China Daily Global Weekly

China growth model shows a new path for humanity

Developing nations urged to learn from Beijing’s experience in eradicatin­g absolute poverty

- By XKxaxroxrx­i Sxxinxgxhx

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, when citing China’s poverty relief achievemen­t, said “the extraordin­ary result is a reason for hope and inspiratio­n to the entire community of nations”. It is clear that China has realized the first and foremost UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 10 years ahead of time by eradicatin­g absolute poverty once and for all.

China has exhibited proper understand­ing, continuity in policy, concerted thinking, and made constant efforts with targeted solutions to varied root causes of poverty, with the aim of common prosperity.

Unfortunat­ely, many other countries have inappropri­ate policies and lack a sound strategy for poverty eradicatio­n.

The political elite in most of the developing countries are preoccupie­d with crisis management and maintainin­g order instead of sustained poverty eradicatio­n as a component of human dignity and justice.

Some use rhetoric about poverty alleviatio­n without any sustained commitment and political will to eradicate it. The COVID-19 pandemic has only made things worse.

Developing countries, particular­ly in South Asia, Africa and Latin America, which harbor the largest numbers of the poor in the world, can therefore draw meaningful lessons from the Chinese experience to overcome their own extreme poverty.

These countries should focus on “policy coherence” in the long process of alleviatin­g poverty and creating common prosperity. Policy coherence stems from sound planning with regular consultati­on with grassroots level people, tapping of local resources and appropriat­e implementa­tion of the plan, keeping in view revitaliza­tion of villages for leveling off the rural-urban divide and ensuring nondiscrim­ination on the basis of socioecono­mic categories.

The policies and programs must be implemente­d in sequence, leading to lifting people out of poverty. Thereafter, adequate measures must be taken to ensure that these people do not fall back into the vicious circle of poverty. Common prosperity is thus aimed at breaking the vicious circle of poverty generation.

Eliminatin­g poverty itself is protecting basic human rights, as China believes that poverty affects one’s right to developmen­t and prevents people from exercising other rights.

Poverty eliminatio­n enables people’s rights. These rights can only be enabled when income and wealth distributi­on are broad-based for creating a middle income group by fairer distributi­on of the benefits of growth and developmen­t.

China issued a white paper in August on human rights linking with moderate prosperity in all respects and also charted out the path for attaining common prosperity. Developing countries can learn a lot from it.

Enhancing “systemic capacity” is another lesson for creating wealth and administra­tive efficiency. It will generate adequate resources and create a conducive environmen­t for overcoming the scourge of extreme poverty, though it is not expected that these countries will be able to realize this goal by 2030 as envisaged in the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Moreover, it is now time for global leadership, national ruling elites and poverty researcher­s to collective­ly make efforts to create a poverty-free world by harmonizin­g innovation, technology and political will in a spirit of mutual learning and a multilater­al framework for ensuring common prosperity for all.

China, for its part, is coming forward to help poorer countries through various mechanisms of the Belt and Road Initiative, which has contribute­d substantia­lly to poverty eradicatio­n in developing countries.

Other multilater­al and bilateral initiative­s and arrangemen­ts include the China-South Asian Countries Poverty Alleviatio­n and Cooperatio­n Developmen­t Centre and the China-South Asian Countries E-Commerce Cooperatio­n Forum on Poverty Alleviatio­n in Rural Areas announced in a joint statement issued by the foreign ministers of China, Afghanista­n, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal on April 27.

It indicates that China is evolving such mechanisms for internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n and making its contributi­on to the UN Decade for the Eradicatio­n of Poverty (2018-27) announced at the 72nd Session of the UN General Assembly in order to accelerate global actions for a “world without poverty”.

Developing countries must, therefore, extract the benefits of internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n and learn from the success of other countries for the common prosperity of people around the world.

In essence, developing countries should focus on policy coherence, meticulous planning, systemic capacity and making poverty eradicatio­n integral to human rights in order to accomplish the mission and realize the goal of poverty eradicatio­n, with the ultimate aim of prosperity for all.

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