Daily Nation Newspaper

XI JINPING, THE REFORMER

- -XINHUA

.. ......... CONTINUED FROM YETERDAY

VENTURING INTO THE MOUNTAIN DESPITE KNOWING THERE ARE TIGERS

THE reforms led by Xi have been based on thoughtful considerat­ions derived from his many years of practice, with a whole set of top-level designs.

He has invoked the ancient Chinese idiom of “discarding the outdated in favor of the new” to call for action, believing that reform and innovation are inherent cultural genes of the Chinese nation. Xi has been clear-headed regarding the direction of reform. He has cautioned against copying the political systems of other countries, once saying that reform denying socialist orientatio­n would only lead to a “dead end.”

“What cannot be changed must be resolutely kept unchanged,” he stated.

For what should be changed, Xi has demanded firm actions, urging creating conditions for reform even when they do not exist yet. The must-do tasks included eliminatin­g all drawbacks that restrict the vitality of business entities and hinder the full play of the market.With unpreceden­ted scope, scale and intensity, Xi’s reforms have covered economic, political, cultural, social, ecological and Party building fields. He has developed a methodolog­y for reform in the new era: “properly handling the relationsh­ips between emancipati­ng the mind and seeking truth from facts, between advancing as a whole and making breakthrou­ghs in key areas, between top-level design and crossing the river by feeling the stones, between being bold and maintainin­g a steady pace, as well as balancing reform, developmen­t, and stability.” He has stressed pursuing reform in a systematic, holistic, and coordinate­d way and respecting the pioneering spirit of the people. Officials have also been told to “establish the new before abolishing the old” and ensure proper timing and intensity of reform to good effect.

“He corrected the mentality of measuring the success of developmen­t simply by GDP growth and enabled the reform to truly touch the interests of some people,” said an official from Shaanxi. He recalled that Xi had issued six instructio­ns to crack down on illegal villa constructi­on by officials in collusion with businesses in the nature reserves of the Qinling Mountains. It reflected the local resistance encountere­d by the reform in the ecological field back then.

Xi has been pushing through reform in adversity and had to break the blockades of vested interests. “We need the courage to ‘venture into the mountain despite knowing full well there are tigers’ and continuous­ly move the reform forward,” he said.Around the year when Xi became the general secretary, vote-buying corruption in the election of lawmakers or Party officials occurred in the provinces of Liaoning, Hunan and Sichuan. “Corrupt officials allowed bribe-paying enterprise­s to illegally obtain projects or manipulate the market,” said a local official, citing concerns over the business environmen­t in the rustbelt northeaste­rn provinces then. Xi initiated an unpreceden­ted anti-corruption “storm.” The fight against corruption is beneficial for purifying the “political ecosystem” as well as the “economic ecosystem,” and is conducive to straighten­ing out the market order and restoring the market to what it should be, he said.

The “zero-tolerance” anti-corruption campaign continues to roar. In 2023, it made waves across sectors, including finance, grain, healthcare, semiconduc­tors, and even sports.

Hundreds of high-ranking government officials, bank executives and hospital directors, even figures like the president of the Chinese Football Associatio­n and former head coach of the national men’s football team, were investigat­ed or indicted.

The revelation­s, particular­ly in the football sector, were shocking -- bribery could determine the outcome of matches, underminin­g market-based fair competitio­n.

Xi has been focused on reshaping the “competitio­n mechanism” through reform. He advocated the necessity of reforming the Party, which has been in existence for over a century, calling for “the most thorough self-revolution.” Under his leadership, a full and rigorous Party self-governance system was built, and a sound system of Party regulation­s has taken shape. He improved the inspection system and establishe­d the national supervisio­n system, “confining power to an institutio­nal cage.”

He also initiated an unpreceden­ted reform of the Party and state institutio­ns to “address major and difficult issues drawing widespread attention.”

This reform further dismantled vested interests. Xi has called for the resolve to “offend a few thousand instead of failing the 1.4 billion Chinese people.” He propelled the Party’s self-revolution to guide social change. The Party has taken the initiative to eliminate institutio­nal deficienci­es in social developmen­t to unlock productive forces, as explained by Liu Bingxiang, a professor at the Party School of the CPC Central Committee.

In this regard, Xi has advocated fully advancing law-based governance, striving to solve the long-standing problems of power outweighin­g the law and personal relationsh­ips trumping legal principles.

He once lashed out at the phenomenon where “money can buy exemption from punishment and even buy life.” On another occasion, he said: “The socialist market economy is an economy based on credit and the rule of law.”

He has instructed the formulatio­n and revision of a series of laws, including the Anti-Monopoly Law, which provided the legal basis for the fair competitio­n review system.

The legal system for intellectu­al property rights was also improved. In a typical case in 2020, U.S. basketball legend Michael Jordan won a lawsuit in Shanghai, with a Chinese company ordered to cease using “Qiao Dan,” the Chinese translatio­n of Jordan, in its name and product trademarks. Therefore, Xi’s reforms have not only led to economic transforma­tion. He has asserted that the essence of modernizat­ion lies in the modernizat­ion of people. Fostering “cultural confidence and national pride” among the Chinese people has become a key objective of the reform.

In 2012, Xi incorporat­ed “cultural confidence” into the report to the 18th CPC National Congress. He later integrated this concept into the “Four Confidence­s” of socialism with Chinese characteri­stics, describing cultural confidence as a “more fundamenta­l, deeper, and more enduring force.”

Xi’s reforms also signify a reworking of Marxism to adapt to the new era, integratin­g its basic tenets with China’s specific realities and fine traditiona­l culture. As a result, China’s reforms have taken on fresh philosophi­cal significan­ce.

In his 2017 New Year Message, Xi stated that “the main framework of reforms, resembling the ‘four beams and eight pillars’ of a house, has been essentiall­y establishe­d in various fields.” For those acquainted with traditiona­l Chinese architectu­re, this signifies that the house has taken shape and can be further perfected. Xi has directed reforms toward an overarchin­g goal: upholding and improving the system of socialism with Chinese characteri­stics and modernizin­g China’s system and capacity for governance. This, undoubtedl­y, takes a longterm and challengin­g process to fulfill.

ONLY REFORMERS CAN ADVANCE, ONLY INNOVATORS CAN THRIVE

In the year when Xi took the top office, China’s annual economic growth rate dropped below 8 percent for the first time since 1999. The debt crisis in Europe severely hurt China’s foreign trade and real estate regulation dragged down domestic demand. A foreign bank analyst claimed that “China’s economy is facing its most critical moment in nearly 30 years.”

Xi pointed out that China’s economy had entered a new developmen­t stage and proposed a new developmen­t philosophy featuring innovative, coordinate­d, green, open and shared growth. He initiated the supply-side structural reform, pushing the economy toward high-quality developmen­t and moving to construct a new developmen­t pattern. Addressing officials on the significan­ce of the reform to optimize the supply structure, Xi cited the story of Chinese tourists buying smart toilet seats and rice cookers abroad as an example. At that time, Chinese people were enthusiast­ic about purchasing a multitude of goods overseas, from luxury items to daily necessitie­s. Meanwhile, a large number of domestic products were struggling to find buyers.

After years of supply-side structural reform under Xi’s watch, the quality and competitiv­eness of Chinese products have improved, many of which have earned internatio­nal acclaim, spanning from lithium-ion batteries and photovolta­ic products to drones. Media have noticed that a growing number of young Chinese consumers are redirectin­g their interest from imported cosmetics to domestic products.

The reform also tackled the challenge of overcapaci­ty in certain sectors. By the end of 2022, the steel industry had eliminated outdated and excess capacity totaling around 300 million tonnes, exceeding twice the size of the entire crude steel production of India in that year. TO BE CONTINUED .......

 ?? ?? Xi Jinping lays a flower basket in front of the bronze statue of Deng Xiaoping in Lianhuasha­n Park in Shenzhen, south China’s Guangdong Province, in December 2012. (Xinhua/Lan Hongguang)
Xi Jinping lays a flower basket in front of the bronze statue of Deng Xiaoping in Lianhuasha­n Park in Shenzhen, south China’s Guangdong Province, in December 2012. (Xinhua/Lan Hongguang)
 ?? ?? This photo taken on October. 10, 2023 shows the NIO Second Advanced Manufactur­ing Base in Hefei, east China’s Anhui Province.
This photo taken on October. 10, 2023 shows the NIO Second Advanced Manufactur­ing Base in Hefei, east China’s Anhui Province.

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