Upcoming
NPC, CPPCC sessions expect appeased GDP fervor
BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- GDP growth
has for years been a hot topic of discussion among officials,
experts and common peoplea like in the run-up to China's
annual sessions of the National People's Congress (NPC)
and the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference (CPPCC).
But things have turned
out different this year. The temperature of the hot discussions
seems to have been cooling down as people are more and more
taking to a scientific approach to development.
"We must have a scientific
approach to the current accounting system of GDP, a comprehensive
indicator of the economy," said Zeng Qinghong, Chinese vice
president and president of the Party School of the Central
Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) at a a recent
seminar on the subject. "There is a drawback that cannot
be ignored in paying too much attention to GDP alone."
The recent trends
in the country show that the GDP growth-consciousness is
being weakened throughout the country. The local people's
congresses and local CPPCC committee sessions across the
country have all echoed the calls by top Chinese leaders
to tone down 2004 GDP growth anticipations and re-evaluate
the existing GDP accounting system that focuses too much
on economic development to the neglect of environmental
protection and the economical and multiple use of resources.
Guangdong Province
in south China, which has taken the lead in entering into
a new round of rapid growth, has set its 2004 GDP growth
target at 9 percent, 4.6 percentage points lower than last
year. Huzhou City in Zhejiang Province has declared that
the GDP growth target would not be made part of the criteria
for judging the performance its leading cadres.
Meanwhile, Chinese
media have started a campaign for re-evaluating economic
figures, people's living standards and environmental conditions.
It is the first time
for the world's most populous nation to review its GDP system
since the country started using GDP as a major indicator
from the mid-1980s, said observers.
In fact, all these
boil down to a "new approach to development," which stresses
harmonious and human-based sustainable development.
Hu Angang, a noted
economist and policy expert, termed the "newapproach" as
"China's second-generation development strategy" in contrast
to the "fast development and allowing part of the people
to get rich first" approach developed by the late Chinese
leader Deng Xiaoping.
The second-generation
development strategy has made it clear for the first time
that social and economic development should serve the people
and enable them to live a better life, said Hu during an
exclusive interview with Xinhua.
The 2003 SARS crisis
revealed the flaws of China's public health system. The
excessive expansion of the steel, cement and electrolytic
aluminum has strained energy and raw material supply.The
dwindling of farmland will pose a serious threat to China's
food security.
Other problems China
has to tackle include an increasingly widening gap between
the urban and rural areas and among differentregions and
a worsening environment, said Wu Jinglian, a well-known
economist and member of the CPPCC National Committee.
According to Hu Angang,
the second-generation development strategy and the "human-based"
approach show that the CPC is becoming mature as a party.
Once established as a guiding principle in the country,
Hu said, it will help resolve many problems, such as promoting
employment and increasing the income of peasants. The criteria
for judging the performance of leading officials will change
and those who make much ado about GDP with the ulterior
motives of getting promotion will be curtailed.
Xu Xianchun, an official
from the National Bureau of Statistics,told Xinhua that
related government departments are now calculating the environmental
costs China had paid for its robust economic growth over
the past two decades, and a new "green GDP system," taking
into consideration environmental cost, is in the pipeline.
"This year's NPC and
CPPCC sessions will be the best place for such discussions,"
said Xu.