Which Countries Are Still Truly Communist? - YouTube

Channel: The Infographics Show

[0]
This episode is brought to you by Skillshare.
[2]
The first 1,000 people to sign up using the link in the description will get their first
[6]
2 months free.
[7]
Communism is an economic and social system in which most property and resources are collectively
[12]
owned by a classless society and not by individual citizens.
[16]
It was founded by two German political philosophers, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who met in
[21]
the second half of the 19th century.
[23]
They discovered that they had similar principles and in 1848, wrote and published The Communist
[28]
Manifesto, which became the foundation for Communism…
[32]
Communism became the dominant political philosophy for many countries across Asia, Eastern Europe,
[37]
Africa, and South America, and in the late 19th century, it also began to develop in
[41]
the old Soviet Union.
[43]
But in 1991, when the Soviet Union disbanded, Russia constituted itself as a semi-presidential
[49]
republic.
[50]
Communism still exists in a number of countries, but in many cases it’s a legacy of the past
[55]
and has lost much of the doctrine it originally came with.
[58]
So where is communism still being practiced?
[60]
And is it the communism that Marx and Engels proposed?
[63]
That’s what we’ll find out, in this episode of the Infographics Show: Which Countries
[67]
Are Really Truly Still Communist?
[70]
Communism envisaged common ownership of all land and capital, and the dissolving of the
[75]
coercive power of the state.
[77]
In such a society, social relations were to be regulated on the fairest of all principles:
[82]
from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.
[86]
Differences between manual and intellectual labor and between rural and urban life were
[91]
to disappear, opening up the way for unlimited development of human potential.
[95]
The rise of capitalism in the 20th century disrupted communist principles, and so many
[100]
countries either turned to alternative political frameworks or allowed the philosophy to blend
[104]
with a new cultural climate.
[106]
So how many countries are still officially communist?
[109]
When we started to research this subject, we first discovered that there are several
[113]
countries with multiple political parties, and some have had leaders who are affiliated
[117]
with their nation's communist party.
[119]
These countries are not considered truly communist because of the presence of other political
[124]
parties, nor is the communist party empowered by the constitution.
[128]
These countries are Nepal, Guyana, and Moldova, who have all had ruling communist parties
[132]
in recent years.
[134]
In terms of true communist states left today, there are five that most experts consider
[139]
communist, and those are: Vietnam, Laos, North Korea, China, and Cuba.
[144]
These countries adhere to different levels of commitment when it comes to living by communist
[148]
principles.
[149]
Let’s take a look at them one by one.
[152]
Socialist Republic of Vietnam – Following the First Indochina War, Vietnam was split
[156]
up at a conference in 1954.
[159]
North Vietnam established itself as a communist state, supported by the Soviet Union, while
[164]
South Vietnam was democratic and backed by America.
[167]
Then followed two decades of the war we know as the Vietnam War, which is also the Second
[171]
Indochina War, and in 1976, Vietnam was unified to become a communist country.
[177]
Technically Vietnam is still a communist country, with one-party rule, the Communist Party of
[183]
Vietnam, under Marxist-Leninist governance, but like many other communist countries, Vietnam
[188]
has in recent decades moved toward a market economy that has seen some of its socialist
[193]
values disrupted by capitalism.
[195]
In fact Vietnam is now one of the world’s fastest growing economies, and is on track
[200]
to becoming a modern, industrialized nation by 2020.
[203]
Despite these economic reforms and adoption of capitalist values, human rights and freedom
[208]
of speech are still limited in the country.
[210]
All news media are under control of the government, and there are heavy penalties for criticizing
[215]
the government or broaching politically sensitive topics.
[218]
Vietnam continues to shift in both policy and culture, and it’s not unimaginable that
[222]
it will veer fully away from communism sometime in the next couple of decades.
[227]
Lao People's Democratic Republic – Laos, officially the Lao People's Democratic Republic,
[233]
became a communist country in 1975, following a revolution supported by Vietnam and the
[238]
Soviet Union.
[239]
The government in Lao is largely run by military generals who support a one-party system that
[243]
is grounded in Marxist ideals.
[246]
Media outlet, The economist, published an article in 2016, stating that “Laos has
[251]
what may be the world’s most closed political system after North Korea, and that for the
[255]
few visiting media, the communist official appointed as spokesman for the occasion responded
[260]
to most questions by blinking.”
[263]
But Lao is changing and has been heavily influenced by democratic ideology, both via tourism and
[269]
trade.
[270]
Many aspects of business and culture have changed in the country over the last three
[273]
decades.
[274]
Is Lao truly a communist state, when there is a stock exchange and a Private Sector that
[279]
is fast expanding to be the most productive part of Laos's economy?
[283]
Though Lao is ruled by a communist party, as far back as 1988 the country began allowing
[288]
some forms of private ownership, as well as joining the World Trade Organization in 2013.
[293]
And in 2009, the Obama administration declared that Laos had “ceased to be a Marxist-Leninist
[299]
country.”
[300]
So Lao is on the list, but the verdict is still out there and things seem to be rapidly
[304]
changing for this South East Asian Country.
[307]
Democratic People's Republic of North Korea - Korea was occupied by the Japanese in World
[311]
War II and divided after the war into a Russian-dominated north and an American-occupied south.
[318]
North Korea did not become a communist country until 1948 when South Korea declared its independence,
[323]
leaving the north to declare its own sovereignty soon after, when Korean communist leader Kim
[329]
Il-Sung was installed as leader.
[331]
Getting clear information on North Korea is not easy as the state has full control of
[335]
all media.
[337]
Though most of the world sees North Korea as a communist state, the country itself does
[341]
not, and the ruling Kim family has always promoted their own doctrine based on the concept
[346]
of ‘juche’, which means self-reliance.
[348]
Juche was first introduced in the mid 1950’s bringing with it Korean nationalism as a core
[354]
value within the countries leadership strategy.
[357]
Juche became official state policy in the 1970’s.
[360]
So is North Korea really a communist country or is this a western misinterpretation of
[365]
the way this secretive country is governed?
[368]
In 2009, North Korea’s constitution was changed to remove all mention of the Marxist
[373]
and Leninist ideals, the foundations of communism, and the word communism was also removed from
[379]
the text.
[380]
What we do know is that North Korea has a very questionable human rights record and
[384]
many strict controls…According to the South Korean government estimates and Human Rights
[389]
Watch, between 150,000 and 200,000 North Koreans live in prison camps; only government and
[395]
military officials are able to own motor vehicles; all televisions are tuned to state-controlled
[400]
domestic programming, and there is no Internet other than a closed domestic network.
[404]
It’s not easy to get a clear picture of North Korea, but one person who may know more
[409]
is ex basketball player Dennis Rodman, who is a frequent visitor to the country and has
[413]
met with President Kim Jong-Un on a number of occasions.
[416]
The People's Republic of China – In 1949 Mao Zedong took control of China and declared
[422]
the nation as the People's Republic of China, a communist country.
[426]
China has remained communist since that date, although economic reforms have been in place
[430]
for several years and there is debate over how long China can continue to declare itself
[435]
communist.
[436]
The Chinese Communist Party or CCP has revolutionized many things for the country in recent years.
[441]
Most notably, it has made China the world’s second largest economy.
[444]
It has also strengthened China, especially in the South China Sea, where it has challenged
[449]
America’s hold.
[450]
And China’s presence in the Indian Ocean has expanded by re-building the ports of Sri
[454]
Lanka, and by developing the China Pakistan Economic Corridor.
[458]
The underpinning of all of these activities has been the expansion of a capitalist economy
[462]
that continues to grow year after year.
[465]
Some of the communist principles have clearly been eroded, and in 2004 the country's constitution
[470]
was changed to recognize private property.
[473]
So what makes China truly communist?
[475]
The Chinese government still controls major aspects of society and the economy.
[479]
Nearly all Chinese banks are state-owned, which means the government decides which businesses
[483]
and individuals are lent money.
[485]
Chinese media companies are entirely state-owned and virtually all of the land in the country
[490]
still belongs to the government.
[492]
So though communism is at the core of the Chinese political system, the CCP is not really
[497]
a communist party in the conventional sense, as it’s now motivated by the same market
[501]
drivers as the majority of democracies in capitalist states.
[505]
Republic of Cuba – Cuba is perhaps best known for the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, a
[510]
13-day confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union concerning American ballistic
[515]
missile deployment in Italy and Turkey.
[517]
It was a nerve wracking time that could have led to full-scale nuclear war.
[521]
Cuba became a fully communist country in 1961, following a revolution that led to a government
[527]
takeover by Fidel Castro and his associates.
[529]
Cuba continues as a one-party communist state under President Miguel Diaz-Canel, who very
[534]
recently took over for Raúl Castro, who succeeded his brother in 2008.
[540]
The government has a monopoly on the majority of economic activity within centralized state
[544]
enterprises.
[545]
And there are restrictions to the freedoms of the press, assembly, and speech.
[548]
In 2016, the Cuban Committee for Human Rights and National Reconciliation reported 9,125
[556]
arbitrary detentions in the first 10 months of the year, and there was a crack down on
[559]
digital media, and the emerging private sector, by temporarily halting the issuance of business
[565]
licenses, for new private restaurants in Havana.
[568]
There have been changes in Cuba in more recent times including increased engagement with
[572]
the United States under President Barack Obama.
[574]
This resulted in relations between the two nations becoming more relaxed and travel restrictions
[579]
loosened during Obama's second term.
[581]
However in June 2017, President Donald Trump tightened travel restrictions on Cuba.
[587]
From our research we found that most of the experts agree, these five countries are still
[591]
communist.
[592]
However, there is clearly divided opinion on this subject and even within these five
[595]
countries, there is a lot of deviation from the original communist economic and social
[600]
systems that Marx and Engels initially proposed.
[603]
We often get asked how we make our videos.
[606]
The short answer is, we use Adobe After Effects and Adobe Illustrator.
[609]
But if you want to know how to use this software, skillshare offers over 20,000 classes, and
[614]
more than 700 of them are in Animation.
[617]
You can learn the basics of animating in After Effects from the friendly folks over at Kurzgesagt.
[621]
They cover topics such as setting up your project, positioning, animating, and creating
[625]
shapes from vector layers.
[627]
Skillshare is an online learning community offering classes in leadership, photography,
[631]
productivity, and more.
[633]
Premium Membership will give you unlimited access to topics that will improve your skills,
[637]
and in the process, your life!
[639]
The first 1,000 people to use the promo code infographics16 or to visit the the link in
[643]
the description will receive 2 months of Skillshare absolutely free!
[647]
Join skillshare and start learning today!
[649]
Will these countries continue operating under communist ideology or will things change as
[654]
new ways of living and systems of governance are adopted?
[657]
Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
[659]
Also, be sure to check out our other video called Top 10 Weakest Militaries in the World!
[663]
Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe.
[667]
See you next time!