People’s well-being tops Xi’s agenda
President stresses key guiding principle in discussions during the two sessions
Tashi Dorje, a national legislator from Qinghai province, was excited when talking about his meeting with President Xi Jinping during the two sessions that concluded last week in Beijing.
When Xi took part in discussions with the province’s deputies to the 13th National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislature, on March 7, Tashi Dorje told Xi about the development of his hometown in the Yushu Tibetan autonomous prefecture, which was hit by a 7.1-magnitude earthquake about 11 years ago. The disaster flattened a town and claimed more than 2,600 lives.
“I have been paying attention to Yushu’s post-quake recovery all these years,” Xi said. He recalled his visit to Yushu after the earthquake in June 2010, when he was vice-president. “I flew directly to Yushu. I went to a village more than 4,000 meters above sea level. The damage there was serious.”
Tashi Dorje told Xi that great changes have taken place in his hometown. After the earthquake, the people of Yushu quickly rebuilt their homes, and all the rural people in the prefecture have been lifted out of poverty. “Now the streets of Yushu are cleaner, the houses are better and the milk tea is sweeter.”
Xi asked in detail about people’s livelihoods in the prefecture, and said he is confident Yushu will develop even better amid the nation’s efforts to strive for high-quality growth.
Every year when China holds the annual sessions of the NPC and the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, the top political advisory body, Xi always joins other legislators and political advisers in discussing issues of national importance, such as poverty alleviation, environmental protection, reform and opening-up, and technological innovation.
And during this year’s two sessions, he talked more about “people’s wellbeing” and “high-quality development”, and urged officials to stick to the people-centered philosophy and enable the results of high-quality growth to meet people’s aspirations for a better life.
He told the legislators from Qinghai province that high-quality development remains the theme for China’s social and economic growth in the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) period and beyond, and that it matters to the overall situation of the country’s socialist modernization drive.
He further explained that pursuing the high-quality development path calls for upholding the people-centered development philosophy and sticking to innovative, coordinated, green, open and shared growth. It is not only related to economics, but covers all aspects of socioeconomic development.
Liu Shijin, deputy director of the Economic Affairs Committee of the CPPCC National Committee, said that with the growing prosperity in recent years, people have more diversified requirements for living a better life.
China’s pursuit of high-quality development aims to further improve people’s living conditions not only in the economic and cultural aspects, but also in terms of their living environment, Liu said.
When Xi met legislators from the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, environmental conservation was among the main topics of discussion.
Xi has always stressed a “holistic approach” to conserving mountains, rivers, forests, farmland, lakes and grasslands to achieve sustainable growth. This time, he added deserts to the list of priorities.
Top-level design and comprehensive measures are needed to protect the ecosystems in mountains, rivers, forests, farmlands, lakes, grasslands and deserts, the president said.
Zhou Yizhe, an NPC deputy from Inner Mongolia who works at a tree farm, told Xi that he used to be a logger, but now works as a forest ranger. The tree farm where he works has completely abandoned timber felling, and has shifted its focus to environmental protection.
Zhou said that more wild animals are coming to the tree farm now, and research has indicated that the ecosystem in the forests and wetlands has greatly improved.
“Your identity shift from a logger to a forest ranger epitomizes our country’s transformation in industrial structures,” Xi said after hearing Zhou’s story.
Highlighting the concept of “green GDP”, Xi said that maintaining a good environment is of enormous value. He called on Inner Mongolia to continue to fight pollution and improve the environment in both urban and rural areas.
As the COVID-19 pandemic still rages globally and China is also facing the risk of the resurgence of the virus, Xi stressed giving priority to safeguarding people’s health when he joined discussions with national political advisers from the education, medical and health sectors in a joint group meeting on March 6.
Since the outbreak started, Xi has required “putting people first” and “putting people’s lives foremost” in the fight against the virus. As China has made strategic achievements in epidemic control, he urged efforts to accelerate the implementation of the Healthy China Initiative, with an emphasis on major diseases and problems that matter to people’s health.
During discussions with legislators and political advisers, Xi underlined the need to make consistent efforts to solve the problems that matter to people’s livelihoods, including employment, education, social security, healthcare and housing, and improve the accessibility of public services.
Efforts should also be made to advance coordinated development between urban and rural areas and fully carry out the rural vitalization strategy, in order to improve the living conditions of urban and rural residents, he said.
Ma Shanxiang, a community worker in Jiangbei district of Chongqing, said he was impressed by Xi’s dedication to people’s welfare. The president knows very well what people are concerned about and what they need, Ma said.
Xi attaches a great deal of importance to employment, which is the top concern for people in order to ensure stable livelihoods, said Liu Wenxin, chairman of Wenxin Xinyang Tea Company Ltd in Xinyang, Henan province.
Meanwhile, a key meeting presided over by President Xi on March 15 outlined steps to bolster oversight of the economy supported by internet platforms, which includes tech giants and e-commerce sites, while underlining the need to enable the healthy growth of private businesses in the sector.
The meeting of the Central Committee for Financial and Economic Affairs also mapped out a host of measures that would help China to peak its carbon emissions by 2030 and attain carbon neutrality by 2060.
With China’s internet economy at a crucial stage of growth, it is important to strengthen weak areas in the sector in both the long and short terms, said Xi.
He urged steps to create an environment for innovation, solve prominent problems in the sector and enable its growth in a regulated, healthy and sustained manner.
The meeting highlighted the increasingly important role of the internet economy in overall social and economic development, noting that the sector has helped raise efficiency in the allocation of resources, promote the transformation of technologies and industries and improve national governance.
However, the sector is witnessing certain problems, with some businesses undergoing unregulated growth and faced with various risks, according to a summary of the meeting.
It is important to establish and improve a governance system for the internet economy and clarify the rules and bottom line before stepping up oversight and enabling the orderly growth of the sector, the summary said.
The meeting reiterated the need to promote fair competition, fight monopolies and guard against the unregulated expansion of capital.
The government must improve its capacity in conducting oversight and strengthening its anti-monopoly capabilities while ensuring that all financial activities are brought under the scrutiny of financial regulators, the summary said.
At the meeting, the important role of the internet economy in promoting high-quality growth and high-quality living standards was stressed.
Meeting participants also emphasized that China’s goals of peaking its carbon emissions by 2030 and attaining carbon neutrality by 2060 are crucial elements for sustained development of the nation and for nurturing a community with a shared future for mankind.
It is important to identify and control risks and properly handle the relationship between cutting emissions and ensuring the security of energy, industry and supply chains, food security and the normal life of the public, the summary said.
The country will encourage the growth of green manufacturing, improve energy-saving standards in the construction sector and expedite the development of green and lowcarbon transportation methods.
The meeting highlighted the need to refine policies in finance, taxation, land use and government procurement to better enable green and lowcarbon development, saying that trading of carbon emission rights must be moved forward as quickly as possible and green finance must be actively promoted.