|
V. Historical
Development of Various Undertakings in Ethnic Autonomous Areas
Before the founding of New
China, the ethnic minority areas suffered from low productivity, and
underdeveloped economy, society and culture. They had little modern industry,
few educational or medical services, and poor infrastructure. Most of their
populations were illiterate, and they suffered epidemics of such contagious
diseases as plague, smallpox and malaria. They mainly engaged in traditional
farming and animal husbandry, the slash-and-burn method of farming was still
practiced in some of the ethnic minority areas, and iron tools had even not been
widelyused in some places. The people lived in destitution, and those living in
mountainous areas, deserts and on saline-alkali soils were out of food for a few
months almost every year. The development of ethnic minorities was seriously
hindered, and some were on the verge of extinction.
Since the founding of New China,
and especially since the introduction of the reform and opening-up policies, the
people of various ethnic groups in the autonomous areas have exploited theirown
advantages, relied on their own efforts, worked with stamina and diligence, and
continuously enhanced their self-development ability with energetic assistance
and aid from the state and the more-developed areas. As a result of over half a
century's efforts,in the ethnic autonomous areas the people's living conditions
and environments have conspicuously improved, and the local economy and various
public services have developed rapidly. Together with the people of the other
parts of China, they share the achievements of development brought about by the
modernization construction of the country.
(1) Rapid Economic Growth
In 2003, the GDP of China's
ethnic autonomous areas reached 1,038.1 billion yuan, exceeding 1,000 billion
yuan for the first time. From 1994 to 2003, the GDP of the ethnic autonomous
areas grew by an average of 9.87 percent annually, which was nearly one
percentage point higher than the national average. The proportion of the GDP of
the ethnic autonomous areas in the national total rose from 8.5 percent in 1994
to 8.9 percent in 2003. In 1994, theper-capita GDP of the ethnic autonomous
areas was 63.5 percent of the national per-capita average. In 2003, the
percentage rose to 66.3 percent. Also in 2003, the local revenue of the ethnic
autonomous areas reached 67.4 billion yuan, 3.3 times over that of1994. In 2003,
the GDP of Xinjiang was 187.761 billion yuan, accounting for 1.60 percent of the
national total, and an increaseof 0.06 percentage points compared with 1993; the
GDP of Tibet was18.450 billion yuan, accounting for 0.16 percent of the national
total, and an increase of 0.04 percentage points compared with 1993. In the same
year, the per-capita GDP in Xinjiang was 9,700 yuan, equivalent to 106.58
percent of the national per-capita average; and the per-capita GDP in Tibet was
6,871 yuan, equivalent to 75.5 percent of the national per-capita
average.
(2) Obvious Rise of Living
Standards
In 2003, the per-capita net
income of rural residents in ethnicautonomous areas was 1,895 yuan, 2.31 times
that in 1994. The per-capita net income of rural residents in Xinjiang and Tibet
were 2,106.19 yuan and 1,690.76 yuan, respectively, equivalent to 80.32 percent
and 64.48 percent of that of rural residents nationwide.
In 2003, the housing conditions
of the residents of the ethnic autonomous areas continued to improve. The
per-capita housing space in urban areas was 19.8 sq m, and that in rural areas
was 22.9 sq m. The balance of various kinds of savings in ethnic autonomous
areas was 1,175 billion yuan, of which those of the residents of both urban and
rural areas at the end of the year was735.3 billion yuan, four times that in
1994.
(3) Distinct Improvement of
Infrastructure
In 2003, the total investment in
fixed assets in ethnic autonomous areas was 473.4 billion yuan, 3.7 times that
of 1994. Of this, 283.7 billion yuan was invested in infrastructure
construction, 4.2 times that of 1994. By the end of 2003, there were 22.73
million fixed telephone users in ethnic autonomous areas, among whom 15.32
million were urban residents. The number of mobile phone users reached 23.07
million. In 2003, the state-owned railway operation mileage in ethnic autonomous
areas reached15,100 km, a near three-fold increase compared with 1952; the
highways open to traffic in those areas totaled 547,800 km, 21 times that in
1952. In addition, the urbanization levels of Inner Mongolia, Ningxia and
Xinjiang have exceeded the national average.
(4) Protection and Fostering of
Traditional Cultures
From the 1950s to the 1980s, the
central authorities organized over 3,000 experts and scholars to compile and
publish five seriesof books on ethnic minorities, totaling 403 volumes and over
90 million Chinese characters. The series are: The Ethnic Minorities in China, A
Series of Books on the Brief History of the Ethnic Minorities in China, A Series
of Books on the Brief Record of the Languages of the Ethnic Minorities in China,
A Series of Books on the Survey of Autonomous Areas of Ethnic Minorities in
China, and A Collection of Research Materials on the Societies and Histories of
the Ethnic Minorities in China. Over 500,000 copies have been distributed.
Today, each of the 55 ethnic minorities in China has its own brief written
history.
The 55 ethnic minorities in
China, except for the Chinese-speaking Hui and Manchu, each have their own
language. The Mongolian, Tibetan, Uygur, Korean and Yi languages have coded
character sets and national standards for fonts and keyboard. Software in the
Mongolian, Tibetan, Uygur and Korean languages canbe run in the Windows system,
and laser photo-typesetting in theselanguages has been realized. Applied
software in languages of ethnic minorities are emerging one after another, and
some achievements have been made in research into the OCR (optic character
recognition) of languages of ethnic minorities and machine-aided
translation.
The state has set up special
institutions to collect, assort, translate and study in an organized and
programmed manner the three major heroic epics of China's ethnic minorities,
i.e., Gesar(an oral Tibetan epic), Jangar (a Mongolian epic) and Manas (an epic
of the Kirgiz people). In the past decade, the state has appropriated over 30
million yuan for the collation and publishingof 160 volumes of the Buddhist
Tripitaka in the Tibetan language. It has also earmarked a large amount of funds
for the renovation of the Drepung, Sera and Ganden monasteries in Tibet, the
Kumbum Monastery in Qinghai, and the Kizil Thousand-Buddha Caves in Xinjiang,
and many other key national cultural relics. From 1989 to 1994, the state
invested 55 million yuan and 1,000 kg of gold in the first-stage renovation of
the Potala Palace in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region, and in 2001,
330 million yuan for the second-stage renovation.
With the assistance of the state
and efforts of the ethnic autonomous areas, by 2003, 4,787 titles of books in
ethnic minority languages had been published, totaling 50.34 million copies.
There were also 205 magazines and 88 newspapers in such languages, totaling 7.81
million copies and 131.30 million copies,respectively. The ethnic autonomous
areas had set up 513 art performance troupes, 566 libraries and 163 museums. In
2003, the ethnic autonomous areas had 122 radio broadcasting organizations with
73 radio stations and 523 radio transmitting stations, broadcasting in 15 ethnic
minority languages; 111 TV broadcasting organizations with 94 TV stations and
830 TV transmitting stations,broadcasting in 11 ethnic minority languages. There
were also 254,900 satellite radio and TV receiving and relaying systems.
(5) Education Level Markedly
Raised
In 2003, there were 83,726
schools at all levels and of all kinds in ethnic autonomous areas, with a total
enrollment of 29.43million, an increase of five fold compared with 1952, of 29.7
percent compared with 1984 and of 10.6 percent compared with 1994.There were
1.541 million specialized teachers, an increase of 16 percent compared with
1994. The development of education has greatly extended the years of schooling
of the people of ethnic minorities. The fifth national census, conducted in
2000, showed that the years of schooling of 14 ethnic minorities, including
theKorean, Manchu, Mongolian and Kazak groups, were higher than the national
average.
(6) Continuous Progress in
Medical Services and Public Health
By the end of 2003, the ethnic
autonomous areas had 15,230 medical institutions, 13 times the number in 1952;
380,000 hospital beds, nearly 67 times the number in 1952; 460,000
medicaltechnicians, almost 26 times the number in 1952; 934 epidemic-control and
specialized prevention and treatment institutions; and371 clinics and health
centers specially catered to women and children. In rural areas, there were
7,234 township hospitals, with 55,000 beds. The development of medical services
has greatly increased the life expectancy of the ethnic minority people. The
life expectancy of 13 ethnic minorities is higher than the national average,
which is 71.40 years, and those of seven of themare higher than the average of
the Han people, which is 73.34 years.
(7) Rapid Development of Foreign
Trade and Tourism
In 2003, the total value of imports and exports of the ethnic autonomous areas was 13.6 billion US dollars, including 7.9 billion US dollars-worth of imports and 5.7 billion US dollars-worth of exports. The 3,263 foreign-invested enterprises in these areas used two billion US dollars of foreign investment in 2003. In the same year, these areas hosted 123.33 million domestic tourists and 2.15 million international tourists, the incomes fromdomestic and international tourism reaching 56.3 billion yuan and 600 million US dollars, respectively.
|