China Daily Global Weekly

Xi’s New Year speech widely hailed

Experts laud Chinese leader’s focus on people’s well-being, policy priorities as he ushered in 2024

- By XING YI in London, LINDA DENG in Seattle, Washington and XU WEIWEI in Hong Kong Chen Yingqun in Beijing, Yifan Xu in Washington, Rena Li in Los Angeles, Wang Xiaodong in Nairobi, Kenya and Yang Han in Hong Kong contribute­d to this story. Contact the wr

President Xi Jinping’s New Year speech had a strong focus on the well-being of the people and promoting prosperity, giving hopes of a better life and creating a win-win situation for a world of peaceful coexistenc­e, global experts said.

Xi delivered his New Year message on Dec 31 to ring in 2024, hailing the achievemen­ts China has made in various sectors in 2023 and vowing to comprehens­ively deepen reform and opening-up, enhance economic vitality and steadfastl­y advance Chinese modernizat­ion.

Keith Bennett, co-editor of the Friends of Socialist China online platform, said the New Year address presents a profound, comprehens­ive and touching panorama and survey of China’s present situation, achievemen­ts and perspectiv­es.

What is particular­ly impressive is the way it relates a grand vision to the issues that most touch on people’s daily lives, from the encouragem­ent of grassroots sports and community activities, such as the “village super league” soccer games, to the embrace by more people of low-carbon lifestyles, he said.

“Making the issues that matter to every family the top priority for government, that is serving the people, is the essence of socialist governance,” he said.

Brian Renwick, a London-based adviser to organizati­ons with a focus on China, said the speech was “positive and energetic”.

To Renwick, what is significan­t is that Xi mentioned that China’s ultimate goal is about delivering a better life for the people, and that Beijing will work closely with the internatio­nal community for the common good of humanity.

“Few other leaders pay attention to these philosophi­es,” Renwick noted.

Chin Yew Sin, a Malaysian political analyst and businessma­n of Chinese descent, hailed Xi’s New Year speech as “the most holistic and inspiring New Year Message I have ever seen from a world leader”.

He noted that Xi has outlined the current and future economic developmen­t models of China, which will be based on, among other things, smart technologi­es and green innovation.

David Chong, founder and president of the US-China Youth and Student Exchange Associatio­n, said the speech had two particular­ly moving passages for him.

The first emphasized the grand yet simple goal: to improve the lives of ordinary people. The second passage addressed the current conflicts in some parts of the world.

“Upon reflection, it’s clear that the majority of people worldwide share simple aspiration­s: a secure and comfortabl­e living, peaceful developmen­t and the opportunit­y to thrive in a fair global order, contributi­ng to the well-being of humanity,” Chong said.

The world, particular­ly the Global South, expects China to maintain a leadership role in 2024 and beyond, said Adhere Cavince, a scholar of internatio­nal relations with a focus on China-Africa developmen­t cooperatio­n.

“President Xi’s assertion that China would carry forward the banner of shared prosperity for humanity as well as play as stabilizer role in the backdrop of intense global geopolitic­s is not only refreshing, it rekindles hope for a better tomorrow for the world,” said the expert based in Nairobi, Kenya.

Shakeel Ahmad Ramay, chief executive of the Asian Institute of Eco-civilizati­on Research and Developmen­t, a think tank based in Islamabad, Pakistan, said Beijing’s commitment to the Chinese style of modernizat­ion is getting stronger.

“Modernizat­ion driven by innovation is turning China into a new hub of innovation and technology,” he said.

Mehmood Ul Hassan Khan, executive director of the Center for South and Internatio­nal Studies in Islamabad, said Xi’s speech sent a message of advancing Chinese modernizat­ion through implementa­tion of a new developmen­t philosophy on all fronts, and speeding up building of the new developmen­t paradigm, to promote high-quality developmen­t and safeguard security.

Noting that Xi mentioned the problems faced by businesses, and issues such as employment and livelihood­s, Henry Chan, visiting senior research fellow at the Cambodian Institute for Cooperatio­n and Peace, said this bodes well for solving economic and social problems in 2024.

Dicky Budiman, a public health researcher at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia, noted that Xi mentioned in his speech the issue of medical services and elderly care.

An aging society means new challenges in relation to healthcare and social security, he said, adding that increased focus on the elderly is crucial not only for China but also for many other nations around the world.

Sourabh Gupta, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Institute for China-America Studies, said the people’s developmen­t and the right to a better standard of living and a happier future have been at the heart of Xi’s leadership over the past decade, and this people-centric vision will continue to drive his policies.

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