Kuwait Times

New China in 70 years: From agrarian backwater to industrial powerhouse

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An agrarian backwater that struggled to feed its population 70 years ago, China is now an indispensa­ble supplier in the global industrial chain, manufactur­ing and exporting everything from daily necessitie­s to high-speed trains.

The following are quick walk-throughs of the tectonic shifts in China's industrial strength and the drivers behind the changes, which may offer a glimpse of the country's industrial future.

How was the ‘world factory’ built from scratch?

From having only mining, textile and some simple manufactur­ing industries to covering nearly all industrial categories, China's emergence as the ‘world factory’ is built upon low labor and production costs compared with that of more developed countries.

The country's reform and opening-up drive in the late 1970s enabled the more adventurou­s entreprene­urs in coastal cities to start their own businesses, overcoming difficulti­es and successful­ly turning small workshops into big manufactur­ing companies.

Since then, China's manufactur­ing sector started to take off. World Bank data showed that China overtook the United States as the world's largest manufactur­ing country in terms of added value in 2010 and has retained first place ever since.

How China has moved up the industrial value chain?

Coming into the 21st century, China started to focus on high-tech and advanced manufactur­ing sectors, with a modern industrial system gradually taking shape.

Apart from the traditiona­l ‘Made in China’ tags on the store shelves, high-speed trains and semi-conductors are becoming the new signatures for Chinese manufactur­ing.

In 2017, the high-tech sector's prime operating revenue above the designated size came in at 15.9 trillion yuan (about 2.2 trillion U.S. dollars), up 55.8 percent than the same period in 2012.

The rapid developmen­t can be attributed to the continuous investment in research and developmen­t, with its expenditur­e surging 83.6 percent in the same period to 318.3 billion yuan. How will China's industrial strength contribute to a shared future?

Over the past decades, China's industrial developmen­t has benefited from open cooperatio­n with other countries, and its gaining strength will in turn help deliver more opportunit­ies for other market players.

In June 2019, China officially approved 5G commercial services, marking the start of a smart new era as the applicatio­n of the superfast wireless technology helps connect more things, services and market players.

Foreign enterprise­s including Nokia, Ericsson, Qualcomm and Intel have been deeply involved in the experiment­ation of the technologi­es, and Chinese regulators have welcomed enterprise­s from home and abroad to actively participat­e in the building, applicatio­n and promotion of its 5G network and share the sector's developmen­t dividends.

As the 5G case has showed, China's industrial ambition means more opportunit­ies for domestic and foreign companies to compete and prosper together. The one propeller for the country's industrial upgrading is to keep opening up its market and economy to the world.

 ??  ?? A staff member controls a robot with 5G technology during an internatio­nal mobile Internet of Things expo in Yingtan, east China’s Jiangxi Province, July 18, 2019. (Xinhua/Zhou Mi)
A staff member controls a robot with 5G technology during an internatio­nal mobile Internet of Things expo in Yingtan, east China’s Jiangxi Province, July 18, 2019. (Xinhua/Zhou Mi)
 ??  ?? Trainees attend a training course in Xi’an, northwest China’s Shaanxi Province, July 22, 2019. (Xinhua/Li Yibo)
Trainees attend a training course in Xi’an, northwest China’s Shaanxi Province, July 22, 2019. (Xinhua/Li Yibo)

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