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China Economic Reform: Achievements, Strategies and perspectives

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Title: China Economic Reform: Achievements, Strategies and perspectives


1
China Economic Reform Achievements, Strategies
and perspectives
Development Research Center of the State Council,
P.R.C
DRC
Junkuo Zhang Chile-China Conference Santiago,
Chile June 9, 2004
2
Main Contents
  • I. Background of Economic Reform
  • II. Major Achievements of Economic Reform
  • III. Major Strategies of Economic Reform
  • ?. Perspectives of Economic Reform
  • Brief Summary

3
I. Background of Economic Reform
4
  • China began to practice highly concentrated
    planning economy after 1949
  • Basic features of Planning economy a. Almost
    all enterprises are State-owned or
    quasi-State-owned. b. Main production decisions
    are made by central planning authorities. c.
    Degree of openness to the outside world is very
    low.
  • Although this economic system demonstrated some
    advantages in the quick economic recovery in its
    early stages, it eventually obstructed economic
    development.
  • Since 1978, China has been in a period of
    economic reform and opening-up.

5
II. Major Achievements of Economic Reform
6
1. Rapid and Continuing Economic Growth
  • During the 25 years from 1979 to 2003, the
    average annual GDP growth rate was about 9.3,
    very rare in economic history for a big
    developing country.
  • In 2003, Chinas GDP has reached USD 1405.6
    billion , No. 6 in term of total economic
    volume.
  • But due to the huge population, GDP per capita is
    still very low. In 2003, it is only a little bit
    more than USD 1000.

7
2. Remarkable increase in peoples living standard
  • Chinas poverty population decreased from 250
    million in 1978 to 29 million in 2003.
  • The Engle Coefficient of urban and rural family
    decreased from 67.7 and 57.7 in 1978 to 45.6
    and 37.1 in 2003 respectively.
  • Per Capita Floor Space of Residential Buildings
    in urban and rural area increased from 6.7 M² and
    8.1 M² in 1978 to 27.2 M² and 23 M² in 2003
    respectively.
  • By the end of 2003, major durable consumer goods
    per 100 household color TV, 130 refrigerator,
    88.7 washing machine, 94.4 mobile phone, 90.1
    fixed phone, 95.4.

8
3. Notable changes in ownership structure
  • In manufacture sector in 1978, 78 of output was
    produced by state-owned enterprises, 22 produced
    by collective enterprises, no private enterprise
    existed. But at present, only less than 30 come
    from state-owned enterprises, more 70 come from
    non-state enterprises.
  • In term of employment structure, 78 of total
    urban employees working in state-firms or
    organizations, while in 2003, only 26.8 of
    urban labors working in state sectors.

9
4. Market plays fundamental role in resource
allocation
  • The scope of mandatory plans reduced greatly. For
    example, in manufacture sector, the number of
    products on which the state still set mandatory
    plan targets reduced from 120 in 1981 to 5 at
    present.
  • Before 1978, almost all prices of commodities and
    services were set by the government, while at
    present, 97 of total retail commodities sales,
    94 of total farm products sales and 91 of total
    capital goods sales are traded at
    market-determined prices.
  • Generally speaking, both State enterprises and
    non-state enterprises now have autonomy to decide
    the what, how and to whom problems
    according to the markets.

10
5. The degree of openness of the economy
increased markedly
  • Currently China has 5 SEZs, 56 state-level ETDZs,
    53 state-level HIDZs, 15 state-level FTZs and 36
    state-level EPZs.
  • In 2003, China has a total export and import
    volume of 851.0 billion USD, accounted more than
    60 of GDP, meaning quite a high foreign trade
    dependence of Chinese economy.
  • Export structure also improved remarkably. In
    1980, export of manufacture goods only accounted
    for 8.6 of Chinas total export value, while in
    2003, the situation is reversed, the share of
    manufacture goods has reached the high level of
    92.8.

11
III. Major Strategies of Economic Reform
--why China reform relatively successful?
12
1. Promoting SOE reform by developing non-State
economies
  • SOE reform is both crucial and difficult for all
    transitional economies.
  • In the early stage of reform, when it was too
    difficult to carry out the SOE reform on a large
    scale, stress was put on promoting the
    development of non-state economies
  • In China, the concept of non-State economies
    includes both the private and the collective
    enterprises for example, the township
    enterprises are a typical form of collective
    ownership firms.
  • This policy gained quite a big success. The rapid
    development of non-state economies has been a
    remarkable feature of Chinas economic
    development in the past more than two decades.

13
1. Promoting SOE reform by developing non-State
economies (Cont.)
  • The development of non-state economies benefits
    the SOE reform in three aspects
  • (1) Making SOEs less important and therefore
    easier to be reformed
  • (2) Playing as a competitor to SOEs and therefore
    forcing the latter to reform
  • (3) Preparing some preconditions for the SOEs
    reform(e.g. absorbing laid-off works)

14
2. Promoting domestic reform by opening up to
outside world
  • Chinas opening up policy was put forward at the
    same time with the domestic reform policy. The
    original idea of the opening up policy is to
    attract foreign investment by formulating a
    series of favorable policies.
  • Usually the extent and scope of these kinds of
    favorable policies were different among regions
    and industries. Generally, SEZs, ETDZs, coastal
    cities etc are more open than other places, while
    ordinary manufacture industry is more open than
    other industries.
  • Interaction between opening up policy and
    domestic reform is another important factor to
    the reform success.

15
2. Promoting domestic reform by opening up to
outside world (cont.)
  • The opening up policy benefits the internal
    reform in three aspects
  • (1) Broadens peoples mind and makes the reform
    irreversible. When the door opened, Chinese
    people were shocked when they realized how far
    China has been lagged behind. The more the door
    opens, the bigger the reform pressure.
  • (2) Most convenient and effective way for
    reformers to get necessary knowledge and
    information in formulating development and reform
    plans.
  • (3) Provides strong and constant push to advance
    reform.

16
3. Promoting total reform by conducting
incremental and partial reforms
  • By incremental reform, it means, when some reform
    policies seem to have too significant an
    influence on the whole economy and the peoples
    lives, and therefore a comprehensive reform plan
    is difficult to be adopted, then those policies
    may usually be first practiced incrementally. For
    example, old (existing) people old (existing)
    system, new people new system.
  • By partial reform, it means, when a reform
    policy, for some reasons, cannot immediately be
    carried out over the whole country, it then may
    be first practiced in some areas, for example a
    province(s), a special economic zone(s) or even
    one or more cities. Most of the past reform
    policies had first been practiced in some areas
    before they were adopted as universal policies.

17
3. Promoting total reform by conducting
incremental and partial reforms (cont.)
  • Incremental and partial reform strategy has both
    negative and positive effects
  • Positive (1) Helps to reduce resistance to
    reform. (2)Helps policy-makers to acquire
    experience and to reduce errors in making reform
    policies.
  • Negative some policies became economic roots of
    corruption, for example, the Dual Track Price
    System.

18
It should be noted that these three strategies
are not something clearly described in government
reform plans. Instead, they are actually implied
in various reform practices. To some extent,
these strategies reflect the acting styles of
Chinese people, and also reflect some features of
the so-called gradualism reform.
19
?. Perspectives of Economic Reform
20
1. Goal and phases of China economic reform
  • The overall goal of Chinas economic reform is to
    build a Socialist Market Economy, which was
    first put forward in 14th National Congress of
    the Communist Party of China (CPC) in 1992.
  • According to 16th National Congress of CPC in
    2002, the basic framework of the socialist market
    economic system has been established by the end
    2000. The task for the future is to further
    complete the existing framework, so as to
    establish a full-fledged socialist market economy
    by around 2020.

21
2. Major tasks facing future economic reform
  • In 2003, the 3rd plenary of 16th CPC Congress
    approved Decisions on Issues relating to the
    Completion of Socialist Market Economic System.
    According to the Decisions, there are 12 aspects
    of tasks facing Chinas future reform, among
    which, the most important ones include
  • (1) Further promoting SOE reform
  • (2) Reducing development difference between urban
    and rural areas and among different regions.
  • (3) Completing competition policies and promoting
    fair competition
  • (4) Consummating social security system

22
(1) Further promoting SOE reform
  • Currently China has about 170,000 SOEs, of which,
    only about 5 are large ones. Major measures for
    SOE reform are
  • Most small and medium-sized SOEs are to be
    transferred to private management through various
    ways.
  • For large SOEs, the goal is to pluralize their
    shareholders and to establish effective corporate
    governance structures through IPO,
    reorganization, etc.
  • For those large SOEs in monopoly industries such
    as telecommunication, electricity, railway, post,
    etc, the major measure is to loose entry
    restricts and to introduce competition.

23
(2) Reducing development difference
  • While the economy as a whole grew very rapidly
    during the past more than 20 years, there are big
    differences in development levels between urban
    and rural areas and among different regions. For
    example, in 2003, income per capita in urban area
    is 3.23 times that in rural area GDP per capita
    in Zhejiang, a southeast-coastal province, is 5.5
    times that in Guizhou, a southwest-mountainous
    province.
  • To gradually establish a coordinating development
    mechanism and to accelerate economic and social
    development in the West and rural areas has now
    become one of key tasks of the Chinese central
    government, and a series of plans and policies
    have also been developed to fulfil the task.

24
(3) Promoting fair competition
  • Anti-competitive conducts in China today include
    both business and administrative conducts, for
    the former, such as Cartels, abuse of market
    dominance, and various unfair competition
    behaviors, and for the latter, such as regional
    protectionism and complicate approval procedures.
  • Two aspects of efforts are needed to promote fair
    competition
  • One is to enhance competition legislation and law
    enforcement.
  • Another is to deepen administrative reform and to
    eliminate various administrative anti-competitive
    conducts.

25
(4) Consummating social security system
  • Chinas existing social security system has two
    major problems one problem is that its coverage
    is very limited, it only covers urban business
    sector another problem is that the fund is not
    enough.
  • To consummate the social security system, the
    government has decided to gradually expand the
    coverage of the system and to explore different
    ways, including selling out some state shares, to
    replenish the fund gap.
  • China is also exploring effective ways for
    managing social security funds, and in this
    regards, Chilean experience is very worthy to
    examine and to learn.

26
Brief summary
  • 1?During the past 25 years, through economic
    reform and opening up policies, China has not
    only established the basic framework of the
    socialist market economic system, but also
    realized rapid growth in the national economy and
    the peoples living standard.
  • 2?Three strategies, among others, contributed to
    the relative success of Chinas reform a
    combination of promoting development of private
    economy and reforming the state economy, a
    combination of opening-up with domestic reform,
    and a combination of partial (incremental) reform
    with overall reform.
  • 3?The task facing Chinas reform in the next 15
    years is to establish a full-fledged market
    economic system.

27
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