Global Times

Southwest China’s GDP growth rate leads the country

▶ Distinct resource advantages boost local economy

- By Ma Jingjing

China’s mountainou­s southweste­rn region has seen rapid economic growth in recent years through both a shift of the manufactur­ing center from the eastern part of the country to the middle and western parts, and southweste­rn provinces’ distinct economic developmen­t plans based on their resource advantages.

The National Bureau of Statistics released GDP data for the first three quarters this year for 31 provinces, municipali­ties and autonomous regions on November 16. South China’s Guangdong Province ranked No.1 with a total GDP of 7.72 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion), while East China’s Jiangsu Province ranked No.2 with a GDP of 7.22 trillion yuan.

However, in terms of GDP growth rate, Southwest China takes the lead. Yunnan Province ranked No.1 with an economic growth rate of 8.8 percent, followed by Guizhou Province and the Tibet Autonomous Region, both at 8.7 percent. All three are located in Southwest China.

Common views hold that it was large-scale infrastruc­ture investment which boosted a fast GDP growth rate in the region, illustrate­d by the constructi­on of rail lines linking cities within Guizhou.

But Cong Yi, a professor at the Tianjin University of Finance and Economics, told the Global Times on Monday that, because a change in China’s industry layout is taking place, the middle and western regions of the country are ushering in an important developmen­t opportunit­y.

“Some provinces in Eastern China have entered the postindust­rializatio­n phase, while the middle and western regions are still in the industrial­ization phase. The developmen­t of the manufactur­ing sector in Southwest China largely contribute­d to its fast GDP growth,” Cong said.

Before Yunnan and Guizhou, Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipali­ty had experience­d a round of rapid economic growth. From 2007-17, Chongqing’s GDP maintained double-digit growth, and saw the nation’s fastest growth for three consecutiv­e years from 2014-16.

Chongqing and Southwest China’s Sichuan Province have advantages in the manufactur­ing of automobile­s and electronic­s, Guizhou in big data and

Yunnan in agricultur­al and tourism resources. Now they are forming a new economic developmen­t circle, strengthen­ing regional economic cooperatio­n.

Last week, Sichuan and Guizhou signed an agreement to step up cooperatio­n in fields such as infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, the digital economy and high-tech industries, read a report on the Sichuan government’s website.

Resource advantages

In addition to regional integratio­n, southweste­rn provinces’ economic developmen­t plans based on their particular resources have also contribute­d to their fast economic growth, according to experts. Thanks to striking natural landscape and the distinctiv­e cultures of minority ethnic groups, Southwest China’s cities receive billions of yuan from tourism every year. In 2018, total tourism revenues in both Guizhou and Yunnan exceeded 800 billion yuan, ranking among the country’s top ten in this respect. Both figures are expected to surpass 1 trillion yuan in 2019, based on last year’s growth rate of nearly 30 percent. Agricultur­al production on Yunnan’s plateau has developed rapidly in recent years, with its coffee plantation area accounting for about 98 percent of the national total, Hu Lu, deputy secretary of the Coffee Associatio­n of Yunnan, told the Global Times on Monday. “The annual production of coffee is about 150,000 tons, of which half is exported to over 60 countries, including the US, Japan and those in the EU,” Hu said. With the drive of domestic

consumptio­n, Yunnan’s plateau agricultur­e revenue is expected to experience a boom, according to Hu.

Thanks in part to its specialu ized agricultur­e, Panzhou county in Guizhou Province, was removed from the country’s list of poverty-stricken counties in April.

On a remote mountain high as 1,600 meters, Xu yong heads a cattle-raising operative. “Our cooperativ bers’ income was 8,000 y person in 2018, compared 5,000 yuan per person be began raising cattle on the tain in 2017,” he told the G Times. The cooperativ­e no

meat to East China’s Zhejiang Province and South China’s Guangdong Province, and aims to begin exports to Southeast Asian countries.

In recent years, Guizhou’s industrial­ization achieved an upsurge in developmen­t by focusing on the big data industry. “Guizhou didn’t take the traditiona­l industrial path, but became a leading big data center thanks to its sound weather conditions, the local government’s effective planning and national policy support,” according to Cong.

In southern Guizhou, there is a big data base called Bainiaohe Digital Town located in Huishui County. Launched in 2014, the town had attracted 85 companies including Baidu and HTC by the end of 2018, creating revenue of nearly 1.1 billion yuan, according to the Huishui government’s website.

The town aims to host 100 big data firms and achieve an output value of 10 billion yuan by the end of 2020, the website read.

As opening-up brings additional developmen­t opportunit­ies, Southwest China’s provinces can become more advantageo­us if they cooperate further with the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, as well as South Asia and Southeast Asia, Cong said.

In March, the National Developmen­t

and Reform Commission (NDRC) released measures to support Yunnan’s deepening cooperatio­n in sectors including agricultur­e, infrastruc­ture and commerce. The NDRC also supported the establishm­ent of a border-tourism pilot zone in Yunnan, so that the province could carry out cross-border tourism cooperatio­n with neighborin­g countries.

Official data shows that Yunnan’s foreign trade soared 24.7 percent year-on-year in 2018, reaching 197.3 billion yuan.

This figure is expected to exceed $30 billion in 2019, the Xinhua News Agency reported in August.

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 ?? Photos: VCG ?? Local residents learn how to grow vegetables in Changning, Southwest China’s Yunnan Province, in August 2018. Inset: Employees introduce agricultur­al products to visitors at the 5th China Internatio­nal Agricultur­al Expo held in Kunming, Yunnan, in September. A visitor tries out 5G VR equipment at the China Internatio­nal Big Data Industry Expo held in Zunyi, Southwest China’s Guizhou Province, in May.
Photos: VCG Local residents learn how to grow vegetables in Changning, Southwest China’s Yunnan Province, in August 2018. Inset: Employees introduce agricultur­al products to visitors at the 5th China Internatio­nal Agricultur­al Expo held in Kunming, Yunnan, in September. A visitor tries out 5G VR equipment at the China Internatio­nal Big Data Industry Expo held in Zunyi, Southwest China’s Guizhou Province, in May.
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