e-magazine
Quake Shocks Sichuan
Nation demonstrates progress in dealing with severe disaster
Current Issue
· Table of Contents
· Editor's Desk
· Previous Issues
· Subscribe to Mag
Subscribe Now >>
Weekly Watch
Expert's View
World
Nation
Business
Finance
Market Watch
Legal-Ease
North American Report
Forum
Government Documents
Expat's Eye
Health
Science/Technology
Lifestyle
Books
Movies
Backgrounders
Special
Photo Gallery
Blogs
Reader's Service
Learning with
'Beijing Review'
E-mail us
RSS Feeds
PDF Edition
Web-magazine
Reader's Letters
Make Beijing Review your homepage
Hot Links

cheap eyeglasses
Market Avenue
eBeijing

Lifestyle
Lifestyle
UPDATED: December 5, 2011 NO. 49 DECEMBER 8, 2011
Market Comes to the Rescue
Share

On January 17, 1992, only 20 days after the disintegration of the Soviet Union, 88-year-old Deng began a historic trip to south China. He started his trip with heavy concern and a sense of urgency about the carrying out of China's reform and opening-up policy. On his inspection tour, Deng pointed out that "a market economy is not capitalism, while a planned economy is not identical with socialism: Planning and market forces are both means of controlling economic activity." The CPC came to realize that to avoid repeating the failures of the Soviet Union and East European countries, it was imperative for China to continue market-oriented reforms and enable the people to benefit from reforms so as to win their support.

According to Time magazine, the all-round economic reform advocated by Deng emancipated the productive forces of China's 1 billion people. The reform launched by Deng has greatly changed the daily life of the Chinese people, and foreigners visiting China a few years after their previous visit often found it hard to believe the changes.

What goal should China set for its economic restructuring? Deng did not describe the goal explicitly. This was left to his successor, Jiang Zemin, who was elected the top leader of the CPC in 1989.

On the basis of a series of investigations and research probes, it was stated clearly at the 14th National Congress of the CPC, held in October 1992, that the goal of China's economic restructuring was to establish a socialist market economy system. In 1993, "implementing a socialist market economy" was made part of the Constitution of the PRC, and a political move was turned into a legal stipulation.

Nobody could have imagined that China's acceptance into the WTO would be delayed as long as six years just because of the term "market economy." In the 1980s, China proclaimed to the world that it would implement a "commodity economy system" and during negotiations for China's entry into the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the WTO's predecessor, foreigners were struggling to figure out the meaning of the term. Representatives from the United States expressed their views frankly during the examination of China's economic and trade systems, saying they knew only two economic systems in the world—a planned economy and a market economy—and they had never heard of a "commodity economy." The negotiating representatives from the West finally posed the question: "Is China implementing a market economy?" Due to China's domestic political atmosphere then, none of China's negotiating representatives dared to admit it!

It was not until 1992, when it was clearly stated at the 14th National Congress of the CPC that China would establish a socialist market economy system, that the Chinese delegation told the representatives from other countries that China was also implementing a market economy system but under the overall practice of socialism. The negotiating process determining China's accession to the WTO, which had been suspended, was not only resumed, but also moved on to the substantive stage of market access.

The reform goal of building a socialist market economy caused confusion among Westerners because only five main market economic patterns were recognized in the world, including the free market economic pattern of the United States, planned market economic pattern in France, social market economic pattern in Germany, welfare national market economic pattern in Sweden, and government-oriented market economic pattern in Japan. The socialist market economy does not fall neatly into any of the above-mentioned categories.

Some people raised doubts about the term "socialist market economy," asking whether there is any difference between capitalism and socialism when it comes to a market economy. Just as Jiang said, the attribute "socialist" points out the goal and the nature of China's implementation of a market economy. The market economy in China is closely linked with the basic socialist economic system, whose principles include public ownership as its foundation and which features the coexistence of a variety of ownership models. According to American scholar Robert Lawrence Kuhn, "The 'socialist' modifier does in fact give a somewhat accurate description of China's current economic policy, even if only to differentiate it from Western-style capitalism." Out of consideration for stability, the Chinese want to maintain central control to some extent to force a narrowing of the increasingly widening gap between the rich and the poor, which is the inevitable product of liberal market capitalism.

By employing Eastern wisdom, respecting reality, and forging ahead with bold innovations, China has expanded the role of the market without ignoring the determining values of planning. The magic power of the market was brought into full play under the command of the CPC.

The market propelled huge, populous and largely backward China from being an underdeveloped country to a rapidly developing one, and at a speed never before witnessed in the world. In 2010, China became the country with the second largest fiscal revenue, exceeded only by the United States. China's total output increased sharply, and production of key main agricultural produce such as grain and cotton and over 100 industrial products rank first in the world. The UN and the World Bank have said two thirds of the achievement in human poverty relief over the past 25 years was attributable to China.

While many countries met with serious setbacks as a result of the financial crisis sweeping across the world since 2008, China's socialist market economy was admired by many countries for its obvious advantages. It displayed considerable power of integration when adjusted to respond to the financial crisis, pooling China's energies and deploying its national strengths in a short period of time.

   Previous   1   2  



 
Top Story
-Too Much Money?
-Special Coverage: Economic Shift Underway
-Quake Shocks Sichuan
-Special Coverage: 7.0-Magnitude Earthquake Hits Sichuan
-A New Crop of Farmers
Related Stories
-CPC's Secret to Success
-Mistake Survivor
-Roaring Economic Engine
 
Most Popular
在线翻译
Useful Links: CHINAFRICAChina.org.cnCHINATODAYChina PictorialPeople's Daily OnlineWomen of ChinaXinhua News AgencyChina Daily
CCTVChina Tibet OnlineChina Radio Internationalgb timesChina Job.comEastdayBeijing TravelCCNStudy in China
About BEIJINGREVIEW | About beijingreview.com | Rss Feeds | Contact us | Advertising | Subscribe & Service | Make Beijing Review your homepage
Copyright Beijing Review All right reserved