China Daily Global Edition (USA)
Village overcomes jitters, ends poverty via tourism
When Jiang Wanhe, Party chief of Shisanhao village, tried to persuade his poverty-stricken neighbors in 2012 to turn their houses into restaurants and hotels, no one was enthusiastic.
They doubted tourists would come to the isolated mountainous village near Zhangjiakou, Hebei province.
“Villagers refused at first because their old houses would be torn down, and they worried the idea might not bring in any money,” Jiang said.
“It’s only 10 kilometers from downtown Shangyi county. Yet residents must spend two hours going there in animal-drawn carts,” Jiang said.
There were no paved roads and no tap water, the 43-year-old Jiang said. Money was earned mainly by growing crops, such as potatoes and oats.
Ten years ago the average income per capita was 1,800 yuan ($260) annually. Younger people left for cities for more rewarding work.
“The number of permanent residents dropped from 200 to 40,” Jiang said.
He was one of those who left. He worked in Tianjin as a truck driver for years and ended up in downtown Shangyi, trading beef and mutton in the 1990s.
In 2012, when a road opened that connected many scenic spots in Zhangjiakou, Jiang was inspired. Visitors, particularly from Beijing, which is four hours away, traveled along the road and enjoyed resting in nearby villages.
Shisanhao lies at the western end of the road, and Jiang believed it could be a good stopping place for tourists.
The village, with an altitude around 1,400 meters above sea level, is cooler than neighboring Beijing and Tianjin during the summer — a perfect retreat from the heat.
Jiang opened a restaurant in 2013, and others followed suit.
With the residents’ agreement and with support from the county government, the village demolished 38 old houses and built a hotel with 53 “yaodong”, or cave rooms — a traditional Northern Chinese housing style.
According to Jiang, the hotel Editor’s note: Yang Wu, head of All-China Patent Attorneys Association
There are two major challenges in our IP development. One is to improve our innovative ability; the other is how to strengthen IP application. We should not only pay attention to the IP quantity and quality but also take economic benefits or added value into consideration. We need to transfer the IP, such as works and trademarks, to productive forces. China must solve both problems if it wants to be a powerful IP country, not just a big IP country.
former president of Zhongnan University of Economics and Law
Wu Handong,
earned the village 120,000 yuan in its opening months from August to October 2015.
“Each participating household received 1,500 yuan profit,” Jiang said.
Each was also given ownership of one or more of the cave rooms, which are worth 60,000 yuan each.
The growing tourism business in Shisanhao has lured investors from outside. Zhangjiakou Jinjin Fruit and Vegetable, a company from Shangyi county, invested 6 million yuan in 2016 to develop modern agriculture.
It built 37 greenhouses for fruits and vegetables, and provided a dozen jobs. The village received 30,000 yuan last year as a dividend.
In the following years, the village was gradually built up with more restaurants and hotels, vegetable and fruit gardens and other tourism infrastructure.
Jobs for residents lured back about 40 people. Zhang Ai, 58, came back in 2014 to become a barbecue chef at a restaurant.
“I have a better job here and got married,” he said. He now earns 10,000 yuan a year.
With dividends from the collective economy and their salaries, the villagers officially got out of poverty in October, with each earning an average income of at least 5,300 yuan annually.
“Our previously empty, poor village has been brought back to life,” Jiang said.
The State Council Information Office invited five experts on intellectual property on Tuesday to meet journalists and answer questions on the issues of reform and opening-up and the development of intellectual property law in China. Here are some highlights:
We can say we now have a better legal system for safeguarding IP rights, thanks to great efforts in the industry’s development of law over the past 30 years. Take the patent agent sector as an example. We’ve established a rule on agent training. Under it, all patent agents are ordered to receive training every year. The legal document also clarifies how to get further training. In addition, we designed online training and published some books for the convenience of agents in rural areas.
It’s a good thing that China ranks at the top worldwide in patent applications. It shows our major progress in the IP sector over the past decades. But it doesn’t mean we are blindly optimistic about quantity. Instead, we’re exerting great effort to improve patent quality. The State Intellectual Property Office has put quality higher in our work and taken steps against low-quality patent applications.
Yin Xintian, former director of the legal affairs department of the State Intellectual Property Office
Chinese high-tech enterprises, including us, should respect intellectual property and abide by related international rules in developing businesses overseas. In 2005, when we extended the business, we found our original trademark, Legend, had been registered. Making respect for IP a priority, we changed Legend to Lenovo, and registered the new trademark as quickly as we could in more than 100 countries worldwide. That’s the pattern we followed with international IP protection rules and effectively solved the IP problems we met in overseas markets.
Chen Yuanqing, director of IP Counsel of Chinese computer giant Lenovo Group
With fast developments in technology, industry and economy, patents in China have also entered a new era. As a technology researcher, I’ve kept an eye on patent developments. On April 1, 1985, when our nation’s first Patent Law took effect, I submitted materials and had the honor of being the first applicant nationwide. New technologies bring new ideas, and these ideas may bring us new achievements in the patent field.
Hu Guohua,
the first patent applicant after the founding of the People’s Republic of China