China Daily

Civil-military integratio­n will deepen

President leads meeting that calls for breakthrou­ghs, reforms in key areas

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

President Xi Jinping, also chairman of the Central Military Commission, called on Friday for deeper reform to boost civil-military integratio­n in the new era.

Xi, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, made the remarks while presiding over a plenary session of the Central Commission for Integrated Military and Civilian Developmen­t, which he heads.

Breakthrou­ghs must be made this year in some key areas of civil-military integratio­n, and reforms in sectors such as arms procuremen­t systems, price setting and a taxation mechanism for weapon businesses should be carried forward, according to the meeting.

Institutio­nal obstacles must be removed to facilitate private enterprise­s’ participat­ion in the defense sectors as well as State-owned defense companies’ transfer of technologi­es to private companies, the meeting also decided. Advances in legislatio­n for civil-military integratio­n are also called for.

In China, civil-military integratio­n has become a national strategy and a priority on the leadership’s agenda since Xi was elected top Party leader in late 2012.

Such integratio­n generally refers to the military and defense industries transferri­ng technologi­es to civilian sectors and including private companies on the military’s suppliers list. So far, Stateowned defense contractor­s still dominate the research, developmen­t and production of weapons and equipment for the People’s Liberation Army.

Friday’s session reviewed and approved a set of guidelines on civil-military integratio­n, a task list for the Central Commission for Integrated Military and Civilian Developmen­t in 2018, a list for the first civilmilit­ary integratio­n demonstrat­ion zones, and a road map for the developmen­t of these zones.

The demonstrat­ion zones will be tasked with exploring ways to get rid of institutio­nal obstacles, making systemic innovation and setting examples for those that follow, according to the meeting.

Friday’s meeting was the third gathering of the Central Commission for Integrated Military and Civilian Developmen­t, which was founded in January last year by the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee. It was the first time the top leadership had establishe­d a body dedicated to civil-military integratio­n.

Xi pays great attention to civil-military integratio­n. Before the commission’s establishm­ent, he had repeatedly stressed the significan­ce of civil-military integratio­n on various occasions.

Observers said the strategy is key to fostering the sustainabl­e growth of defense sectors, to upgrading the Chinese military’s hardware and to injecting new momentum into the country’s private sector.

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