China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Government to improve ‘weak links’

- By ZHANG YUE and LYUCHANG Contact the writers at zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

The key to expanding demands and creating a proper context for China’s structural reform is to improve its own weak areas.” Premier Li Keqiang

Measures will be put in place by the Chinese government to improve weak links, including poverty alleviatio­n, infrastruc­ture, urban flood prevention and boosting new growth engines to achieve more balanced and effective developmen­t.

The decision was made during the State Council executive meeting on Monday, chaired by Premier Li Keqiang, as he heard a report by the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission on the country’s efforts to improve weak links and measures to be taken down the road.

“The key to expanding demands and creating a proper context for China’s structural reform is to improve its own weak areas,” Li said. “China is still a developing country with huge developmen­t gaps between regions and also between rural and urban areas. We need to work hard to expand effective investment and make stronger efforts at improving weak links.”

Improving the country’s weak links is one of the major tasks of the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20), and was raised during the Central Economic Conference in Beijing in December.

Li said that reducing excess capacity, lowering corporate costs and improving weak links for better livelihood­s of the people will be the government’s core task in 2016, while maintainin­g economic growth within a proper range. It also plays an indispensa­ble role in China’s structural reform.

“Currently, we are still under pressure to maintain stable economic growth and create jobs, and our achievemen­ts in the first half of this year did not come easily,” Li said.

Hydro-engineerin­g and urban flood prevention infrastruc­ture will be enhanced, and another 10 new flood prevention projects will be started this year. A total of 800 billion yuan ($120 billion) will be invested in railway constructi­on, and constructi­on of over 2,000 kilometers of undergroun­d pipeline will commence this year. Public facilities for the elderly will also be improved. Further support will be offered in developing agricultur­e, technologi­cal and equipment upgrading as well as nurturing new forces to drive the economy.

Also, areas such as civil airports, telecommun­ication and oil-gas exploratio­n are to be open to private investors.

Han Xiaoping, chief informatio­n officer at China Energy Net Consulting Co, an industry consultanc­y in Beijing, said that bringing in social capital benefits both State and private companies in the field of oil and gas exploratio­n.

“Profits in pipeline constructi­on are very stable with long-term returns, so it is very attractive for privately owned enterprise­s. Once the capital is injected, it will not only speed up constructi­on of the pipeline network, but it will diversify ownership and promote the efficiency of the total project,” he said.

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