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Harmonious society planned in next 5 years

www.chinanews.cn 2005-10-07 11:08:44

(Source: CRIENGLISH.com)

People walk past a poster calling for building up a social harmony in
Tian'anmen Square in Beijing on Sept. 27, 2005. (File)

Oct. 6 - China's ruling Communist Party has listed building a harmonious
society as a strategic goal to ensure stability while seeking continuous
economic giant steps in carving out its next five-year growth plan.
The 300-strong Party Central Committee will convene its fifth plenary
session in Beijing this weekend, scheduled from October 8-12, to discuss
ways to thwart growing disharmonious elements, such as growth disparity
between developed coastal provinces and underdeveloped west, rising gap
of the haves and have-nots, urban environmental pollution, and corruption.
It is timely for China's top leadership to consider a course revision to
prevent the horse-cart not to be rocked over, experts said.
The idea of building a harmonious society marks the maturity of the
Chinese Communist Party as a ruling party with serving the people as its
guideline, they said.
"The construction of a harmonious society" was initiated by Chinese
President Hu Jintao, who, while addressing a high-level seminar at the
Party School of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee in
February, urged the state and Party leaders to prioritize social harmony
on their agenda.
In Hu's words, "A harmonious society should feature democracy, the rule
of law, equality, justice, sincerity, amity and vitality."
This focus shift is timely, as many observers point out, as China is
confronted with increasingly acute potential social unrest caused by
disparity in development and distribution, inequality, injustice, and
corruption, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.
The "harmonious society" initiative has stemmed out of awareness of the
social problems cropping up in the process of China's rapid economic
development, which might hold back the country's sustainable progress and
brew up into real social crisis if they are not dealt with properly, said
Dr. Ding Yuanzhu, a sociologist with the Academy of Macro-economic
Research under the State Development & Reform Commission.
In fact, noted Ding, China has never put "harmonious society" above
economic progress. "The idea of social harmony demonstrates the central
government's determination to overcome thorny social problems caused by
inadequate policy decisions and overheated economic development."
During the past 26 years, China has created an economic miracle with GDP
growing at a dazzling rate of 9.5 percent annually. Figures from the
National Bureau of Statistics show that the total amount of GDP hit 13.65
trillion yuan (US$1.68 trillion) in 2004.
However, the economic success does not necessarily promise social
stability. "A most severe social crisis often erupts at the time when
economy reaches its most flourishing stage. Ominously, a range of
negative social elements have emerged. These include widening disparities
between the rich and the poor and between urbanites and farmers,
worsening unemployment, and deteriorating ecological system," Ding said.
Farmers Left Behind
Farmers may feel the inequity more than other groups. In the process of
rapid urbanization, millions of farmers have lost land and have been
neglected in the economic growth. Some have come to cities, taking almost
all the poorly-paid jobs.
Among them are Zhang Yong and his wife from a southwestern mountainous
village, who came to Beijing, the national capital, five years ago,
making a living by selling vegetables in a residential area full of
high-ranking officials in western Beijing.
Parents of two teenagers, the couple gets up at 2:00 am in the morning to
get the freshest vegetables at the best possible price at a wholesale
market. The 35-year-old husband complains, "We have to work 17 hours a
day on average to make ends meet, earning 800 yuan a month. There is no
money for entertainment. At best we just take a day off."
Even so, the wife says, "life still is better than it is in the
countryside, where you might not get in anything if the weather doesn't
bless you. Here in Beijing, you can always have some cash in your pockets
at the end of year."
China now has 120 million rural surplus labor seeking a life in the
cities. There are another 30 million of unemployed population, including
laid-off workers. These people represent an important stake of social
disharmony, Ding warned.
"If they cannot savor the sweetness of economic prosperity, their growing
discontent may touch off an appalling social disaster," Xinhua quoted
Ding as saying.
Zhang the vegetable vendor might not understand the meaning of social
harmony. Yet, a laid-off steel worker who is now working as a traffic
assistant on Beijing's Chang'an Boulevard told Xinhua: "Equity and
justice must be the core. Without that, no people can hope for harmony. "
His remarks are in keeping with what Hu Jintao has warned: Without equity
and justice, people won't be happy.
Balancing Different Interest Groups
Conflicts of various economic interests are primary among the people's
internal contradictions, said Jing Tiankui, director for the Sociology
Institute of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. "Building a harmonious
society is a long-term and systematic project. Balancing different
interests cannot be delayed any longer."
Beijing is working hard to guarantee that the people's rights and
interests are honored. In a bid to improve employment, it has decided to
put in 10.9 billion yuan on reemployment projects and 3 billion yuan to
improve industrial safety.
And, it has pledged to exempt 730 million farmers from agricultural
taxation, and provide subsidies to rural families which cannot afford
their children's education.
"The rural population plays an important role in fostering a harmonious
society," Dr. Ding siad. "Only when the poor farmers live a better life,
can the whole society expect to live in harmony and stability."

          ��State Councilor urges efforts to build harmonious society

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