BEIJING â" The Snake is determined and smart, according to traditional Chinese beliefs. Today is New Yearâs Day in China, the first day in the Year of the Snake, and a good day to ask: Will Xi Jinping, a âsnakeâ set to become president in March (Mr. Xi was born in a Year of the Snake, in 1953) bring change to China
Whether or not one believes in feng shui - the thought system based on geomancy, astronomy and folk wisdom of which the 12-yearly animal cycle is part - many here swear by it, and that makes the confluence of the man and the year important.
As the rational economist He Fan said last year, at the beginning of the Year of the Dragon: Feng shui may not be rational, but it is âsymbolic,â âand thatâs important, because thatâs how Chinaâs political culture works.â
So as ordinary people across the nation settle into their hard-earned, weeklong holiday amid the thunde of festival firecrackers, some are wondering whether recent calls by Mr. Xi to attack corruption and âcriticize sharplyâ the ruling Communist Party will bring unwelcome shocks to members of the privileged classes in China, including the party, the government and state-run companies, widely seen as too powerful and too corrupt.
Skepticism about real change is rife, for sure, but signs say maybe, at least to some degree. And if that sounds woolly, it is because making predictions in China is notoriously difficult. Yet it is also important as the nation grows in international stature: As Bloomberg News notes, 2012 may have marked the year when China became the worldâs largest trading nation. China was last the worldâs biggest economy during the Qing dynasty, Bloomberg noted (though back then it didnât focus on trade, Bloomberg wrote).
Some say the change has al! ready begun, amid a deepening campaign against corruption announced by Mr. Xi after he was appointed general secretary of the party in November. The stateâs anti-corruption warnings are being taken more seriously now than at any time in the past decade because they come from Mr. Xi, who is regarded as potentially a strong leader fast establishing his dominance, already the most eminent member of the seven-man Standing Committee of the Politburo, Chinaâs inner circle of power.
One sign: Traditionally lavish end-of-the-year parties thrown by powerful state-owned companies, and thus paid for from the public purse, have been canceled in large numbers, causing great satisfaction among ordinary people as high-end restaurants in Beijing are suddenly available for traditional New Year family dinners. In previous years, getting a booking was impossible. This year, itâs not.
Another sign: a recent call by Mr. Xi for âsharp criticismâ of the Communist Party.
âChinese leader Xi Jinping hasurged the Communist Party of China (CPC) to be more tolerant of criticism and receptive to the views of non-communists,â Xinhua, the state-run news agency, reported last week.
âThe CPC should be able to put up with sharp criticism, correct mistakes if it has committed them and avoid them if it has not,â Xinhua quoted Mr. Xi as saying, adding that nonparty members should âhave the courage to tell the truth, speak words jarring on the ear, and truthfully reflect public aspirations.â
The call has been - what else - sharply criticized, in fast and furious microblog postings showing just how deep is the well of resentment against the stateâs heavy hand in some quarters.
Shortly after 9 a.m. on New Yearâs Day, Ai Weiwei, the artist, snapped on his Twitter account: âFirst sentence of the New Year, release all political prisoners.! â
The South China Morning Post, a Hong Kong newspaper, gathered more acerbic responses:
The venture capitalist Kai-Fu Lee: âWill you stop silencing and shutting down microblog accountsâ
Xu Xiaonian, an economics professor: âWill you stop censoring books and media reportsâ
Chen Tongkui, an academic: âWill you stop press censorshipâ
Wang Xiaoyu, another academic: âCan you not delete the comments on this microblog postâ
The real estate magnante Ren Zhiqiang: âWill you stop criminalizing peopleâs speech and sentencing them to re-education through laborâ
Cui Weiping, an academic: âWill you put an end to police harassmentâ of activists and netizens
And yet, for many ordinary Chinese, there is hope. Incomes are rising, and there is a whiff of, yes, change in the air. In a recent, colorfully presented survey by TNS, part of Kantar, an information and consulting group, 88 percent of people surveyed in China were positive about the Year of the Snake, the company said.
As Mr. He said of last year, which saw the dramatic downfall of the political scion Bo Xilai, seen by some as a contender for Mr. Xiâs position, amid a murder and corruption scandal: âSomething happens in every Dragon Year, even if itâs just a turning point.â Often, the real action begins a year or two later.