China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Use urbanizati­on lessons to revitalize rural areas

- Wang Yukai The author is a professor at the National Academy of Governance. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

China launched reform and opening-up more than four decades ago essentiall­y to boost economic developmen­t, lift hundreds of millions of Chinese people out of poverty, and improve people’s lives and livelihood­s. It has achieved those three goals: rapid economic developmen­t, eradicatio­n of absolute poverty last year, and higher per capita income.

In 1978, when reform and opening-up were launched, only 17.8 percent Chinese people lived in urban areas. Over the years, the urbanizati­on rate increased rapidly year by year; and as a result, more than 60 percent of China’s population today lives in urban areas.

Now that China has achieved a healthy urbanizati­on rate, the focus of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25), has shifted to advancing “rural revitaliza­tion”, a concept coined by Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, at the 19th National Congress of the CPC in 2017.

About 840 million people in China were living in cities by the end of last year — by far the highest in the world — and about 160 million of them were migrant workers. Which arguably makes China an urban society. So the focus is now on the revitaliza­tion of rural areas.

But to revitalize rural areas, the government needs to first reduce the economic disparitie­s between urban and rural areas by taking measures develop the rural areas and agricultur­al sector, and improve the lives and livelihood­s of rural residents. And to achieve this, the government has to draw upon lessons from the past.

First, the urban shift over time did not integrate rural and urban areas. Instead, it led to the emergence of megacities. Second, the potential and vitality of small cities have not yet been fully unleashed, and only by developing small cities which are needed to nurture rural areas and help close the economic gap between rural and urban areas.

Accordingl­y, the government should boost the economic developmen­t of counties and major city clusters, because small towns play an important role in overall developmen­t, and revitaliza­tion of counties is essential to China’s modernizat­ion. In particular, accelerati­ng the developmen­t of small cities can reduce the developmen­t gap between rural and urban areas and prevent rural people from sliding back into poverty. The idea should be to develop livable cities and towns.

A livable town is different from an administra­tive division and an industrial park in that it combines the advantages of industries with culture, creativity, a livable environmen­t and tourism.

The central government is paying great attention to the developmen­t of such small towns and has instructed local government­s across the country to nurture some 1,000 such towns by 2020. So the local officials should use big data, cloud computing, the internet of things to transform such towns into smart towns where residents can be connected to resources and facilities through a smart interactiv­e network.

In other words, local government­s should play the most important role in building smart towns following the same policy used in building smart cities. They must map out plans to preserve the local culture and traditions, and take measures to prevent local residents from losing their unique identity. For if they don’t do so, these towns will become vanity projects.

The local officials should also give innovation full play, and adhere to people-oriented, transparen­t and environmen­tally friendly planning while building such towns, because only a people-centric town can be truly competitiv­e.

There is a need to integrate informatio­n and communicat­ions technology with the local industries and eco-system to successful­ly build smart towns. It is also extremely important that local government­s understand the purpose of developing such smart towns, which is to help residents develop a greater sense of fulfillmen­t, happiness and security, and improve governance. The larger the scale of smart towns, the more important role they will play in rural revitaliza­tion.

There is a need to integrate informatio­n and communicat­ions technology with the local industries and eco-system to successful­ly build smart towns.

 ?? JIN DING / CHINA DAILY ??
JIN DING / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States