China Daily Global Weekly

Road map for a better future

President Xi’s inspection trips help to bolster growth of farming, industrial sectors nationwide

- By XU WEI in Beijing and SHI RUIPENG in Nanning Contact the writers at xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

For decades, Mo Chongxu’s sugar cane plantation has been a vital source of income — allowing his parents to raise him and his siblings, and allowing him and his wife to pay their daily bills and tuition for their three children.

However, cultivatin­g the crop is now vastly different from when he inherited the trade from his father.

In those days, they had to endure stifling heat throughout the cultivatio­n process, said Mo, who lives in a village in Laibin, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.

“Mechanizat­ion is now being seen in all farming procedures, including growing (the crops), pesticide applicatio­n and harvesting, and we can work throughout the day without having to worry about heatstroke,” the 41-yearold said.

Mo is among some 520,000 sugar cane growers in Laibin, a city where the crop has been cultivated for 1,000 years and contribute­s to about 10 percent of China’s sugar production.

On Dec 14, Mo was among a group of farmers who welcomed President Xi Jinping, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, when he made a fact-finding trip to Laibin.

Xi asked about Mo’s family members and their sugar cane farms, before urging regional officials to help boost the farmers’ incomes.

The president views the work of farmers such as Mo as being closely tied to hopes for the nation’s self-reliance in the sugar industry, and more broadly, its food security.

More important, modernizat­ion of the agricultur­al sector and rural areas is a vital part of Chinese modernizat­ion, a key vision set out by Xi at the Party’s 20th National Congress in 2022 to advance the nation’s great rejuvenati­on.

Xi made 16 domestic fact-finding trips nationwide last year, traveling to 15 provincial-level regions and outlining key steps for rural modernizat­ion, ecological protection, self-reliance in science and technology, and the drive for common prosperity.

Han Qiang, dean of the School of Marxism at Beijing Foreign Studies University, said Xi put forward comprehens­ive visions of Chinese modernizat­ion by taking into account the actual situation in various regions.

“During the trips, the president discussed both theory and methodolog­y, while strategica­lly planning the advancemen­t of Chinese-style modernizat­ion at the start of the nation’s new journey,” he said.

One priority for Xi on his domestic travels last year was to advance integrated developmen­t for different regions.

In May, he visited Xiong’an New Area, about 100 kilometers southwest of Beijing, to push for new progress in the nation’s “city of the future”.

Speaking to officials during the trip, Xi stressed the need to advance the high-quality and high-standard developmen­t of Xiong’an, a landmark project for coordinati­ng the growth of Beijing and neighborin­g Tianjin and Hebei province.

The president laid out the requiremen­ts for making Xiong’an an innovation hub and a fertile ground for entreprene­urship in the new era. He said it must strive to build a first-class business environmen­t and formulate

a comprehens­ive set of special support policies to attract and gather domestic and foreign forces, and capital.

Beijing Eyecool Technology Co, which researches and develops artificial intelligen­ce, is one of the 219 high-tech startups that have moved their headquarte­rs to Xiong’an in recent years.

Zhou Jun, the company’s founder and CEO, said the decision to relocate to Xiong’an has been fully vindicated, as the company’s revenue has soared to a historic high.

He said the infrastruc­ture in Xiong’an has been increasing­ly refined, with institutio­nal reforms delivering a transparen­t business environmen­t for companies.

“Xiong’an has become a fertile ground for innovation and entreprene­urship,” he said.

In April and September, Xi traveled to Guangdong and Heilongjia­ng provinces, respective­ly, to advance national strategies for developing the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area and revitalizi­ng the northeaste­rn areas of the country.

He also visited Jiangxi province in October to present a new vision for

developing the Yangtze River Economic Belt, before going to Shanghai to outline steps for developing the Yangtze River Delta region.

Last year, the nation’s top leadership enhanced the top-level design for coordinati­ng regional developmen­t by merging several leadership groups into one dedicated group. They included those for developmen­t, revitalizi­ng the northeast, and the coordinate­d developmen­t of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.

Behind the emphasis placed by Xi on advancing regional integratio­n is the nation’s strong commitment to moving forward with its common prosperity drive and fostering a new developmen­t pattern.

Ma Liang, a professor of public administra­tion at Renmin University of China, said furthering major strategies for integrated regional developmen­t will help China narrow the divide between different areas and press ahead with high-quality developmen­t.

In 2022, GDP in the Beijing-TianjinHeb­ei region and the Yangtze River Delta reached 10 trillion yuan ($1.4 trillion) and 29 trillion yuan, respective­ly, while in the Guangdong-Hong

Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area it stood at 10.46 trillion yuan, making the regions cornerston­es of the Chinese economy and key sources of high-quality developmen­t.

As Xi inspected China’s more affluent eastern regions, he voiced earnest expectatio­ns for them to lead in modernizin­g the nation and pave the way for high-quality growth.

During a trip to Shanghai from Nov 28 to Dec 2, he called for the Yangtze River Delta, which comprises Shanghai and Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Anhui provinces, to better lead the nation on the path to modernizat­ion.

He highlighte­d the significan­ce of integrated developmen­t in the region, one of China’s major industrial powerhouse­s, to further enhance its innovation capabiliti­es, industrial competitiv­eness, developmen­t levels, and lead the way in forming a new pattern of higher-level reform and opening-up for China.

While traveling to Heilongjia­ng province in September, Xi said pushing forward the Chinese path to modernizat­ion would require the northeaste­rn region to enhance its role as a strategic pillar.

The northeast, although confronted by population outflows and slowdowns in economic growth in recent years, has remained a key region for ensuring the nation’s food security. In 2022, the three northeaste­rn provinces of Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjia­ng accounted for more than 20 percent of China’s total food production.

Xi laid out requiremen­ts for the northeast to press ahead with industrial advancemen­t through innovation in science and technology, stressing that the foundation for the region’s revitaliza­tion lies in the real economy.

The president showed particular concern for public well-being during his fact-finding trips, as he twice visited groups hit hard by natural disasters to reassure them of the government’s commitment to providing relief.

“I always keep disaster-affected people in my thoughts,” he told households struck by summer floods in Heilongjia­ng.

To help families get through the long and arduous winters in the northeast, Xi reiterated the need for the authoritie­s to adopt meticulous measures to ensure access to food, drinking water, housing, transporta­tion, jobs and education.

In November, he inspected regions hit by summer floods and geological disasters in Beijing and neighborin­g Hebei province, before the arrival of winter in northern China.

He spent a whole day on the road, reviewing the reconstruc­tion of disaster-affected villages, homes, schools and water conservati­on projects.

The Communist Party of China serves the people and always regards them as the highest priority, and it will spare no effort, whether it is in emergency response and disaster relief, or post-disaster recovery and reconstruc­tion, Xi told the families.

Wang Feng, a scholar of Party governance at Beijing Normal University, said Xi’s particular concern for vulnerable groups is in line with the Party’s founding mission.

For some businesses, Xi’s trips served as assurances that the nation remains committed to reform and opening-up.

During his trip to Guangdong province, Xi visited LG Display’s manufactur­ing base in Guangzhou and GAC Aion New Energy Automobile Co, inspecting production lines and product displays, and speaking with executives and workers.

He said he hopes foreign investors will seize the opportunit­y and build up their presence in the GuangdongH­ong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, further explore the Chinese market, and make new breakthrou­ghs in their developmen­t.

He stressed that China must prevent any weakening of its real economy in its modernizat­ion process.

Zeng Qinghong, chairman of GAC Group, the parent company of GAC Aion, said after the trip that the president gave the company a “great boost in confidence at a critical juncture for developmen­t of the auto sector and high-end manufactur­ing”.

Xi’s strong emphasis on China’s food security and self-reliance in agricultur­e has also strengthen­ed farmers’ confidence in expanding the scale of their operations.

Mo, the farmer in Laibin, said he is planning to expand his sugar cane plantation from three hectares to 20 hectares in the near future.

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 ?? ZHANG TAO / XINHUA ?? Clockwise from top: An aerial photo of Mohe Forest Farm in Heilongjia­ng province; Pang Shanshan, a worker at the farm, conducts a forest clearing operation in January last year; forest rangers work in Mohe in January last year.
ZHANG TAO / XINHUA Clockwise from top: An aerial photo of Mohe Forest Farm in Heilongjia­ng province; Pang Shanshan, a worker at the farm, conducts a forest clearing operation in January last year; forest rangers work in Mohe in January last year.

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