Home / China / Opinion Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Urbanization Drive Needs Varied Strategies
Adjust font size:

At Beijing's annual municipal people's congress, officials declared their ambitious target of setting the number of permanent residents of the capital at 16 million by the year 2010.

 

Liu Zhihua, vice mayor of Beijing, admitted it will be very difficult for the city to achieve this goal.

 

With per capita water resources at only an eighth of the national average level and land resources at one-fifth the national average, the city is facing a resources shortage and population explosion.

 

As increasing natural resources is out of the question, the vice mayor said on Sunday that economic, legal and scientific means would be employed to control and adjust the size of the population.

 

The vice mayor did not elaborate on these means, but emphasized the city would rely less on administrative approaches to population control.

 

Many major cities and provincial capitals are confronted by a similar crisis. On one hand, unlimited expansion of urban areas has given rise to various management problems; on the other hand, it is unfair and unrealistic to prohibit rural people from swarming into cities and urban residents from small cities into larger ones.

 

The disparity between rural and urban areas and between large and small cities in terms of living conditions and opportunities for better lives and careers is at the very root of the problem.

 

Urbanization is believed to be a process that may bridge the gap, but it is unrealistic to think that enough cities can be constructed for everyone, or that existing cities can be expanded to absorb millions of rural citizens.

 

Statistics show nearly 100 million rural migrant workers are employed in urban areas, clustered in big cities such as Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou and other provincial capitals.

 

How to successfully assimilate them into the cities where they live and work is an important part of the country's urbanization process.

 

Migrant workers contribute to economic growth in urban areas, but they do not enjoy the same benefits and rights as permanent urban residents.

 

Although many cities have started to make plans to improve living conditions for rural migrant workers, much more needs to be done before they can really be said to have been assimilated.

 

But what about rural people left on the farmland? More and more laborers from the countryside are expected to swarm into cities, which cannot expand indefinitely.

 

That explains why the Central Party Committee (CPC) put forward the task of building a new socialist countryside and why some urbanization experts have suggested the country's urbanization process is at a critical stage when urban industry should support the development of agriculture and the central government's financial policies should favor rural development.

 

With the world's largest rural population, unbalanced agricultural development and varied natural conditions in the vast rural areas, a unified policy for urbanization cannot be expected to apply in every set of circumstances.

 

The example of Huaxi Village, where agriculture and industry have developed in a balanced manner and common prosperity has been realized among villagers, should be mirrored in other locations.

 

In this village in east China's Zhejiang Province, every family has its own big house measuring several hundred square meters, its own cars and all the facilities urban dwellers benefit from. The majority of villagers do not make their living by farming in Huaxi.

 

This should be one of the options considered in the framework of the country's urbanization drive.

 

However, given China's large population, food provision will be a concern for a long time to come in the process of economic development.

 

Urbanization should not be realized at the cost of the agricultural sector.

 

Cities should not expand ad infinitum as this approach will certainly mean the loss of arable farmland.

 

(China Daily January 17, 2006)

 

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read

Related Stories
Rural Development Strategy Boosts Urbanization
Towards True Urbanization
Official Says Urban Population to Near 560m by Year-end
Urbanization Changes Rural Family Life
Blind Expansion of Urban Areas
Rural Areas in Beijing Speed Up Urbanization
Urban Population Accounts for 40% of National Total
Resources Top Concern in Urbanization Drive
China to Hear Foreign Views on Urbanization
 
SiteMap | About Us | RSS | Newsletter | Feedback
SEARCH THIS SITE
Copyright ? China.org.cn. All Rights Reserved ????E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-88828000 京ICP證 040089號
主站蜘蛛池模板: 亚洲ⅴ国产v天堂a无码二区| 免费欧洲毛片A级视频无风险| 2022麻豆福利午夜久久| 女教师巨大乳孔中文字幕| 啊~用力cao我cao烂我小婷| 国产xxxxx| 国产精品入口麻豆电影网| 99ri国产在线| 好吊操视频在线| 中国一级特黄的片子免费 | 不卡一区二区在线| 日本一品道门免费高清视频| 久久青草国产免费观看| 欧美aaaaaa级爽激情会所| 亚洲日韩精品欧美一区二区| 波多野结衣无内裤护士| 免费看h片的网站| 精品少妇ay一区二区三区 | 99久久综合精品五月天| 夫妇交换性3中文字幕k8| 一区二区三区国产最好的精华液| 成人福利app| 丰满少妇被猛男猛烈进入久久| 日本护士恋夜视频免费列表| 久久精品国产亚洲av麻豆色欲| 最近高清日本免费| 亚洲av无码专区国产不乱码| 欧美亚洲色综久久精品国产| 亚洲妇女水蜜桃av网网站| 欧美精品videosbestsexhd4k| 亚洲熟妇色自偷自拍另类| 波多野结衣69xx| 亚洲精品网站在线观看你懂的| 特级毛片在线大全免费播放| 免费观看国产精品| 秋霞鲁丝片一区二区三区| 八木梓纱老师三天两夜| 精品丝袜国产自在线拍亚洲| 免费精品99久久国产综合精品| 精品国产一二三产品价格| 兽皇videos极品另类|