Cheng Enfu is a native of Shanghai and a member of the Communist Party of China. He is a member of the Presidium of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Academic Divisions and director of the Academic Division of Marxist Studies of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. He is executive vice-director and professor of the Institute of Marxist Studies of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and contemporaneously president of the World Association of Politics and Economics, executive vice-president of the China Foreign Economics Research Association, and executive vice-president of the Institute of Law of Chinese Economy.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ideological opposition is not truly weakened
Global economic integration has involved both developed and developing countries, including those with opposing ideologies. Ideological opposition, which has seemingly weakened, has actually taken on a more concealed form. The drastic changes in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in the late 1980s and early 1990s was taken by western countries as a success of their ideological and cultural infiltration. China, a socialist developing country, has always been a key target of their infiltration. After the Cold War, this infiltration has not been weakened; rather it has been enhanced due to China’s opening to the world and the deepening of its reform.
August 7, 2013
Different forms of ownership can develop side by side
It was clearly put forward in the report of the 16th National Congress of the CPC (the Communist Party of China) that we must uphold and improve the basic economic system, with public ownership playing a dominant role and diverse forms of ownership developing side by side. Ten years of development and achievements of the Chinese economy have proved that great changes are closely related to the basic economic system.
November 7, 2012
Treat the seven important ideological trends correctly and make innovations in our social sciences independently
What ideological trends are there in the ideological realm in China today? What are their key ideas? How to understand and treat them? How to develop the philosophy and social sciences with Chinese characteristics and Chinese style? Liang Weiguo, CSSN reporter, had an interview with Prof. Cheng Enfu recently for the answers to the questions.
September 11, 2012