China Daily

A new historic starting point

Further reform will prompt measures to balance interests, release market potential and strengthen the rule of law

- CHI FULIN The author is president of the China Institute for Reform and Developmen­t and the article is excerpts from his speech at the Eighth China-Singapore Forum on Oct 23, 2013.

History and our experience­s over the past more than 30 years show that the key to achieving national rejuvenati­on, prosperity and the well-being of the people is to rely on reform and the continuous release of reform dividends.

China’s reform has entered the “deep water area” and it will be a profound, complicate­d and arduous process never before seen in history. Economic restructur­ing, social transforma­tion, administra­tive transition are dependent on major breakthrou­ghs in reforms, but these require making headway in adjusting major interest relations.

The Third Plenary Session of the 18th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China shows determinat­ion and courage to promote the necessary comprehens­ive reforms.

Giving priority to people’s livelihood­s and forming a reasonable interest structure are priorities, but these will involve major adjustment­s to interest relations and a major breakthrou­gh in income distributi­on.

To solve the problem of the imbalance of interests, we should increase the incomes of urban and rural residents, especially lowincome groups. The report of the 18th CPC National Congress set the goal that by 2020, the country’s GDP and per capita annual income of urban and rural residents should be double 2010 levels.

This goal can be achieved through substantiv­e breakthrou­ghs in income distributi­on reform. Judging from internatio­nal experience, the expansion of the middle-income group depends on the actual process of demographi­c urbanizati­on. Urbanizati­on will bring about rapid developmen­t of the service industry, resulting in quick expansion of the middle-income group. But this will require the integratio­n of migrant workers into cities so that they become service consumers.

Another necessary reform is adjusting the relationsh­ip between the government and market in order to release market vitality. Past experience shows that this relationsh­ip has a bearing on overall reform. If well handled, it will not only ensure healthy economic developmen­t, but also bring about social harmony and help eliminate corruption. Otherwise, a tense relationsh­ip will present many difficulti­es to economic restructur­ing, social transforma­tion and the changing of government functions.

The prominent problem at present is the government’s excessive administra­tive interventi­on in microecono­mic activities. Therefore, a more rational relationsh­ip between the government and market is needed to allow the market to fulfill its basic role in allocating resources. A competitiv­e market system offers the biggest reform dividends.

In this regard, we need to deepen price reform with the pricing of resources as the focus, promote financial reform with the marketizat­ion of interest rates and exchange rates as the focus, expand the space for social capital investment with promoting reform of monopoly industries as the focus, and adjust and optimize the allocation of Stateowned capital with the focus on public welfare.

Whatever steps are taken to deepen economic, social, political, cultural and ecological reform, or to promote a new round of overall opening-up, there is an urgent need for legal and institutio­nalized guarantees and strengthen­ing of the rule of law. Comprehens­ively deepening reform requires accelerati­ng the constructi­on of a law-based government and a fair and just society. Legislativ­e guarantees for a modern market economy need to be establishe­d. A modern economy is market economy based on the rule of law. A market economy lacking the rule of law is not only unfair, it is also unsustaina­ble.

Adapting to the changing situation and regulating the reform program through legislatio­n will not only effectivel­y guarantee market equity, it will also effectivel­y prevent distortion­s of reform. A fair legal environmen­t is an important guarantee for social stability and healthy developmen­t. Reform of the judicial system should be accelerate­d to increase judicial transparen­cy, and ensure the independen­ce of the courts and an impartial judiciary.

Meanwhile, the constructi­on of a law-based government is a fundamenta­l step toward good governance. The legislatio­n concerning finance, taxation, government purchases and the allocation of public resources must be strengthen­ed. Only with administra­tion according to law will the government achieve the goal of building a lawbased government by 2020.

Deepening comprehens­ive reform requires further openingup. But prompting reforms with further opening-up will face more challenges. However, releasing the dividends of further reforms will benefit not only 1.3 billion Chinese people, but also regional economies that have close economic and trade ties with China. China’s ongoing transforma­tion and comprehens­ive opening-up will let the world share the “China dividend”, especially regional economies.

The Chinese Dream is the realizatio­n of common prosperity for the 1.3 billion Chinese. Market-oriented reform over the past 35 years has successful­ly made China rank among middle-income countries, comprehens­ively deepening reform will enable the country to stride forward toward the rank of high-income countries.

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