Table of Contents

bōxuē: 剥削 - To Exploit, Exploitation

Quick Summary

Core Meaning

Character Breakdown

Cultural Context and Significance

剥削 is one of the most important terms in the vocabulary of Chinese political thought and modern history. Its meaning is inseparable from Marxist-Leninist ideology, which formed the bedrock of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). In classic Marxist theory, history is defined by 阶级斗争 (jiējí dòuzhēng), or “class struggle.” The central conflict is between the 资产阶级 (zīchǎn jiējí), the capitalist class who own the means of production, and the 无产阶级 (wúchǎn jiējí), the proletariat or working class. The core action of the capitalist class is 剥削—they exploit the workers by paying them a wage that is less than the actual value their labor creates, and they keep the “surplus value” as profit. For decades in China, 剥削 was the ultimate sin of the “old society” (旧社会, jiù shèhuì)—the pre-1949 capitalist and feudal world. Landlords exploiting peasants and factory owners exploiting workers were the classic villains in CCP narratives. Comparison to Western “Exploitation”: While “exploitation” in English can refer to the same Marxist concept, it's also used much more broadly and casually (e.g., “exploiting a loophole,” “I feel so exploited at work this week”). In Chinese, 剥削 (bōxuē) almost exclusively retains its severe, political, and economic connotation. Using it is to make a serious accusation about systemic injustice and immoral profit-seeking. It frames the issue not as a personal grievance, but as a moral failure of a system or a powerful entity.

Practical Usage in Modern China

With China's market-oriented economy, the use of 剥削 has become more complex and is a hot topic of social debate.

Example Sentences

Nuances and Common Mistakes