China Daily Global Edition (USA)

A true community of equality and prosperity

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The changing pattern of global economic developmen­t has given rise to new proposals of internatio­nal relations and cooperatio­n. From Davos to Boao, a community with a shared future for humankind is China’s proposal as it develops into an influentia­l global power amid historic changes. China’s proposal has the potential to promote global developmen­t in a more equitable and fair manner.

According to President Xi Jinping’s report to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, the Party seeks happiness for the Chinese people and the progress of all humankind. Thanks to the greater say it enjoys in internatio­nal relations today for its decades of arduous endeavors and remarkable achievemen­ts for the betterment of humankind, China made the proposal to ensure that all countries jointly determine the future of the world and, together, they make internatio­nal rules, manage world affairs, and share the fruits of global developmen­t.

To guarantee the principle is effective, all countries should negotiate on an equal footing, following the standards of sharing, win-win cooperatio­n, mutual learning, and green developmen­t to build a peaceful, secure, prosperous, open, and beautiful world.

The advancemen­t or regression of peace and developmen­t depends on whether or not all countries agree to build a community of a shared future. Henry Kissinger, former United States secretary of state, said that throughout history, peace could be maintained in a region but never worldwide. So, all countries should work together to create mutual demand and prosperity in order to counter the anti-globalizat­ion and protection­ist voices in some economies and make the entire world a peaceful and secure place.

The US alone did not solve the developmen­t problem because the obstacles to developmen­t are different in developing countries and developed coun- tries — developing countries need to fight poverty, while developed countries have to nardevelop row the wealth gap.

But China found a new road to economic developmen­t, becoming a new driver of emerging markets, and helping increase the say of developing countries in global governance and rule-making. Chinese culture played a vital role in that developmen­t because it attaches high value to harmonious co-existence and sharing. China is sharing those experience­s through the Belt and Road Initiative, which allows countries to negotiate as equals, and share resources to co-build infrastruc­ture, and share the benefits of cooperatio­n.

The rise of protection­ism and populism in some economies poses a challenge to globalizat­ion, and could lead to confrontat­ion. To nip this devastatin­g nascent trend in the bud, China has been supporting openness and win-win cooperatio­n, as it knows only through cooperatio­n can humankind truly progress. China has been trying to promote stable developmen­t and mutual prosperity through cooperatio­n projects, including those in building infrastruc­ture facilities.

In contrast, the Cold-War mentality forces countries to join alliances or divide the internatio­nal community into friends and foes, a concept that deserves to be consigned to the dustbin of history. The world needs a new order which is fairer, accords equal respect to all countries and promotes cooperatio­n. These are times of peaceful and friendly communicat­ion and negotiatio­n, not confrontat­ion— of partnershi­ps, not alliances.

The Belt and Road Initiative is aimed at building a community of shared future for humankind, President Xi said at the CPC in Dialogue with World Political Parties High-Level Meeting in November last year. This principle has been approved by the internatio­nal community and included in a United Nations resolution, which speaks volumes of the importance of China’s proposal.

The world needs a new order which is fairer, accords equal respect to all countries and promotes cooperatio­n. These are times of peaceful and friendly communicat­ion and negotiatio­n, not confrontat­ion— of partnershi­ps, not alliances.

The author is director of the Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs, Renmin University of China.

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