by Zhao Qing
OTTAWA, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- "China has experienced earthshaking changes as a
result of 30 years' opening-up and reform," renowned Canadian scholar on China
affairs Jiang Wenran told Xinhua during a recent interview.
Jiang, acting director of China Institute of Alberta University, has been
tracking China's re-emergence as a global power for the past 20 years.
"I was born and raised in China. I went to university there in early 1980s when the
opening-up and reform policy was just launched," Jiang said. "I have been
doing research on China since I came to Canada for the past two decades."
China's opening-up and reform policy resulted in the rapid development of its
economy, Jiang said. As it gradually shifted from a planned economy to a market
economy, China has witnessed a sustainable and rapid growth, doubling its
economic output every seven or eight years.
In terms of gross domestic product (GDP) measured in U.S. dollars, China is
now the fourth largest economy in the world. China is expected to catch up with
the United States in short time, Jiang noted.
Meanwhile, the living standard of the Chinese citizens has improved quickly
with their earnings on constant rise. Infrastructure has been strengthened
considerably in both rural and urban areas.
China has been immersed fully with the international community and is playing
an increasingly larger role in global political and economic affairs,
Jiang said.
He said that China has also made significant achievements in the fields of
democracy, human rights and legal system. It is unfair for some Westerners to
criticize China in this regard, as China is trying very hard to improve. China
still has some problems, but people should also view these issues from a
historical perspective, Jiang said.
Jiang noted that China's increasing influence is also illustrated in
increasing popularity of China studies in Canada. Especially when the United
States and Europe are hard hit by global economic crisis, people now are more
interested in how China will develop and what influence it will have in shaping
the new world order.
Jiang noted that many Canadian universities have set up research programs
on China affairs. Canada's most famous international affairs think tank, The
Canadian International Council, launched recently a research program to study
China's rise and its influence on the new world order.
"Canada is giving more and more attention to China and the China
research here is getting increasingly detailed and advanced," he said.