Development in the west crucial to nation: Govt

08:28, July 09, 2010      

Email | Print | Subscribe | Comments | Forum 

A decade after China started its Western Development Program, the gap between its target regions and the eastern areas remains vast, a senior official said.

Du Ying, vice-minister of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), likened the regions' development to "the shortest board" of the barrel at a news conference on Thursday.

The comparison referred to a well-known saying that the amount of water a barrel can contain is determined by the shortest, rather than the longest, stave of the cask.

"The entire country will not develop well if the western regions do not develop well," Du said, adding that the area is integral to national stability.

The area includes 12 provinces, regions and municipalities. It accounts for 71.5 percent of the country's territory and 27.5 percent of the mainland population.

The western regions are also home to 75 percent of ethnic minority groups and two-thirds of the country's population that lives below the national poverty line, delineated by an annual income of less than 1,196 yuan ($176).

The central government realized the region's importance and started the Western Development Program a decade ago, adopting preferential policies and supporting the regions' development. In the past decade, investment from the central and local governments, as well as from the private sector, has totaled nearly 20 trillion yuan, 5.5 times the amount invested from 1949 to 1999, the NDRC said.

Consequently, the regions maintained an 11.9-percent growth rate during the period and the impoverished population decreased by 70 percent to 23 million.

The central government plans to invest heavily in western China's economic development over the next 10 years. It aims to sustain double-digit annual growth from now until 2015, Du said.

A document released on Tuesday said the central government will this year invest more than $100 billion in 23 new infrastructure projects in the regions to boost domestic demand.

The NDRC is also imposing a trial 5 percent tax on resources exploited in the oil-rich Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. If successful, the tax will be expanded nationwide, Du said.

Western China has abundant resources, including two-thirds of the country's extractable coal and natural gas reserves.

"The reform will certainly increase the resource-rich western region's fiscal income," Du said, without giving a timetable for the tax's expansion.

Source:China Daily

(Editor:梁军)

  • Do you have anything to say?

双语词典
dictionary

  
Special Coverage
  • Premier Wen Jiabao visits Hungary, Britain, Germany
  • From drought to floods
Major headlines
Editor's Pick
  • On Sept. 28, tourists travel around the Mingshashan Scenic Area in Dunhuang, Gansu province by camel. With the National Day vacation right around the corner, more and more tourists from home and abroad are going to Dunhuang. Riding on a camel, they travel in the desert to enjoy the cities rare form of natural scenery. (Xinhua/Zhang Weixian)
  • Chinese forest armed forces work together with forest firefighters on Sept. 28. (Xinhua/Chai Liren)
  • Photo taken on Sept. 29, 2011 shows strong wind blows trees in Sanya, south China's Hainan Province. Typhoon Nesat heads towards south China and is moving at an average wind speed of 20 km per hour toward the west coast of China's Guangdong Province. (Xinhua/Hou Jiansen)
  • A fallen tree is seen on a road in Qionghai, south China's Hainan Province, Sept. 29, 2011. Typhoon Nesat was predicted to land in Hainan later Thursday, bringing heavy rainfalls to the island. (Xinhua/Meng Zhongde)
  • Arash Kamalvand (L) of Iran spikes the ball during the semifinal against South Korea at the 16th Asian Men's Volleyball Championship in Tehran, Iran, Sept. 28, 2011. Iran won 3-1 to advance to the final. (Xinhua/Ahmad Halabisaz)
  • A man visits "Thy Word Is Truth, the Bible Ministry Exhibition of the Protestant Church in China", during its opening at Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church in Washington DC, capital of the United States, Sept. 28, 2011. Through the Bible's various Chinese versions, ancient or modern, as well as pictures, paintings, calligraphy, art works and historical documents, the exhibition was expected to give an overall understanding of how Bible was brought into China, how it was translated, published, distributed and loved. (Xinhua/Zhang Jun)
Hot Forum Discussion