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By C.H. Tung
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Chinese people around the globe passionately celebrated the 60th
anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China this
month. Maybe this is hard for others to understand. But for the Chinese
people, such emotions are rooted in memories of a vastly different
China, one whose destiny was not always as promising as it is today.
When the republic was founded on Oct. 1, 1949, political institutions
were just starting to be formed. People were hungry. The average life
expectancy was 35 years. Infant mortality reached a high of 20 percent.
The overall illiteracy rate was 80 percent. There was little organized
education, no health care and no means of social security. The national
treasury was empty, the economy bankrupt. There was no industry to
speak of and little basic infrastructure. Indeed, the Chinese people
had endured a century of government mismanagement, political
instability, constant civil war and warfare imposed by other countries.
In the six decades since the republic was formed, China's economy has
become the world's third-largest. Life expectancy has reached 73 years;
infant mortality is down to 1.5 percent. The illiteracy rate has fallen
to 5 percent. A nine-year education has become available to all
children. Health care and social security are improving. Modern
industries are being developed. Roads, railways, airports and ports
blanket the country. In the areas of democracy, the rule of law and
human rights -- including the rights of 55 minorities -- China has made
enormous progress. At no other point in history has so much improvement
been made for so many people in such a short period.
How did this happen?
A chief factor was a strong determination to find our own way
forward. Even before the downfall of the Qing Dynasty a century ago,
China has searched for a way forward. We have tried to learn from the
Japanese, the Germans, the Americans and even the Soviet Union, but
none of these development models was right. China was too chaotic and
too poverty-stricken; it had too large a population and insufficient
natural resources. Our nation was too weak to respond to foreign
interference. China's challenges required a development model
consistent with its culture, history and stage of development.
In China's long history, prosperous times were always associated
with a strong and enlightened central government, which has led the
Chinese people generally to believe in strong government. Today we have
such a government, with clear vision and enlightened policies. While
ideological and principled, the government in Beijing has also proved
pragmatic and flexible when necessary. Rather than pursuing short-term
politics, Beijing has been able to formulate sound long-term and
holistic macroeconomic and geopolitical policies.
China's emergence is also the result of putting people at the center
of governance. The government believes that eradicating poverty is
fundamental and is the first priority of all development policies.
Accordingly, 1.3 billion people have been moved from abject poverty to
a much-improved livelihood.
China strongly promotes harmony in diversity as a way forward by
emphasizing commonality among different interests to defuse social
tension associated with reform and development. China also recognizes
the need to better share the fruits of success between the rich and the
poor, and among its 56 ethnicities.
As China has opened up to the outside world, its people have
realized how increasingly intertwined their destiny is with the rest of
the world. China shares the anxiety posed by challenges such as
combating global warming, protecting the environment, creating energy
security, achieving global financial stability, countering terrorism,
preventing nuclear weapons proliferation and stopping the spread of
infectious diseases.
Some worry that as China's economic development continues, it will
become a hegemonic power. It is noteworthy that at the height of
China's economic power some 500 years ago, when it controlled about 30
percent of the world's economy, instead of expanding its might
overseas, China sent missions to neighboring countries only for trade
and good will. China's tradition of yiheweigui, peace and harmony above
all, will ensure that its development objective is for its interest and
in the interest of the world.
Also noteworthy is that government efforts have received enormous
support from the Chinese people, as demonstrated by the 86 percent
satisfaction rating on the direction the country is heading, in the
2008 Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes survey.
China's historic journey continues to shape its future. It is a
developing nation of 1.3 billion people, nearly 60 percent of whom live
in vast rural areas. It will take decades for China to realize
comprehensive modernization. But our 60 years of progress should give
the Chinese people confidence in the next 60 years and assure other
nations that China will become a greater force for a better world.
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