Global Times

Experts discuss China’s developmen­t philosophy, Belt and Road progress

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A Chinese scholar gave a lecture and held discussion­s with British experts at Britain’s Oxford Brookes University on Monday on China’s developmen­t path and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

Professor Zhang Weiwei, director of the China Institute of the Shanghai-based Fudan University, comprehens­ively introduced China’s developmen­t philosophy from a civilizati­onal state perspectiv­e and its road to prosperity.

Citing statistics and examples to illustrate China’s developmen­t, Zhang said the Fourth Industrial Revolution has come to China with the surge of things like e-commerce and financial technology, as well as breakthrou­ghs in artificial intelligen­ce and quantum communicat­ion.

Proceeding from a civilizati­onal state perspectiv­e, Zhang clarified “the Chinese Way” in its political, economic and social dimensions and its implicatio­ns for the BRI. He stressed the significan­t role played by the Communist Party of China (CPC) in the country’s rapid economic developmen­t.

In the panel section, Zhang held a discussion with two British China

experts, Professor Rana Mitter, director of the University of Oxford China Centre and Martin Jacques, senior fellow at Cambridge University.

Mitter described Zhang’s lecture as constructi­ve and said that British people were interested to hear about China’s steady and very rapid economic growth over the past 70 years.

Mitter told Xinhua that he believes the BRI will be of increasing

interest for the UK after Brexit, assuming that the country is looking to find independen­t channels for trade in the world.

“I think that Britain will be very interested in the new trading ecology and networks that grow up as a result of the BRI,” Mitter said.

Jacques said it was important for Westerners to have a more thorough understand­ing of China nowadays from different perspectiv­es.

“The difficulty in the West is that we try to understand China through Western eyes, through a Western present; you can’t understand China like that because China is very different. The history is different, the culture is very different, so you have to understand China in Chinese circumstan­ces. And that requires a very serious intellectu­al effort,” he said.

Jacques said that Western countries need to deepen their understand­ing of China. In today’s internatio­nal situation, the BRI and the implementa­tion of related projects are conducive to further strengthen­ing of internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

The lecture, organized by the Chinese Ministry of Culture and Tourism and jointly sponsored by the China Arts and Entertainm­ent Group Ltd. and the Confucius Institute at Oxford Brooks University, was held to celebrate the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

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