City and countryside
Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong – when we think of China, these booming metropolises are usually what we have in mind. Indeed, most the population and economic power is concentrated around the capital and in the coastal regions of the People’s Republic. However, Zhongguo, as the Middle Kingdom is called in Chinese, also has an enormous hinterland that is little known in the West, and it is now poised to make the leap into the modern age. The countryside is opening up – even to foreign investors. The demographic dimensions that this involves can be seen by the example of the Sichuan region of Central China, which is home to 84 million people – more than the Federal Republic of Germany. Even the sparsely populated Inner Mongolia in the north of the People’s Republic has a population larger than that of most European nations: 24 million people.
Critical size. China is the fourth largest country on earth, after Russia, Canada and the United States. The country covers 4,500 kilometers from north to south, and the same distance from east to west.
The cities and regions along the coasts as well as the large and navigable rivers are well connected to international transportation arteries.
However, developing the hinterland will be one of China’s greatest challenges over the next few years, and it is a task of enormous political, economic and social importance. For the only way to equalize the various stages of development in the different parts of the country is by modernizing the transportation and communications infrastructure in these regions.
From a planned to a market economy. Over the past 25 years, the Chinese government has steered a successful course from a planned economy to a prosperous market economy. Former state-run enterprises have gained greater autonomy, a greater portion of agricultural production is in private hands, a functioning stock market has emerged, and private companies now exist. Most importantly, the country, its economy and its people have sought contact with the global markets and opened themselves up to foreign investors. As a result of all these efforts, the gross domestic product (GDP) has grown tenfold since 1978.
By 2010, it will have increased another 45 percent. In terms of buying power, China was the world’s second largest economy in 2005, after the United States. And the economy continues to grow at a current rate of ten percent each year.
The downside of success. However, progress comes at a price, as it does in any country that goes through a phase of accelerated economic development. The Beijing government must nevertheless deal with problems on a scale beyond anything known in the West. Social development is especially important in the countryside, outside the metropolitan areas. This means creating jobs – not just in the millions, but in the tens of millions. In addition, the “one child” policy of family planning means that China now has one of the most rapidly aging populations in the world.
Another issue of great concern is the environment. In particular, air pollution, soil erosion and sinking ground water levels have taken on alarming proportions. Some cities and regions have become ecological disaster zones, due to their rapid economic growth
The authorities have identified the problem and are now taking steps to solve it. Research and development projects as well as investments focus on this area. State-of-the-art industrial filter systems, intelligent and ecologically compatible traffic systems as well as sustainable water supply and waste water purification plants have been built.
Energy conservation as a government goal. To supply 1.3 billion people with adequate energy, the country’s leaders have taken radical measures in recent years. One example is the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River in Central China – a highly controversial project due to its effects on the environment and the need to resettle hundreds of thousands of people. However, Beijing points out advantages such as the ability to generate enormous amounts of energy through hydroelectric power plants and better protection against flooding. By 2010, the government plans to cut energy use by 20 percent per unit of GDP.
Both the Communist Party leadership and the National People’s Congress – the Parliament – agree that resource conservation should be a fundamental policy objective.
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