Development -- Main Theme of New Millennium
Gathering
Accelerating development should claim top priority,
said Laham, a NPC deputy from the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
"With a developed economy, it would become very easy to solve
all other problems, such as employment and stability."
"We are concerned about national defense," said
an army deputy, Gu Shanqing. "But we are concerned more about
economic development, as economic development provides the powerful
backing to national defense."
"Economic development would enable the country to
realize the national reunification earlier," said Rita Fan from
Hong Kong.
Development -- this is the main theme of the on-going
fourth session of the Ninth National People's Congress (NPC),
which opened here Monday. It is this theme that makes the session
more attractive at the start of the new century.
Among the deputies attending the session are rich
entrepreneurs as well as farmers from impoverished regions with
an annual net income of a few dozens U.S. dollars. This reflects
the tremendous changes in China over the past two decades and
it has also posed problems in policy options for the new century.
Watching the deputies walking into the Great Hall
of the People for the opening session, Gao Zenghui, a farmer tourist
from east China's Fujian province, said he hopes to "earn more
money in the coming years."
Gao's views was exactly reflected in the draft plan
submitted by Chinese premier Zhu Rongji to the NPC session for
deliberation, which makes improvement in the people's standard
of living the primary goal of China's development.
According to the draft plan, China, whose gross
national product (GDP) ranks seventh in the world, aims to increase
its GDP to about 12 trillion yuan by 2005 with faster progress
in science and technology and education, which will lay a good
foundation for the GDP to double by 2010 over that of 2005.
For the first time in years, economists, entrepreneurs
and grass-roots deputies, instead of film and singing stars, have
become the focal point of correspondents and cameramen.
Qu Geping, known as China's pioneering figure in
environmental protection who later served as director of the Administration
of Environment Protection, was surrounded by correspondents on
the steps leading to the great hall.
"Sustainable development is an issue of the greatest
concern to me," said Qu."We will continue to promote birth control,
a rational use of resources and make more efforts to improve ecological
environment according to the five-year plan."
China will readjust itself to the changing world
characterized by economic globalization and its anticipated entry
into the World Trade Organization (WTO) through agriculture restructuring
and faster development of the information industry and optimizing
industrial structure for sustainable development, according to
the plan.
Huang Jinhua, a deputy and an expert of nuclear
energy, said rapid scientific and technological progress will
lay a good foundation for long-term development.
He explained that, as outlined in the plan, planned
breakthroughs in genome science, information science, nanometric
technology and other high-tech fields will provide key support
for the country's economic development.
The policy measures indicate that the Chinese economy
is coming to a new turning point after 22 years of rapid development.
According to the country's three-stage development
strategy, annual per capita GDP will rise to about 10,000 U.S.
dollars by 2030, compared with 800 U.S. dollars for 2000.
The plan, however, also lists a number of challenges
facing China: an irrational industrial structure, backwardness
in science and technology and education, shortage of water and
oil resources, and ecological deterioration in some parts of the
country, population and unemployment pressure and corruption.
But experience in the past several years has shown
the future is bright for China.
The past five years have seen China tide over devastating
flooding, droughts, the Asian economic crisis and high inflation
and deflation in China. The country, with an average annual economic
growth rate of more than eight percent, has remained to be the
main destination of foreign investment among developing countries.
Ding Jiemin, a deputy from Jiangsu province and
Peter Becker, first counselor of Germany who attended the opening
on invitation, are quite upbeat about China in the coming five
years.
Becker said he believes China could surmount the
difficulties in its future development.