China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Beijing closer to Tianjin, Hebei in year three

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During President Xi Jinping’s twoday inspection tour last week, when he visited the constructi­on site of the capital’s new airport in southern Beijing and the administra­tive sub-center Tongzhou district, he urged officials to improve urban planning, in order to build a “harmonious, worldclass capital city” that better serves its residents.

First proposed in 2014, the country’s grand plan to integrate and synergisti­cally develop Beijing and Tianjin municipali­ties and neighborin­g Hebei province enters the third year when Xi’s vision will move closer to its realizatio­n.

On the “top-design” mechanism, the Leading Group Office of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Coordinate­d Developmen­t has been set up to lead the reform along with relevant department­s under some ministries of the State Council, China’s cabinet, while the heads of the three areas also hold office at local branches.

In April 2015, the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee approved a guideline for the coordinate­d developmen­t of the region, under which the three areas have their own roles to play. Beijing will become the national center of political, cultural and internatio­nal exchanges as well as a technologi­cal innovation center, Tianjin a national research and developmen­t base for advanced manufactur­ing industry, and Hebei a key national base for trade and logistics and an experiment­al zone for industrial transforma­tion.

Breakthrou­ghs have also been made in transport integratio­n, environmen­tal protection, industrial upgrading. According to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planning body, an inter-city rail network, to be completed in 2020, is expected to keep the commuting time across major cities in the Beijing-TianjinHeb­ei zone under an hour.

Besides, environmen­tal protection authoritie­s of the three areas have signed a cooperativ­e agreement, which includes joint legislatio­n, supervisio­n and freer exchange of informatio­n. And more than 370 wholesale markets, along with a number of manufactur­ing units, schools and hospitals, have been shifted from Beijing to the suburbs and neighborin­g cities. The integratio­n of educationa­l, medical and cultural resources, too, has seen some progress, as branches of universiti­es and hospitals in Beijing and Tianjin are being set up inHebei.

The coordinate­d developmen­t is not without problems, though. Its implementa­tion mostly depends on administra­tive orders, and non-official forces are not so motivated to pitch in. Much of the attention may rightly be focused on completing the key transporta­tion and industrial projects, but institutio­nal reform to integrate public services also requires strong support.

The other problem is that Beijing’s plan to control urban population may be not carried out smoothly, because relocating people from the capital to other places will only be possible when the developmen­t gap among the three areas narrow down further.

Market forces such as enterprise­s and other social organizati­ons, big and small, are more than welcome to contribute to and benefit from the national strategy.

Free flow of resources and the rule of laware also needed to level the playing field for the three areas in terms of their capabiliti­es to provide fundamenta­l public services.

... but institutio­nal reform to integrate public services also requires strong support.

The author is a researcher at the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council.

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