The Inaugural Annual Meeting of the New Champions of the World Economic Forum's Summer Davos 2007
in Dalian included a speech of China's Premier Wen Jiabao. In it, he
calls China "a developing country with a large population, weak
economic foundations and underdeveloped productivity" that was able to
reduce the number of poor people from 250 million in 1978 to 20 million
in 2006.
He also mentions that China "will stay on the path of peaceful
development, pursue a win-win opening-up strategy, develop itself by
securing a peaceful international environment and uphold world peace
and promote common development with its development. China's
development will promote world peace and development and will never
pose a threat to any country."
Here is the full speech:
Dear Professor Klaus Schwab, executive chairman of the World Economic
Forum, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, let me start by
extending, on behalf of the Chinese government and myself, warm
congratulations on the opening of the World Economic Forum Summer Davos
2007 in Dalian and cordial greetings to you.
It has been 36 years since the inception of the Forum in 1971.
Starting from this year, the Forum will hold an annual Summer Davos in
China. This shows the world's increasing interest in China's economic
development and the growing cooperation between China and the Forum.
The key to the success of the Forum is that political and business
leaders, experts and scholars from various countries participate in it
with sincere wishes for equality and mutual respect.
With a strong sense of responsibility and mission, they are
committed to discussing major issues of the world economy, paying
greater attention to growth companies, underdeveloped regions and
people in poverty, balance, coordination and sustainability of
development, and playing an active role in promoting development,
progress and harmony of the world. This should be the spirit of the
World Economic Forum.
The name of this meeting, "The Inaugural Annual Meeting of the New
Champions - From Davos to Dalian" and the continued theme of "Shifting
Power Equation" are fitting ones and highly relevant as they reflect
both the international community's focus on fast-growing companies and
regions and its strong desire to establish a new international economic
order.
Since China's economic development is high on the meeting's agenda,
I wish to talk to you about the progress in China's development
endeavor.
Since it embarked on the path of reform and opening-up nearly 30
years ago, China has seen profound economic and social changes. China
has succeeded in transforming itself from a closed and semi-closed
planned economy into an open socialist market economy.
There has been a great change in the life of the Chinese people,
from lack of basic living necessities to moderate prosperity. China has
also made important progress in political, cultural and social reforms
and remarkable achievements in its modernization drive.
From 1978 to 2006, China's GDP registered an annual growth rate of
9.7 percent. During this period, its import and export surged to $1.76
trillion from $20.6 billion, the per capita consumption of its urban
and rural population increased by over four times in real terms and the
number of poor people dropped to 20 million from 250 million.
These achievements were possible because we have embarked on the
correct path of development that is suited to China's particular
conditions and is in keeping with the trend of the times.
On the other hand, I want to tell you frankly that China is still a
developing country with a large population, weak economic foundation
and underdeveloped productivity. This is a reality that has basically
remained unchanged.
Although the overall size of China's economy is large, its per
capita GDP is ranked behind over 100 countries. Uneven development
between urban and rural areas and among different regions is still an
acute problem. China, a big country with a population of over 1
billion, has encountered a host of intertwined problems and
difficulties in the course of its social transformation. Modernization
remains a long-term goal for China.
China's economy is on the whole in good shape, marked by sustained
and fast growth, sound financial performance, growing trade and rising
living standards. But problems such as unstable factors, imbalances and
lack of sustainability also affect China's economic development.
They include excessively rapid economic growth, acute structural
tensions, the inefficient pattern of growth, depletion of resources and
environmental degradation, mounting pressure on price and entrenched
structural and institutional obstacles.
To resolve these problems, we are putting into practice the
scientific thinking on development and pursuing an innovation-based
model of development. We are committed to a comprehensive, coordinated
and sustainable path of development that puts people's interests first.
Specifically, we are focusing our efforts on the following areas:
Maintain fast yet steady economic growth. Excessive growth of
investment in fixed assets, oversupply of credit and loans and sizable
trade surplus are major problems in China's current economic
development. To resolve these problems, we must give top priority to
macro-regulation to prevent an already fast-growing economy from
becoming overheated.
We will continue to work to strike a balance between promoting
economic growth and improving economic structure, between investment
and consumption and between domestic and external demand. We will
deepen the reform of the financial sector to develop a modern banking
system, a comprehensive monetary regulatory mechanism and multi-tiered
capital market.
We will continue to reform the renminbi exchange rate mechanism to
increase its flexibility. We are confident that with enhanced macro
regulation, the giant ship of China's economy will continue to surge
ahead steadily.
Speed up changing the pattern of economic growth. To accelerate
economic adjustment and raise the quality and efficiency of economic
development is an urgent task facing China. We will follow a new path
of industrialization by upgrading and improving industrial structure.
We will take enhancing capacity for independent innovation as a key
step in changing the pattern of economic growth, strengthen IPR
protection and speed up scientific and technological development and
improve industrial performance in an all-round manner.
The Chinese government takes product quality and food safety very
seriously. We are working hard to adopt legislation, improve the system
of quality standards and strengthen quality control to effectively
resolve problems in this area. To enhance product quality and food
safety is a common task for the international community. We will
continue to work with other countries to improve product quality and
food safety.
Promote coordinated development. To address imbalances and lack of
coordination in development is a long and arduous strategic task.
Following the principle of making overall planning to ensure
coordinated development, we are taking forceful measures to give
stronger support to rural and other underdeveloped areas, speed up the
development of social programs and gradually reverse the widening gap
between agriculture and industry, between town and country and among
different regions to ensure coordinated economic and social development.
Strive to build a resource-conserving and environmentally friendly
society. China is committed to saving resources and protecting the
environment. Saving energy and reducing energy and resource consumption
and pollution discharge have been set as obligatory targets in China's
plan on national economic and social development.
We have the confidence and resolve to accomplish this arduous task
through unremitting efforts. We take climate change seriously and have
formulated the national program on tackling climate change. We will
work with other members of the international community to mitigate
climate change.
Improve the livelihood of the people. To protect and advance the
interests of the people is the ultimate goal of all our endeavors. We
need to build a harmonious society in all aspects, and the focus of our
effort is to address issues concerning people's livelihood.
Further steps are taken to increase employment, establish the social
insurance system covering both the urban and rural population and
quicken the pace of educational, health and cultural development.
Vigorous efforts are being made to improve housing conditions,
transportation, the living environment and public administration to
ensure that the benefits of reform and development reach all.
Deepen reform. China's economic and social development is driven by
reform. We will continue to reform the economic system, remain
committed to building a socialist market economy, bring into full play
the fundamental role of the market in resource allocation, improve the
effectiveness of the macroeconomic regulatory system and establish
institutional safeguards that facilitate scientific and harmonious
development.
We will continue to advance political reform, expand people's
democracy, strengthen the rule of law and promote social equity and
justice. Without political reform, economic reform will not succeed.
China's economy has maintained rapid growth for almost 30 years.
Will this development momentum continue? My answer is yes. We are fully
confident about it for the following reasons: The pursuit of peace,
development and cooperation is the trend of our times and this has made
it possible for us to secure a long-term peaceful international
environment.
Being in a stage of rapid industrialization and urbanization, China
has the material and technological foundation to sustain economic
growth. It has growing market demand and an abundant and increasingly
well-trained labor force. China has a large number of dynamic companies
that have emerged in the course of reform and by pursuing innovation,
and it enjoys social and political stability.
We need to pursue the right domestic and foreign policies and be
able to adapt to change to fully seize these opportunities and make
good use of these favorable conditions. Despite the difficulties, risks
and challenges on our way ahead, we have the confidence, capability and
means to surmount them and advance the modernization drive. China's
development has a bright prospect.
Ladies and gentlemen, China cannot achieve its development in
isolation from the world, and the world needs China to ensure its
development. Over the years, we have drawn upon the development
practices of other countries and strengthened economic and
technological cooperation and exchanges with them. This has boosted
China's socioeconomic development, and we have contributed our due
share to the growth of the global economy.
China will stay on the path of peaceful development, pursue a
win-win opening-up strategy, develop itself by securing a peaceful
international environment and uphold world peace and promote common
development with its development. China's development will promote
world peace and development and will never pose a threat to any country.
As China's development has shown and will continue to show, a
prosperous, democratic, harmonious, civilized and modernized China will
make an even greater contribution to maintaining world peace and
promoting human progress.
The new champions are the new forces in the changing world economic
environment. In particular, the global growth enterprises, which are
most dynamic, competitive and promising, are playing a key role in
world economic development. Here, I wish to reiterate that China's
opening-up policy will definitely remain unchanged.
We will improve the systems as well as the laws and regulations
governing foreign economic activities and make them more compatible
with international practices and WTO rules. This will provide a more
enabling environment to foreign companies, particularly the growth
enterprises for doing business in China.
China calls for resolving trade frictions through consultation.
China is ready to enhance cooperation with all other countries and
their business communities on the basis of equality and mutual benefit
to promote balanced, universal and win-win progress in economic
globalization.
In conclusion, I wish the Forum full success.
Last update : Sunday, 09 September 2007
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