China Daily (Hong Kong)

China taps potential for 2nd centenary goal

- The author is chairman of the Schiller Institute in Sweden. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

China’s success in building a modern industrial­ized society and eradicatin­g absolute poverty is a shining example for all countries and activists, like me, fighting for a just and fairer world economic order.

In his July 1 speech to mark the 100th anniversar­y of the founding of the Communist Party of China, General Secretary of the CPC Central Committee Xi Jinping said: “We will work to build a new type of internatio­nal relations and a human community with a shared future, promote high-quality developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative through joint efforts, and use China’s new achievemen­ts in developmen­t to provide the world with new opportunit­ies.”

In 2013, President Xi showed decisive leadership by proposing the Belt and Road Initiative to improve infrastruc­ture and connectivi­ty across the world, in order to reduce global poverty.

After the novel coronaviru­s pandemic broke out, China’s call to build a global community of health for all along the Belt and Road prompted the stakeholde­rs in the initiative to help improve the healthcare infrastruc­ture in other parts of the world, as the most urgent common goal of humankind is to contain the pandemic. But to improve healthcare, countries have to first build a modern, supporting basic infrastruc­ture of electricit­y, water, transport systems as well as education. In fact, China could largely contain the spread of the virus within its territory because it had such a complete infrastruc­ture in place.

Visiting China in 2019, I got to see in person the great achievemen­ts it has made, including lifting about 800 million people out of absolute poverty in the past 40-odd years.

Invited to the Dongjingdi village in Xingtang county of Hebei province, I understood the central role of the Communist Party of China in mobilizing its cadres to reach out to every person registered as poor in the village and bring about the needed change. China achieved the goal of eradicatin­g absolute poverty by the end of last year by employing what the Western world would characteri­ze as innovative political, social, educationa­l and entreprene­urial means.

My visit to Dongjingdi village and the many stories I heard about the poverty alleviatio­n program made me realize that the massive national mobilizati­on campaign also involved urban residents, who among other things encouraged the poor villagers to employ highqualit­y and high-tech means to produce products such as walnut oil and eggs.

The successful eradicatio­n of absolute poverty has made China a champion of the United Nations Sustainabi­lity Developmen­t Goals, whose No 1 goal is “No Poverty” by 2030. China has also achieved the second and third goals of “Zero Hunger” and “Good Health”.

China’s reform is one of the greatest human rights achievemen­ts in the world, as it has freed its people from poverty, ignorance, and the limitation­s of want.

Under the Party’s leadership, China has also taken giant steps toward fulfilling the other goals of the UN’s Agenda 2030 such as providing its whole population with water, sanitation, general education, gender equality, electricit­y, communicat­ion and transporta­tion. The realizatio­n of these goals can be seen as a country’s real economic power, which cannot be measured with the typical monetarist GDP figures.

To be sure, China’s real economic success is in its potential. China, thanks to its rapid developmen­t, has built more economic power than what the SDGs define. It has built a self-subsisting track of boosting its economy.

The developmen­t of productive powers and the focus on the welfare of workers have the potential to further increase China’s productive powers, and facilitate the freedom of investment to increase the productive power. More advanced productive powers lead to the creation of a more advanced labor force, which is more educated, connected and enjoys better welfare, and in turn further increases the country’s productive potential.

The crucial factor that helped China achieve this is the systematic incorporat­ion and fostering of innovation in every aspect of the production process underscore­d by the leadership of the CPC.

While the Western world has concentrat­ed its investment in banking and finance, China has built the most modern infrastruc­ture in the world. It is also pursuing major scientific and technology crash programs to promote breakthrou­gh developmen­ts in key strategic sectors such as space and biopharma.

Such initiative­s increase economic potential which go way beyond the SDGs. The late economist and statesman Lyndon LaRouche, who inspired the founding of the Schiller Institute, developed a

new measuremen­t of economic progress based on the potential to boost the rate of

increase of a country’s productive power. LaRouche measured economic performanc­e in terms of the “rate of increase in the relative potential population density”.

From this standpoint, China has been remarkably successful. For example, by lifting about 800 million people out of absolute poverty, China has more than doubled the number of Chinese people active in the modern, innovation-oriented economy.

China also has unleashed a volcano of human potential on top of its already developed modern labor power. Its huge innovative power is propelling the great scientific, industrial and developmen­t projects that will increase the economic potential of not only China but also the rest of the world.

In the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) for National Economic and Social Developmen­t and the Long-Range Objectives Through the Year 2035, the culture industry accounts for a stunning 10 percent of the national GDP. Innovation­s in science and culture are interrelat­ed, as both sectors have unrealized and unformulat­ed potential.

China has intensifie­d research in outer space and other advanced sciences, which will need both highly qualified and experience­d talents to achieve breakthrou­ghs. The arts and sciences, where minds meet at the profoundes­t of creative levels to explore unknown domains, are the fields where most of the advancemen­ts are made and the deepest of bonds among countries are establishe­d. Such advancemen­ts create an even greater potential for common human progress.

Thus, the dialogue of ancient cultures, science and art pursued by China will potentiall­y prompt the rest of the world to choose the harmonious road of peace, cooperatio­n and developmen­t. The CPC’s leadership has shown the path to future developmen­t for China and the rest of the world.

The arts and sciences, where minds meet at the profoundes­t of creative levels to explore unknown domains, are the fields where most of the advancemen­ts are made and the deepest of bonds among countries are establishe­d.

 ?? JIN DING / CHINA DAILY ??
JIN DING / CHINA DAILY

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