Is China’s Social Credit System Really Orwell’s Big Brother?

Updated on Jan 9, 2025 by Aaron Flynn

China’s social score system remains an issue veiled in mystery and rumor. In the absence of reliable information, notions of an all-seeing, all-judging Big Brother have set off alarm bells for human rights and privacy advocates around the world.

The Chinese social credit system has also been compared to Orwell’s 1984 and the Black Mirror episode Nosedive, in which citizens’ opportunities hang on a disturbing social ranking system. 

While the comparisons may be exaggerated, they’re not totally inaccurate. In this article, I’ll demystify China’s social credit system and tell you everything you need to know about what the Chinese social score system is and isn’t. Let’s nosedive in!

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What Is China’s Social Credit Score System?

China’s social credit score system is a government program assessing citizens on various aspects of their “Chengxin” or “trustworthiness.” In some places in China, people are rated on their social as well as financial behavior. 

While the financial and social aspects of China’s scoring system are generally considered separate, non-financial activities can affect your financial standing and vice versa. Citizens’ scores affect their credibility and ability to operate in society. 

China’s score system doesn’t concern individual citizens alone, it also deals with enterprises and government bodies. What’s caused the greatest outcry, however, is how the system affects the privacy and basic human rights of ordinary citizens.

Misdemeanors that impact a citizen’s score include:

  • Eating on trains
  • Buying too many video games
  • Cheating on online video games
  • Spending “frivolously” 
  • Spreading rumors 
  • Posting “fake news”
  • Engaging in religious practices 
  • Not visiting elderly parents frequently

People with higher social credit scores enjoy preferential treatment, business support, and better travel options. Those with lower social credit scores may have difficulty finding work, housing, or good schools for their children, and may be restricted from some forms of travel. 

When you consider that by UN standards, freedom to work and travel are universal human rights, it’s easy to see why so many are critical of the system.

When Was the Credit Score System Implemented?

Things are moving slower than China initially hoped. The CCP first announced its six-year plan to impose a social credit scoring program back in 2014. The plan was to get the system to nationwide coverage by 2020, but so far, It’s running way off schedule. The first draft of the Social Credit Law only came out in November 2022, two years after it was supposed to be fully implemented. 

What Does the Credit Score System Aim to Achieve?

Chinese Communist Party (CCP) state media source, Global Times says “China’s ongoing construction of the world’s largest social credit system will help the country restore social trust.”

The system aims to restore trust or “Chengxin” and discourage “uncivilized behavior” in five key areas:

  • Financial creditworthiness
  • Judicial enforcement
  • Commercial trustworthiness 
  • Societal trustworthiness 
  • Government Integrity
Are services still “public” if not everyone can use them?

People’s Daily, another state media outlet, states the aim of the system is to “promote honesty and deter dishonest behavior.” 

The methods used to achieve these goals are often extremely heavy-handed. By 2019, more than 17 million flights and five million train rides had been denied to people due to poor social credit. When you consider that their “crimes” were things like eating on trains or bad driving, this feels very extreme.

Hong Kong’s Alibaba-owned South China Morning Post notes that “individuals and companies deemed untrustworthy will also be publicly named and shamed” and could suffer in terms of “travel prospects, employment, access to finance, and the ability to enter into contracts.” 

Imagine being denied a flight because you drove badly?

 Those who lose credibility will find it hard to make a tiny step in society — Premier Li Keqiang 

Some critics also point out that terms like “societal trustworthiness” and “government integrity” may be kept intentionally vague to target individuals who pose a political threat. 

China has also recently updated its social credit system to include the use of Central Bank Digital Currencies. This makes it easier for the government to enforce penalties, fining people directly from their bank accounts or even freezing accounts. Cato Institute has called the move a “threat to freedom.”

China’s social credit system is clearly stepping on people’s rights, but is it the all-powerful algorithm we envision?

What China’s Social Credit System Isn’t — Yet

People often wrongly portray China’s social credit score system as some omnipotent AI apparatus automatically scoring citizens on their every behavior. The reality is it’s more of a series of social credit experiments distributed across China. The systems differ between provinces and territories — some places haven’t even implemented one yet. 

China is still working on a country-wide social credit score system

In some small towns, the local council hires “investigators” to simply walk around to catch people misbehaving — pretty low-tech! 

In more built-up areas like Beijing, facial recognition surveillance is already in use. China is world-leading in high-accuracy facial recognition cameras and is estimated to have one camera for every seven citizens. The government uses facial recognition cameras to catch and publicly shame people for misdemeanors as slight as jaywalking.

In other words, the system is more fragmented, localized, and disorganized than it’s been portrayed. So, why all the panic in the global press?

RongCheng — The Prototype That Shocked the World

In 2013, the Chinese city of Rongcheng made headlines experimenting with a social credit system that ranked citizens’ social behavior with a number. Certain behaviors add to the score, while others subtract from it. An AAA rating brings with it an array of benefits, while a D rating results in a loss of privileges and even basic rights. 

The local government defines the behaviors that are encouraged and those that are frowned upon. One worrying part of the outline urges citizens to report people “participating in futile superstition or “cult” organizations.” 

Clamping down on religious freedom is nothing new in China. According to Human Rights Watch, “China continues to violate the right to freedom of religion” and “harsh prison sentences and violence against religious activists are still reported.”

It’s also difficult to ignore the irony that the government’s idea of “trustworthiness” involves encouraging citizens to snitch on their neighbors to win favor from the state. 

In RongCheng, punishments imposed on citizens whose score falls below an “acceptable” level include:

  1. Reputation punishments like public naming and shaming 
  2. Reduced access to government benefits and support
  3. Higher routine scrutiny 
  4. Restrictions on participation in government projects
  5. Restrictions on attending regular business functions
  6. Restrictions on market entry or professional qualifications

Fortunately, Rongcheng’s social credit system is not yet a countrywide phenomenon, but similar projects are taking shape. 

How Does China’s Social Credit Score Work?

The government aims to monitor and discipline society through

  • Data collection and sharing
  • Blocklists and ban lists
  • Punishments, sanctions, and rewards

Critics worry the system grossly infringes upon citizens’ privacy and human rights and that it’s an invasive censorship tool. It also encourages citizens to turn on each other.

The People Have Sharp Eyes

It was Chairman Mao who first pointed out that “the people have sharp eyes.” Today, China’s Sharp Eyes Project is a nationwide system that relies on CCTV cameras, as well as citizens spying on their neighbors to keep law and order. 

This is how Senior Writer at OneZero, Dave Gershgorn described the Sharp Eyes Project:

“Through special TV boxes installed in their homes, local residents could watch live security footage and press a button to summon police if they saw anything amiss. The security footage could also be viewed on smartphones.”

The project bears a striking resemblance to the surveillance state engendered by the Stasi government in East Germany — except this time keen-eyed neighbors are equipped with CCTV footage.

Private Sector Plays Along

It’s not just the government that’s invested in putting the system together — private firms are also getting involved. The fintech arm of Alibaba, for example, led the way with its private financial credit scoring and loyalty program, Sesame Credit. 

Sesame Credit relies on citizens’ borrowing behavior and transaction history within Alibaba’s platforms. As such, it’s limited to analyzing data from its own platforms and is far from comprehensive. Even so, it represents an important precedent. If all companies decided to track consumers and pool information, it’d be one step closer to the absolute surveillance China’s going for.

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How Many People Are Under the Social Credit System?

The questionable reliability of data coming from China makes it tough to estimate how many people are under a social score system. Restrictions on free reporting mean information sources are scarce and often contradictory.

Data from the People’s Bank of China indicated the system had incorporated 1.02 billion individuals and 28.34 million companies by 2019. In 2019, the Chinese government claimed 13 million people had been deemed untrustworthy. This contrasts greatly with sources like MIT Technology Review which states the system is scattered and fragmented at best. 

This inconsistency reflects the general issue of censorship and free reporting in China. It’s hard to get reliable information when journalists and reporters are constantly penalized for speaking out.

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How Does the West Compare?

While China appears to be leading the way when it comes to surveillance and social credit scores, the US, EU, and UK have plenty of privacy and censorship issues of their own. AI surveillance is growing in the US and the EU and a slew of new laws is making it easier for Western governments to carry out mass surveillance on citizens. 

For example, the EU’s Digital Services Act focuses on removing “illegal” content and making it easy for netizens to report each other. The recently passed UK’s Online Safety Bill allows the government to undermine end-to-end encryption to spy on citizens indiscriminately. 

Governments around the world are also experimenting with central bank digital currencies (CBDCs). These pose a serious threat to financial privacy and personal freedom. Unlike Bitcoin which is decentralized, CBDCs are an ultra-centralized form of currency. Your government would have full access to your financial history and resources, making you extremely easy to track and control.

The Carrot & the Stick 

China’s social credit system continues to evolve and frighten the world with its implications. Contrary to the all-seeing eye people envision, however, China’s social credit system is still largely localized and applied piecemeal. 

Even so, as technology continues to develop, the parts could come together into a frightening, inescapable whole. The AI-powered Big Brother may be just around the corner. Even so, the same can be said anywhere. Surveillance has become a real and present danger worldwide. It’s easy to point the finger at China, it’s harder to come to grips with changes closer to home. 

With the many laws recently introduced in the US, Europe, and the UK that threaten citizens’ privacy, is the rest of the world really that far away from implementing its own version of China’s social credit system? 

FAQ

What is the social credit score in China?

China’s social credit score system is a government program to assess citizens on their “trustworthiness” or “Chengxin.” In some places in China, individuals are rated based on their financial creditworthiness and even social behavior. This score reflects their credibility and affects their ability to operate freely in society. 

Do Chinese people have social credit scores?

Some Chinese citizens living in China have social credit scores. However, not all Chinese citizens living in China are subject to this system, and it doesn’t affect Chinese people living abroad.

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Do foreigners have social scores in China?

The Chinese government’s social scoring system only concerns Chinese citizens. However, it affects businesses too. If you’re doing business in China, speak to a local legal professional and local authorities for advice. Since rules differ between regions, information from the internet might not always be reliable. 

Comments are closed.

42 Comments

  1. DraytonAlan

    If I have a credit score of 666 would that work….

    11 years ago
    1. Falkvinge

      That level makes you eligible for a collateral-free loan of 50k yuan (about $8k). Yes, 666 or above. The Chinese like numeric alliteration.

      11 years ago
  2. Aero Windwalker

    It’s partially true. Spreading “rumors” will result at lowing your credit score, which is also true in the US (aka convicted scammers).

    11 years ago
  3. Howard Treesong

    Much though this will be effective, and it will be, in the long term it is utterly and completely self-defeating. Dissent will never go away if the conditions warrant it. It will just be forced underground where it will fester at ease.

    Also, much though the government wants people to think a certain way, and only a certain way, what it is actually doing is to lay the foundation for its own undoing. What kind of poor system of government needs this? What is that saying about a system of government that has to stifle dissent on this level?

    A society that is not open will suffocate. You can’t have smart outside-the-box thinkers in a closed society because that kind of thinking will get them banned. Society is cutting off its own rejuvenation by disallowing the people who will disagree with government. No new ideas, no new non-approved initiatives that will make a difference.

    The smart people will always make their own conclusion. Andrei Sakharov built the Tsar Bomba at Khrushchev’s behest. After seeing what it had done he became a vocal opponent of nuclear weapons.

    You can’t have an advancing society where everybody is afraid to speak their piece.

    The example of Rumania is given. The Stasi was indeed very effective. What did it do for society? What has Rumanian society achieved? Nothing. They got nowhere. The same will happen in China. People will be afraid to speak up and they will end up not doing anything creative that might draw the ire of the system. And that’s going to be the end of that. Who fears a society that fears itself?

    I like this initiative. I want them to make it as tight as they can make it, with harsh consequences for dissidents. There is no greater tool for the liberation of the people than that which controls them the most. And the beauty of that is that you can tell that to the rulers and they will never believe it before it’s too late :-).

    So go ahead, Communist Party, give everybody a score and make them be afraid of speaking their piece lest their privileges be revoked. And make the consequences as harsh as you can.

    11 years ago
    1. lisaAgnes

      What about people who are afraid to speak their minds because they know that in today’s world, disagreeing too much on the internet (or elsewhere) will torpedo your career and possibly make you unemployable?

      11 years ago
      1. Howard Treesong

        I understand what you’re saying but the same condition applies. If the citizenry cannot find a means to redress grievances, society is running into problems.

        It’s a regime’s wet dream to say ‘you can’t protest or else’ but if it then does not address legitimate problems, it’s only going to fester.

        If speaking out (in a civil, reasoned voice it bears pointing out) is met with harsh punishment and causes people to be ostracized then that is saying something about the society. These are not health environments to be in and they will always collapse. There is no precedent for a society where the elite can run roughshod over everyone else and say “well, you just have to grin and bear it”. That very attitude is what causes the system to unravel.

        Whether or not people are constantly monitored or not makes no difference. If you don’t spend your money at megacorp, and everybody else thinks the same way, then megacorp loses its control because no more money is coming in.

        As ever: the power of the elite is that they have most of the tools and the wealth to control society. The power of the many is that they are legion. .1% of the population can keep 99% of the population under control so long as the 99% accept that control. When one day they say “No more. It stops here.” then the system collapses overnight.

        It’s all about the kind of society one wants to live in.

        11 years ago
      2. tetridae

        Yeah. Well they will miss out on some skilled people. Suit themselves.

        11 years ago
    2. Silentoak

      But the problem is that Chinese money is so deep in the western economy that a flick of the switch will bring that system to the west. The Chinese think in terms of hundreds of years not quarterlies…

      11 years ago
  4. warcaster

    And this is not the worst part of this plan. The worst part is that after they perfect this, they are going to modify new embryos after “model citizens”, so that the vast majority of new Chinese babies in the future will also grow up to be “model citizens” that always listen and obey the government. Now THAT’S beyond sinister.

    11 years ago
    1. Jin Peng

      Have you ever come to China? How much do you know our daily life? if not, shut up. I don’t know why you guys are so credulous of rumors.

      11 years ago
      1. Gray

        Looks like someone’s Sesame Credit’s about to go up!

        11 years ago
        1. Edward Lin

          I am a Chinese and I can definitely sure this is nonsense.Sesame Credit does exist,but its just a loan system runs by Alibaba.And the most important,the government has never involved.Your credit can be only decided by the activity inside Alibaba system,like did you pay the bill on time,pretty common stuffs really.And to be honest,one of the biggest competitor of Alibaba is bank,Alibaba is so powerful that government even did some punish to keep the balance(not our topic today),so there’s no way Alibaba can check data from bank or get support from the government.Besides,nobody ever cares about Sesame Credit cuz its totally OPTIONAL!If I can afford the stuff,why the fuck should I use it?So nobody cares about the credit cuz it only influences how much money you can brorrow,not those bullshits in the article.Yeah,our country has a long way to go indeed,and we always bitching about it and make fun of it in Chinese weird sense of humour,but era of Big Brother is Watching You is gone,so please don’t believe these bullshits anymore,sincerely.

          10 years ago
  5. Antimon555

    Yes, it’s time we replace the ‘1984’ simile and metaphor, with ‘The Circle’ by Dave Eggers. Unfortunately, we are going there quickly…

    11 years ago
    1. diy crafts

      In the West, the surveillance agencies have been trying to stay as low-key as possible, while listening to everything and anything. China has taken a different approach. Not only is the surveillance very overt, you are also constantly nudged to fall in line.

      Really ?

      9 years ago