I respect anyone who is willing to point out when they were wrong before.<p>In regard to China, I think that they (like the Soviet Union before them) were very good at playing catch-up, because command economies are very good at getting everybody on board to do the thing which everyone knows needs to be done. "Do this, or we will put you in prison or worse."<p>However, once you have (mostly) caught up, it becomes less obvious what the next thing to do is. Literal moonshot? Fiberoptic internet to every house in the nation? Particle accelerator that can hit energies never before reached? Every student gets a spot in a university?<p>Some of these might be good ideas, some might be boondoggles. It's hard to know, when you're nearing the front of the pack. The Soviet Union was great at playing catch-up until, sometime in the mid 60's, they were too close to the forefront to be able to clearly see what needed to be done next.<p>China's Communist Party is great at getting everyone to do what they have decided to do. I think it is going to be harder for them to figure out what an economy, of their size and relatively advanced state, should be doing next. If they guess wrong, it will be ugly.