Daily Nation Newspaper

XI JINPING, THE REFORMER

- ...CONTINUED FROM YESTERDAY -XINHUA

To push forward the supply-side structural reform, Xi is leading by example with foresight. A decade ago, most cars on China’s roads were foreign-brand gasoline vehicles. In 2014, during an inspection of SAIC Motor, a major Chinese carmaker, he emphasized the significan­ce of developing products that cater to diverse needs and highlighte­d the importance of new energy vehicles (NEVs) in strengthen­ing China’s position in the automotive sector.

In the following decade, Xi became a big fan of electric cars, visiting automotive companies, touring laboratori­es, and showing great interest in experienci­ng electric cars.

By the time he visited an NEV company in 2023, the country had already become a global leader in NEV technology. Every three vehicles exported by China included one electric passenger car, and China’s NEV production and sales constitute­d twothirds of the world’s total. The new energy industry is, in fact, part of Xi’s vision of new quality productive forces. The phrase “new quality productive forces” has become a fresh buzzword after Xi talked about it during his recent inspection trips, but he started to promote it much earlier.

Back in the 1970s in the village of Liangjiahe, Xi took the lead in introducin­g biogas-generating facilities to Shaanxi, allowing villagers to use biogas for lighting and cooking, replacing the traditiona­l way of burning wood. This early initiative can be considered an example of leveraging new quality productive forces during that time.In 2024, developing new quality productive forces was written into the government work report for the first time. This is widely believed as the recognitio­n that the economic growth model primarily driven by low-cost labor, extensive yet inefficien­t investment, external demand and excessive resource consumptio­n can

no longer be sustained, and China must actively cultivate new technologi­es, new business models and future industries to enhance the quality and efficiency of developmen­t.

“The concept has provided fresh hope and impetus for China to speed up its economic transforma­tion,” said a column article published in the South China Morning Post.Xi believes that to develop new quality productive forces, it is imperative to further deepen reforms to boost sci-tech innovation. He likened China’s lack of strong innovation capability to the “Achilles’ heel” of an economic giant. New quality productive forces align with Xi’s earlier vision of an innovation-driven developmen­t strategy.“Only reformers can advance, only innovators can thrive, and only those who reform and innovate will prevail,” Xi stressed.

Under his guidance, a slew of pro-innovation measures were rolled out to encourage enterprise­s to intensify research and developmen­t, apply sci-tech research achievemen­ts in the real world, and refine the management of major sci-tech projects. He also pushed for the establishm­ent of a new system for mobilizing resources nationwide to make key technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs.

The effects are evident, with China’s ranking in the Global Innovation Index, published by the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, jumping from 34th in 2012 to 12th last year.

Data issued in 2023 showed

that China in 2022 overtook the United States for the first time as the No. 1 ranked country or territory for contributi­ons to research articles published in the Nature Index group of high-quality natural science journals. Telecom giant Huawei successful­ly launched its new high-end smartphone­s last year, which demonstrat­ed the limited effects of U.S. “extreme pressure” on Chinese high-tech firms. Neverthele­ss, there is yet much work to be done. Xi has cautioned that “basic research is the source of scitech innovation. Although China has made significan­t progress in basic research, the distance with the internatio­nal advanced level remains evident.”

He has called for further support for basic research and original innovation, with a focus on ground-breaking and cutting-edge technologi­es.

UNLEASHING THE POWER OF THE MARKET

When Xi assumed the Party’s top post, two decades had passed since the concept of building a socialist market economy was introduced. However, doing business remained a challengin­g endeavor. In 2014, a lawmaker attending local “two sessions” revealed that a single investment project, from acquiring land to completing all administra­tive approval procedures, required more than 30 government approvals and over a hundred stamps. The entire process took a minimum of 272 working days.

Xi strongly opposes cumbersome government approvals. While working in Fuzhou of Fujian, he pioneered a mechanism that enabled all procedures for investment project approval to be completed in a single building. As the country’s top leader, he advocated that “the market plays the decisive role in resource allocation and the government plays its role better.”Over the years, the State Council has canceled or delegated to lower-level authoritie­s the power of administra­tive approval for over 1,000 items and slashed the number of investment items subject to central government approval by over 90 percent.

“Let the vitality that creates wealth burst forth, and let the power of the market be fully unleashed,” said Xi.

The results of the reforms are remarkable, as China was ranked by the World Bank as one of the top 10 economies with the most notable improvemen­t in the business environmen­t for two years in a row.

In January 2019, constructi­on started for Tesla’s Shanghai Gigafactor­y, and the automaker started delivering the first batch of China-made Model 3 electric cars built at the factory in December 2019, a pace of developmen­t praised by Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Xi is well-acquainted with the challengin­g situation faced by private enterprise­s. He instructed the establishm­ent of a private economy developmen­t bureau under the country’s top economic planner to provide assistance to private enterprise­s facing difficulti­es.Xi also emphasized the need to promote financial reforms to facilitate financing for private enterprise­s. He stressed the importance of encouragin­g private capital to enter industries and sectors where entry is not explicitly prohibited by laws and regulation­s.Under Xi’s instructio­n, the system of a negative list for market access was comprehens­ively implemente­d, allowing entry into areas not explicitly prohibited by the list. By the end of 2023, the number of registered business entities nationwide reached 184 million, more than three times the figure in 2012.

From 2012 to 2023, the number of private enterprise­s in China more than quadrupled, and the proportion of private enterprise­s in the total number of enterprise­s increased from less than 80 percent to over 92 percent.

TO BE CONTINUED...

 ?? ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, takes part in a deliberati­on with his fellow deputies from the delegation of Jiangsu Province at the second session of the 14th National People’s Congress (NPC) in Beijing, capital of China, March 5, 2024.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, takes part in a deliberati­on with his fellow deputies from the delegation of Jiangsu Province at the second session of the 14th National People’s Congress (NPC) in Beijing, capital of China, March 5, 2024.
 ?? ?? A woman makes Miao embroidery at Shibadong Village in Xiangxi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, central China’s Hunan Province, Oct. 11, 2023. (Xinhua/ Chen Sihan)
A woman makes Miao embroidery at Shibadong Village in Xiangxi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, central China’s Hunan Province, Oct. 11, 2023. (Xinhua/ Chen Sihan)

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