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BEIJING, Feb. 13 (Xinhuanet) -- The World Bank said the proposal made by the
Communist Party of China (CPC) for the coming five years stresses more equitable
development and more care for the environment, although economic development
remains its top priority.
The bank said the Party's proposal, a guiding document for the country's social
and economic development for the next five years, emphasizes that
development should be "comprehensive, harmonious, and sustainable.
That implies "stable and relatively fast economic growth", and the need to
"step up the transformation of the economic growth pattern" toward growth that
is less energy, resource and capital intensive, more knowledge and
innovation-driven, and more equally shared, the bank said in its just-published
China Quarterly Update.
The 11th Five-Year Program constitutes "a policy shift" and deserves more
attention, as it is a major departure form past plans that largely focused on
growth as the key objective.
Although rapid growth remains a key objective, the "Harmonious Society"
with the more balanced development to be achieved througha "Scientific Approach
to Development" has taken center stage.
The program will have key guidelines and benchmarks as it had only two
quantitative targets: "doubling per capita GDP of 2000 by2010" and "reducing
energy intensity by 20 percent".
The proposal contains two other key objectives -- "constructionof a new
socialist countryside" and "structural upgrading of the economy through
homegrown-innovation", it said.
The bank said "Doubling the per capita GDP of 2000 by 2010" should not be
difficult.
With average growth of 9.5 percent over the 10th Five Year Planperiod, and
modest population growth in the years ahead, the target will only require an
average GDP growth of under 7 percent for the next five years, it said.
With major Chinese provincial areas formulating more growth targets, the
bank said more moderate growth targets at the local level would be desirable for
more balanced social and economic development.
"Reducing energy intensity of the economy by 20 percent" will be more
ambitious, said the bank.
It said more emphasis on pricing of energy could help in reducing the
energy intensity, and China will probably have to start taxing energy to
incorporate the costs of environmental degradation and energy security.
It remains a challenge for China to protect vulnerable groups such as
farmers during the process of raising energy prices, but it would need to be
tackled sooner rather than later, said the bank.
The rapid growth in car ownership suggests that resistance to appropriate
pricing of fuels will only increase over time. Enditem |