Northeast must stand on own feet
2003-09-18 China Daily
Northeast China used to be the nation's industrial showpiece.
The
region, including Heilongjiang, Jilin and Liaoning provinces, was the national
centre of heavy industry and served as the engine for national construction in
the 1950s.
At that time, as a national strategy, China ploughed enormous
resources from all over the country into the Northeast to develop heavy
industry, such as mechanical equipment.
In return, products from the
region were distributed to other regions under the planned
economy.
Boasting fertile farming land, the region's agricultural sector
also held a key position in the national economy.
In 1978, the per capita
gross domestic product (GDP) of the three provinces was only behind that of
Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin.
The plan-based economy of the region
gradually lost its lustre, however, as the country began to launch its
market-oriented reforms since the late 1970s and the government gradually
retreated from economic activities. The market is now playing an ever greater
role in allocating resources.
This is a historical transition. But for a
region that has been used to the planned economy, the process is proving to be
rather painful as it fails to adapt itself in a timely way to new market
conditions.
Factories registered huge losses and went bust, workers lost
the protection of corporate welfare and social problems ensued. These issues are
common in many places in Northeast China.
In Jilin Province, for example,
only 15 per cent of industrial enterprises have a technological level of the
1990s in 2002. That means the production of more than four-fifths of its firms
depends on outdated technology. Enterprises with such a low overall
technological level can hardly fare well in a market-driven economy. For the
region, the past 20 years have become the "lost years."
The
national position of Liaoning, Heilongjiang and Jilin has dropped to the eighth,
10th and 14th respectively in terms of per capita GDP.
Against the
backdrop of glaring growth in the eastern and southern regions, the struggling
Northeast becomes more noticeable.
The central government is well aware
of the region's problems.
The Communist Party of China pledged to support
the transformation of the Northeastern industrial base at its 16th National
Congress in November last year. Premier Wen Jiabao reiterated to officials of
the three provinces in his August visit to the region that the central
government will help the region surmount its current economic woes.
The
latest indication of the importance attached by the central government to
helping the Northeast was made at a State Council meeting last Wednesday, when
Premier Wen and other top officials discussed measures to fulfil their
pledges.
The high profile given to the issue shows that the country is
not willing - and cannot afford - to see the region's problems remain, as this
will undermine the national blueprint to build a comprehensively well-off
xiaokang society.
Moreover, the rejuvenation of the region will lend more
dynamism to overall national development, becoming a new propeller to the growth
of the national economy.
The question is, after going downhill for two
decades, can the region step out of difficulties? And how does it achieve
this?
Experts cite as the advantages of the region its abundant natural
resources, relatively complete heavy industrial system, comprehensive
transportation network and concentrated pool of skilled and professional
people.
The region also has petroleum reserves and many rare metals and
acres of forest. The region's oil, petrochemical, iron and steel, electrical
equipment manufacturing, and machine tool industries, among others, have a firm
economic base.
Abundant resources, both natural and human, however, may
not automatically translate into real economic growth.
That is an obvious
lesson drawn from the fall of the region in the past two decades.
More
investment, as many locals have expected after they received the message
of "rejuvenating the Northeast" from the central government, would not
play a decisive role, either. The Northeast is different from the country's poor
western region.
The real problem for the Northeast is the systematic
bottleneck, a legacy of the old planned economy.
A predominant proportion
of enterprises in the region remain State-owned. The single ownership structure
must be steadily optimized to add dynamism to the local economy.
The
eastern regions have benefited much from the private economy since China adopted
the reform and opening up policy.
Seen from experience of the eastern
regions, what the Northeast needs badly is room to manoeuvre its policies to
introduce more market elements in order to boost the economy.
For
example, experts said more personnel power can be given to local governments.
And more flexible policies concerning foreign investment approval and land use
could be granted to the region.
In terms of material input, the central
government can do little in the market-economy era, apart from the areas of the
social security network and environmental protection.
But the supportive
policies will have little leverage over the region's future, if local people do
not take a wider perspective toward change.
The predominant status of the
State economy in the region has not only outlined the local economic structure
but also formed a culture of looking to the government to take care of
everything.
While forging ahead with wrenching reforms in the State
sector, people in the Northeast need to be open-minded to embrace the market
system.
Support from the top is far from a cure-all. The rationale of the
region's revitalization is to depend on itself to reform
economy.
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