Constitution to
protect private property
BEIJING, March 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Legislators
began Monday to consider whether to specify the inviolability
of private property in the nation's Constitution, and the
draft constitutional amendment, if approved, would become
what is widely described as "a historic progress."
Wang Zhaoguo, vice chairman of the Standing
Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC), briefed
lawmakers on the draft constitutional amendment at the on-going
NPC annual session in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing
Monday afternoon.
The draft amendment suggests "legal private
property is not to be encroached upon" and adds "the state
should give compensation" to the current stipulation that
"the state has the right to expropriate urban and rural
land."
"It is a substantive breakthrough in the
history of the People's Republic of China and that reminds
me of the past old days when we were proud of being penniless
and devoting all possessions to the country," said Xia Bing,
a lawyer who serves a Shanghai-based private law house.
In the first 30 years after New China was
founded in 1949, the predominant agricultural country had
been engaged in a continuous campaign to turn its war-shattered
economy into what the top leaders hoped to be superior to
the world powers. But the drive was frequently pestered
by uncertainties such as natural disastersand political
movements such as the devastating "Cultural Revolution"
(1966-1976).
"Being poor meant being revolutionary and
clean in heart, and it was a shame to rake profits and dream
of a luxurious life at that time," recalls 60-year-old Zhang
Yuying, a factory retiree inthe northeastern province of
Heilongjiang.
Tremendous improvements in the people's
daily life did not takeplace until the Chinese economy began
to take off fueled by the reform and open-up policy adopted
in the late 1970s. In 2003, China's per-capita GDP reached
1,000 US dollars, which is internationally accepted as a
mark of a medium-developed country. Major cities such as
Shanghai even reported a much bigger figure of more than
5,000 US dollars.
With swelling wallets, an increasing number
of Chinese citizenshave purchased or are planning to buy
cars and other expensive consumer goods.
Concurrent with the economic boom is a
change in the people's thinking, from the concept that "It's
shame to be rich" to a brand-new motto that "It's a pride
to get rich through hard work in a lawful way."
To usher in a nationwide endeavor to "build
a well-off society in an all-round way," the Chinese government
has taken a more scientific and realistic approach to handling
ideological issues, boosting economic development and constructing
a full-fledged legal framework.
"Stipulations that hamper China's reform
and development shouldbe changed or completed but amendments
are focused on the most essential ones to maintain the stability
of the Constitution," said senior lawmaker Yang Jingyu.
The draft constitutional amendment submitted
by NPC Standing Committee Monday has drawn wide attention
since the proposal was put forward by the Central Committee
of the Communist Party of China (CPC) last year.
It will be the first time in the history
of New China that lawfully-obtained capital goods and invisible
capital such as intellectual property rights are put under
constitutional protection, as is the same case with living
materials and properties such as estate and bank deposits.
The draft amendment, already a cynosure
itself, has brought under the spotlight the country's newly-rich
private entrepreneurs,who have accumulated wealth and dotted
the nation's skyline with robust economic growth.
By the end of November 2003, the number
of China's private enterprises hit 2.97 million with registered
capital exceeding 334.7 billion yuan (40.5 billion US dollars).
The non-public sectors now contribute to half of China's
national economic growth.
"The practice of encouraging the private
sector of the economy but avoiding reference to its existence
in the law no longer sits well with the rising private sector,"
said Lian Xisheng, a renowned law scholar with China University
of Politics and Law.
The draft amendment suggests "encouraging,
supporting and guiding the private economy." Sixteen years
ago, the amendments tothe current constitution stipulated
that the state permits the private economy to exist and
grow within the limits prescribed by law as a "complement"
to the public economy. In 1999, the role of the private
sector was upgraded to make it an "essential part" of the
socialist market economy.
The CPC Central Committee has been pushing
forward China's economic restructuring in a steady and irreversible
manner, and property right is one of the essential issues
of the reform, economists say.
The draft amendment also incorporates into
the Constitution theimportant thought of "Three Represents,"
which emphasizes that theCPC must represent the fundamental
interests of the overwhelming majority of the people.
"Constitutional protection on legally accumulated
wealth will spur investment and consumption, and further
promote development of the national economy," said NPC deputy
Wu Zixiang, an entrepreneur from the southern coastal province
of Guangdong.
Entrepreneur deputy Zhu Qinglong, from
Anhui Province, described the draft amendment as a "comforting
pill" and pledged to increase investment in his high-tech
business of auto-control system manufacturing.
In recent years, forcible relocation of
urban and rural residents for real estate and other projects
has resulted in growing disputes between residents and developers.
Wang Zhenmin, a law professor at the prestigious
Qinghua University said the draft amendment, which puts
private property on the same footing with public assets,
will better safeguard lawful private property rights of
Chinese citizens from public infringement.
Amendments to the Chinese Constitution
are to be proposed by the NPC Standing Committee or by more
than one-fifth of all NPC deputies and adopted by a majority
affirmative vote of more than two-thirds of all the deputies.
Chinese lawmakers will discuss the amendment
draft in the coming days and voted on its fate on March
14, a day to be recorded in the Chinese history no matter
the draft is approved ornot.