MEXICO CITY, Nov. 19 (Xinhua) -- China has
accomplished unprecedented achievements during its 30 years of reform and
opening-up, and Latin America should learn from its experience, a Mexican
scholar says.
Enrique Dussel Peters, coordinator of the
China/Mexico Studies Center at the National Autonomous University of Mexico,
recalled his March trip to southern China's booming coastal city of Shenzhen
during a recent interview with Xinhua
He said the city's glittering skyscrapers, wide
streets and busy traffic left him with the illusion of wandering in Houston, a
prosperous U.S. high-tech city. Dussel said Shenzhen, which was a desolate
fishing town 30 years ago, is a prime example of fast-developing China over the
past three decades.
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The night view of Yiwu is seen in this
picture taken on Oct. 19, 2008 in east China's Zhejiang Province. Thirty
years ago, Yiwu was just a poor agricultural county. Under the reform and
opening-up policy, Yiwu decided to adopt the development strategy of
"Building the City by Prospering Commerce". After 26 years' development,
Yiwu has become the national circulation center and international
procurement base for petty commodities with the world's largest wholesale
market. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
During that period, China, after the devastating
10-year Cultural Revolution, has evolved from a root-and-branch backward country
to one enjoying a high reputation in the world because of its eye-catching
progress in foreign affairs, society and culture, and the economy.
Dussel said Latin America can learn from China's
unique and valuable development model.
To be different from Latin American countries, he
said, China has put more investment into scientific and technological innovation
besides providing cheap labor for foreign companies and attracting overseas
investments.
Products with the brand "Made in China" have included
many high-tech fields such as electronics, digital information,
telecommunications, autos, computer software and space technology, the scholar
pointed out.
He said, for example, that Chinese autos have been
more and more welcome in Mexico, Brazil, Chile and other countries in the
region, but Latin America, a long-time manufacturing base for the European and
U.S. auto industries, has yet to have an independent auto brand.
Dussel said China has not simply copied the
development pattern of other Asian countries that did well earlier in economic
development.
"Under the leadership of the Communist Party of
China, China has walked ahead along an unparalleled development path," he added.
Many Latin American countries have reached the
consensus that they should learn from China's experience and boost cooperation
with the country, the scholar said.