China promises a more open economy

By Wu Jianmin
0 Comment(s)Print E-mail China Today, November 21, 2013
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In November 2013, the Third Plenary Session of the 18th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) approved "a decision on major issues concerning comprehensive and far-reaching reforms," and concluded the meeting with a communiqué revealing China's long-term goals.

On recent trips to South Korea, Europe and Latin America, I met people who all touched upon the topic of the third plenum in our conversations, interested in what new decisions would be made in China. In Beijing, foreign friends from the U.S. and Australia also tried to get a line on how the third plenum would impact on China's future development. It's unprecedented for a Central Committee plenum to attract so much world attention, but also inevitable.

After 30-plus years of development since the implementation of its reform and opening-up policies, China has developed into the second largest economy in the world and become a major player in the international arena. There is no doubt that key events happening in China influence the world.

The world's increasing interest in China has something to do with the sluggish economic recovery following the global financial crisis. The aftermath of the crisis that broke out in 2008 still lingers, and Europe is mired in it; it's quite possible that the Eurozone will still show negative growth in 2013, and witness an increase rate of just one percent in 2014. Although economic recovery in the U.S. is under way, its momentum is not dynamic; it's expected that U.S. economic growth will be at a rate of 1.6 percent in 2013 and 2.6 percent in 2014. Due to this lackluster global recovery, the world is seeing growing unemployment figures, with a total of about 200 million unemployed people at present. Economic growth is the key to improving the situation and today, the engine driving this growth is East Asia, in particular, China.

It can even be said that big changes happening in the world today are triggered by events in China. In the 170-plus years since the Opium War of 1840, time had witnessed a passive and limp performance by China on the world stage. However, today, things have changed: Not only are we a recipient of world influence, but an actor with increasingly powerful influence on the world. This is unprecedented.

In brief, that all eyes are on the outcome of the third plenum of the 18th CPC Central Committee is a direct result of the interplay between world changes and China's development.

Aside from world attention, the Chinese public has also had high expectations concerning the key CPC meeting. Observers have commented that this meeting rivals in historic importance the Third Plenum of the 11th CPC Central Committee in late 1978. That meeting was particularly significant because it adjusted China's development path and transferred the CPC work focus to economic development, and this strategic decision brought about considerable changes to China. Like the plenum in late 1978, this year's meeting sets China on the cusp of a turning point. Since the 18th CPC National Congress in November 2012, the new central leadership with Xi Jinping as the General Secretary has taken over the mission to lead the country and make headway in its development in a new era. The major decisions made at the recent plenum will guide China's development in the next decade. Living up to the high expectations of the general public, the meeting produced fruitful results and mapped out the blueprint for China's development.

The plan is to comprehensively, not partially, deepen reform in a wide range of fields such as politics, economy, culture, society, ecology, defense and Party building. China's development is entering a new stage where reform in one sector will certainly influence others. China's reform has advanced into "deep waters" and to keep it afloat, China must break the mold, which will surely trigger resistance and interference from vested interest groups. Only comprehensive reform can create a momentum powerful enough to break down the current set interest pattern and further China's development by overcoming various barriers.

Such comprehensive measures will take economic restructuring as a focus and a breakthrough point. Since late 1978, the CPC has considered economic development as its central task and promoted the overall policy through reorganizing the economic sector. The report of the 14th CPC National Congress clarified for the first time China's reform goal to establish a socialist market economy. It also stressed that the market should play a fundamental role in the allocation of resources, which had a positive influence in pushing forward China's economic reform. The recent plenum proposed that China should deepen its reform on the economic system, wherein the market no longer plays a "fundamental role" but the "decisive role" in the allocation of resources. This is a great change, since the core of economic restructuring is to properly handle the relationship between the market and the government.

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