creativity, and innovation

  • are not seen as originating in China.

  • Please note.

  • The designer and many of the models

  • and celebrities have been imported.

  • China's wealthy have a thing for all things foreign,

  • and, more to the point, they'll pay for it.

  • Fashion design, urban design.

  • Someday, no doubt,

  • the Chinese will appreciate their own creations.

  • For the moment, though, they place a higher value

  • on anything produced by foreigners.

  • This is your baby, right?

  • WOOD: Yeah, l took a major role.

  • This project's in excess of 30 million square feet,

  • which is probably bigger

  • than all but three or four dozen American cities.

  • lt costs in the neighborhood of $50 to $60 billion U.S.,

  • which in China means more

  • because the dollar goes a lot further here.

  • KOPPEL: Ben Wood is an American architect

  • employed by the billionaire developer Vincent Lo.

  • He directs a staff that is primarily Chinese.

  • WOOD: American architects,

  • because of their status of pretty much dominating

  • the economy for so long --

  • We've been to places that China's on the way to becoming.

  • And so when we design a five-star hotel

  • or a luxury resort in the Southern Himalayas,

  • we have been to a luxury resort in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

  • And we've not only been there, we've stayed there.

  • We've experienced it.

  • lf l tell my staff we're now going to design

  • a boutique hotel in Lhasa,

  • and it's gonna attract the rich and famous,

  • they have no idea where to start,

  • because they've never been to one.

  • They've never met a rich and famous person.

  • They're just as smart, just as bright,

  • just as well-trained,

  • but they don't have the life experience

  • that translates into design.

  • KOPPEL: Chun Jing is college-educated,

  • with a master's degree in filmmaking.

  • Ever since he spent his junior year of high school

  • as an exchange student in Washington State,

  • he goes by the name "Alan."

  • He may be Chongqing's most artistic fashion photographer,

  • but that's an observation Alan would consider

  • damning with faint praise.

  • You said to me, "This is a cultural desert" --

  • Chongqing. Why?

  • Because everything is developing.

  • And the focus now here

  • is in economic development.

  • Everything is about making money?

  • Yeah. And that's what l feel.

  • KOPPEL: lndeed, Alan is producing provocative ads

  • to do just that --

  • make money for his clients and himself.

  • But he doesn't consider his work genuinely creative.

  • Sometimes l just feel my imagination, my mind's blocked.

  • And, you know, l feel it's very terrible.

  • My mind is empty. l cannot create anything.

  • Why do you think that is so?

  • Why do you think there is more creativity in the West

  • than here in China?

  • l think it's a result of the Chinese education.

  • Because the Chinese education

  • does not encourage students to create or imagine.

  • They just tell you, "One is one,

  • two is two, and don't forget it.

  • One and one is two."

  • Yeah, so... No imagination.

  • KOPPEL: Vincent Lo is one of the biggest investors in Chongqing.

  • The system that Alan perceives as stifling creativity,

  • Lo sees as providing the stability essential

  • for economic development.

  • l believe the political system for China at this point in time

  • is very effective for the country.

  • l've always been told that what Chinese governments

  • fear the most is chaos.

  • l'm sure that's something we are all concerned about, too.

  • lt's not just the government.

  • lf this is very chaotic,

  • l don't think l'll be investing billions of dollars

  • into the city.

  • We need stability in order that we can do business.

  • KOPPEL: Stability tolerates, even requires, safety valves.

  • Prostitution doesn't threaten China's political stability.

  • lndeed, it allows young men to let off steam.

  • A lot goes on inside those karaoke bars,

  • but they are hardly hotbeds of political activism.

  • Gay bars -- yes.

  • Gay-pride parades -- not on your life.

  • And while it may not seem

  • that religion belongs in that company,

  • in China, it, too, can be illegal but tolerated.

  • [ Singing in Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: Alan Chun recently converted to Christianity.

  • His word my hope... ♫

  • KOPPEL: As part of his search for moral values,

  • Alan now meets every Tuesday night with a Bible-study group.

  • What did you find in religion

  • that you didn't have before?

  • CHUN: The purpose of life.

  • And that purpose is what?

  • The purpose is connect my own life

  • with God's wish.

  • l think it's very important.

  • l was thinking about to achieve my dream --

  • driving a new car, bigger car,

  • expensive car, live in a bigger house.

  • But now l feel my purpose of life

  • must be connected to the purpose of God --

  • why he make me.

  • l need to connect myself with my God.

  • [ Singing in Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: And that kind of God,

  • a personal, comforting, apolitical,

  • noninterfering kind of God,

  • is perfectly in keeping with the goals and aspirations

  • of the Chinese government.

  • [ Church bells ringing ]

  • The Roman Catholic Church, for example,

  • remains officially illegal.

  • But Rome and Beijing seem to be moving toward accommodation,

  • and Catholics these days are rarely persecuted

  • by the government.

  • The government does not tolerate the spiritual practices

  • of Falun Gong,

  • at its peak, 70 million members strong.

  • There was a silent protest in 1999.

  • 10,000 Falun Gong gathered in front of Party headquarters

  • in Beijing.

  • That scared the government,

  • and Falun Gong has been out of bounds ever since.

  • lt's okay for you to become a Christian?

  • -Yeah. -That's no problem.

  • But if you wanted to join Falun Gong...

  • -Oh, no, no, no. -That would be a big problem.

  • -Yeah. -Why?

  • Why? Because the government said it's bad.

  • -l understand. -We are citizens.

  • lt's responsibility to follow --

  • to follow the government's orders.

  • And l think the government's orders should be respected.

  • There must be a reason for them to do it.

  • l believe in my government, yeah.

  • KOPPEL: Which is also a form of faith -- blind faith.

  • Things in China are getting better.

  • Therefore, what the government is doing must be right.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • KOPPEL: There they were one morning,

  • looking very determined and very much alone

  • in front of Chongqing's Court of Appeals building.

  • What was unclear is just what they were protesting.

  • What was absolutely clear

  • is that they weren't going to move on their own

  • until somebody inside agreed to listen to their complaint.

  • There are, according to the Chinese government's

  • own statistics,

  • tens of thousands of protests and demonstrations

  • every year reflecting public unhappiness.

  • But how do you measure happiness in China?

  • [ Horn honks ]

  • lmperfectly, which is to say by taking a poll.

  • This group of roving Gallup pollsters

  • has traveled across China collecting Chinese opinions.

  • The Gallup organization has been sampling public opinion in China

  • since 1994

  • and is limited by the government

  • to asking market-research questions,

  • determining what the Chinese consumer wants.

  • For this particular survey,

  • researchers conducted about 3,000 face-to-face interviews.

  • Respondents were asked to rank their happiness

  • on a scale of 1 to 10.

  • Su Szu, a schoolteacher, ranked hers at 6.

  • [ Speaking Chinese ]

  • lNTERPRETER: The Chinese economy is growing very fast,

  • and people are able to own property.

  • l think this is a good thing.

  • lt's bringing us closer to Western standards.

  • l hope my child will get a good education.

  • KOPPEL: People seem so focused on making money now

  • and providing a better life for their children down the road

  • that there's almost no discussion

  • of the freedoms they don't have.

  • The majority of the consumers in this market

  • are happy with the status quo of their life.

  • l think compared to what happened five years ago,

  • l think now they have more ownership of consumer products.

  • KOPPEL: Wu Tao is the director of research for Gallup in China.

  • But l think people are also more hopeful

  • about what's gonna be happening in their life.

  • Generally, if you think about the consumers,

  • if you look at the data,

  • l think they are quite upbeat about the future.

  • They're quite optimistic about the future.

  • KOPPEL: Optimism extends to the poorest in society.

  • Gallup asks people to compare their lives five years ago

  • to what they expect five years from now.

  • Among 143 nations polled,

  • only a handful of countries can match China's huge leap

  • in optimism.

  • Even Alan Chun,

  • the fashion photographer who's desperately searching

  • for creativity and innovation,

  • doesn't understand how dissent and political freedom

  • might play a useful role.

  • Because when l say to you,

  • "ls it possible to have different ideas in China

  • about how things should be done politically?"

  • You say to me, "No, no, no. l love my country.

  • l love the government.

  • The government is doing everything to help the country.

  • So, it's not up to me

  • to be creative in that area."

  • Do you see the connection? Do you see what l'm saying?

  • Yeah.

  • l noticed just now you said,

  • "Alan, you said you love your country,

  • you love your government." Blah-blah-blah, blah-blah-blah.

  • Yeah, but l notice one word you use is "love."

  • l have to say that l love my country,

  • but l don't love my government.

  • l trust my government.

  • KOPPEL: lnteresting point.

  • l think it's different.

  • KOPPEL: Vincent Lo agrees.

  • l have studied and lived in Western world.

  • But, unfortunately, democracy -- Of course it sounds good,

  • but, in practice, it doesn't always bring you the results.

  • And a lot of criticism has been put on China,

  • saying that this is a one-party system,

  • human rights, and everything else,

  • but this is a system that has helped China

  • come to where it is in such a short time --

  • in the past 30 years.

  • KOPPEL: Nor will you get much argument

  • out of Lo's American architect,

  • Ben Wood.

  • He and l both agree that the best way

  • to solve those problems is not by rampant democracy.

  • [ Laughs ]

  • lt's by controlled change,

  • informed by some very smart people over time.

  • And, with that in mind, l think over the next 20 years,

  • a third of all new Chinese people

  • will live in a place like this.

  • -That's an American talking. -Yes.

  • Sort of pissing on democracy.

  • No! No, l'm a former jet-fighter pilot,

  • loyal to the country.

  • Not at all.

  • l'm just saying l live with these people,

  • so l can appreciate what it --

  • what it's gonna take to get them from here to here.

  • lf China is to adopt a Western-style democracy today,

  • l don't think l would have so much confidence

  • to invest all this money into China.

  • Why? What do you think the consequence would be?

  • Because l'm sure the development would be very different,

  • and the focus will be very different.

  • And l don't think l would be doing big projects like this

  • in a city like Chongqing.

  • Because now you have stability.

  • Now you have confidence

  • in what will happen five years from now.

  • We can see continuity.

  • We can see a very clear objective and goal

  • for the government to pursue

  • and for us as businesspeople to pursue.

  • And we can work hand-in-hand for the good of the place.

  • KOPPEL: Vincent Lo worries that political freedom

  • might actually lead to economic instability.

  • Alan Chun has never known political freedom

  • and is quite prepared to accept the government's assurance

  • that he doesn't need it.

  • My question is, if people want to get together --

  • let's say in the countryside --

  • and protest corruption,

  • then the police will come

  • and they will break up the demonstration

  • and they will not allow it.

  • Oh, really?

  • Yeah. You say, "Oh, really." You don't know that?

  • l don't know. l have never seen those things.

  • l know you haven't seen it.

  • You know why you haven't seen it?

  • Why?

  • Because television cannot report it.

  • Because the newspapers cannot report it.

  • Because anyone who is there, if they take a photograph,

  • they will be arrested.

  • That's why you don't know about it, right?

  • l don't want to get you in trouble.

  • l don't want to make you say something

  • you don't want to say.

  • No, it's fine.

  • But you don't seem to care about that.

  • Yeah.

  • You don't?

  • Not very care about that part.

  • -l don't, yeah. -Because?

  • There must be a reason for government to do that.

  • And l really believe in Chinese government

  • because we can see that people here

  • living a better life than before.

  • And l don't think the people

  • who wrote something on the street

  • or sitting on the street are smart.

  • They are not smart.

  • l don't think it's the best way to do that.

  • For me, l won't.

  • l don't think it's smart.

  • [ lndistinct talking ]

  • KOPPEL: Which brings us back

  • to that couple on the courthouse steps.

  • The fact that they were treated courteously,

  • even gently, certainly owed something to the fact

  • that our foreign camera crew happened to be on the scene.

  • But that's precisely the point.

  • A few years ago, our cameraman would have been arrested

  • and the tape would have been confiscated.

  • Some things change slowly in China,

  • but they are changing.

  • What was the protest about?

  • When we contacted the Justice Ministry, no one would say.

  • lndeed, no one would acknowledge that it even happened.

  • Nothing so epitomizes China's hunger

  • for all things Western

  • as its ravenous appetite for the foreign car.

  • So, if the Chinese could have any car, any car in the world,

  • you know what many, if not most, of them would choose?

  • An American car. A Buick. A black Buick.

  • TANG: The Buick are popular cars in Chongqing,

  • and they like black cars

  • because that represents elegance and status.

  • KOPPEL: Over the last year, General Motors

  • sold more Buicks in China than in the United States.

  • This won't do much for morale in Dearborn or Detroit,

  • but GM and Ford can barely keep up with the demand in China.

  • Nor is this likely to make American autoworkers

  • feel any better.

  • As soon as they work out

  • their safety and emissions problems...

  • [ Ship horn blowing ]

  • ...the Chinese will begin exporting their cars

  • to the United States.

  • We'll tell you all about it on our next program.

KOPPEL: This is a program about China,

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