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BEIJING, Oct. 11 (Xinhuanet) - The 16th Central
Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) concluded its fifth plenary
session here Tuesday afternoon, which examined and approved proposals for
formulating the 11th Five-Year Plan for National Economy and Social Development.
The four-day meeting discussed a draft proposal set
forth by the CPC Central Committee on the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010).
Participants at the meeting comprises 191 members and
150 alternate members of CPC Central Committee. The Political Bureau of the CPC
Central Committee presided over the meeting.
Hu Jintao, general secretary of the CPC Central
Committee, gave a working report on behalf of the Political Bureau of the CPC
Central Committee. Premier Wen Jiabao made an explanation on the draft proposal.
China's new Five-Year Plan, the roadmap for the country's development in the
next five years, will bring revolutionary changes, analysts said here in
Beijing.
From "Getting Rich
First" to "Common Prosperity"
The theory proposed by the late chief architect of
China's reforms, Deng Xiaoping, in the 1970s to allow some of the people to get
rich first will give away to "common prosperity" in a bid to bridge the growing
gap between the rich and the poor, and to avoid polarization of the society.
That is a historic adjustment to the pattern of
five-year planssince China changed its approach to economic and social
development in the 1970s.
"It shows that the CPC will give special attention to
the construction of a balanced mechanism under a market economy," saidHu Angang,
an expert on macroeconomics at Qinghua University.
After China decided to launch economic reforms in
1978, Deng Xiaoping proposed the principle of allowing some of the regions and
some of the people to get rich first to achieve a final "common prosperity".
The new idea departed from the egalitarianism, yet
managed to energize the country.
More than 20 years later, the average Gross Domestic
Products (GDP) per capita has risen above 1,000 US dollars and is expected to
reach 3,000 US dollars in 2020.
But China's rapid economic growth engendered new
problems.
The lowest-income families, comprising the bottom 10
percent ofall families, owns less than 2 percent of all the residents' assets in
the society, while the highest-income families, or the top 10 percent of all the
families, own over 40 percent of the total assets, government statistics show.
Chinese leaders have warned against extremes of
poverty and wealth, increasing unemployment and intensified social conflict.
"Common prosperity is not an unreachable goal, but
the basic principle and pursuit of socialism," said Hu.
From "Growth Rate" to
"Sustainable Development"
The recognition that economic growth is not equal to
economic development and that growth is not the final goal of development, will
be included in the 11th Five-Year Plan for the first time, said analysts.
Top leaders have criticized old concepts of economic
growth many times, saying that "economic development at the center" does not
mean "with speed at the center."
Blind pursuit of economic growth has led to blind
investment, damage to the environment and false statistics. The country's
helmsmen are worried that without changing China's concept of growth, the
economy might develop an unbalanced structure with a lack of driving power.
In the 11th Five-Year Plan, the economic growth will
be definedas "Serving the people to improve life quality," said analysts.
"A prediction can be made that in the next five years
China will pursue growth in a fair, balanced and sustainable way," said Tang
Min, chief economist with the Asian Development Bank's China office.
China will control the use of foreign investment in
the 11th Five-Year Plan period, said experts.
Government statistics show that foreign trade
accounts for over70 percent of China's economy. Frequent trade frictions have
caused huge costs to the economy.
China has become a major consumer of energy resources
in the world. International energy institutions predict that from 2002 to2030
around 21 percent of the world's new demand for energy resources will come from
China. In 2004, nearly 50 percent of the petroleum used in China was imported.
China will try to change its heavy reliance on
foreign investment and resources to secure its national economy in the next five
years, said analysts.
Favorable to Social
Services
The new five-year plan will bolster social services
to deal with the imbalances in economic and social development, said analysts.
China's top leaders stressed that it has become
urgent to solvethe problem of strong economic growth accompanied by weak social
development.
The problem of social security is particularly
serious in the countryside, where the medical care system and welfare are
extremely weak.
During the period from 1993 to 2003, the number of
people with no access to medical insurance in the country increased from 900
million to one billion, with the percentage rising from 67.8 percent to 80.7
percent. The number in the urban area rose from 96.53 million in 1993 to 300
million in 2003.
"In the next five years, China will place more
emphasis on science and technology, education and health care in policy and
investment," said Ding Yuanzhu, a researcher at the economic and social
development research institute under the National Development and Reform
Commission.
All rural children are expected to enjoy nine-year of
free education before 2010, which will reduce farmers' economic burden by 100
billion yuan (12.37 billion US dollars) every year, analysts said.
"The poor and the weak will get more protection and
have greater access to social welfare," said Ding. Enditem
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