The Herald (Zimbabwe)

CPC introduces new management methods

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NANJING. - A big data system to manage Communist Party of China (CPC) cadres has been introduced in the city of Huai’an in eastern China’s Jiangsu Province.

Informatio­n on each of the city’s 12 000 cadres has been compiled under 356 data fields.

The system will keep confidenti­al data used for cadre selection, covering detailed personal informatio­n and work performanc­e history. It was developed by the Huai’an municipal CPC organisati­on department.

“If there is a vacancy, the system is fast to screen all candidates with qualificat­ions matching the position. In the past, people depended on their connection­s to recommend someone they know,” said Zhang Xu, an official with the department.

The database pools informatio­n that used to be kept separately by 20 department­s. The system puts cadres in a colour grouping system, using red, orange and green. Zhang said red showed cadres that had received disciplina­ry punishment­s or warnings, yellow indicated cadres accused of discipline violations but with no ruling made, and green indicated a clean record that could suggest a cadre was suitable for promotion.

CPC organisati­ons from both within and without Jiangsu have come to Huai’an to learn from its experiment.

Big data is the latest method used by the CPC to motivate and select outstandin­g CPC cadres, while punishing those implicated in corruption.

In addition to the big data technology, China’s first commercial quantum private communicat­ion network is being piloted by the Party and government. The network provides secure telephone and data communicat­ion services in Jinan, capital of east China’s Shandong Province.

Alongside technology, the CPC has been quick to embrace more subtle methods as part of its management strategy. One such method is the introducti­on of special centres to educate grassroots members on appropriat­e behaviour. In the city of Zibo in Shandong, grassroots Party members are now required to receive a “health check” at Party education centres.

Shi Caihua (52) is among 200 000 Party members who have received the health check.

“I was asked whether I had observed all social norms, such as protecting the community environmen­t, not illegally parking and not dumping garbage,” said the community worker who serves 400 households. Shi was embarrasse­d by the health check as she had been using a public corner of her residentia­l community as her own vegetable garden.

Sure enough, the day after her Party purity education she removed the fences and pulled up her vegetables.

Similar Party management techniques have also been tried in Huzhou in eastern China’s Zhejiang Province.

Such pilots are expected to rejuvenate the Party and innovate its organisati­on and management. The CPC has introduced a string of new solutions to manage the 4.5 million groups that organise its 89 million members.

They include standardis­ing Party working procedures, introducin­g a performanc­e appraisal system and publishing informatio­n via bulletin boards and the Internet. - Xinhua.

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