What the world has seen by looking at China from 30,000 feet

China Plus Published: 2018-09-17 22:08:55
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Note: The following is an edited translation of a commentary from the Chinese-language "Commentaries on International Affairs."

The two-day China Development Forum concluded in Beijing on Monday. About 800 guests from Chinese and foreign business circles, academic circles and government institutions have made suggestions for the reform and opening up of China in the new era. Pieter Bottelier, a professor at Johns Hopkins University who is the former Chief of the World Bank's Resident Mission in Beijing, said: "I left my job in China more than 20 years ago. I'm now looking at China from 30,000 feet, from an international perspective." At a time when China has undergone reform and opening up for 40 years and is currently faced with globalization, trade protectionism, and an uncertain and unstable international environment, such perspectives and thinking dimensions are necessary.

Looking at China from 30,000 feet, what has China and the world seen?

Pieter Bottelier, a professor at Johns Hopkins University [Photo: courtesy of Forum's official photography]

Pieter Bottelier, a professor at Johns Hopkins University [Photo: courtesy of Forum's official photography]

First of all, the aerial view reflects achievements and self-confidence. This is also the basis for China's conviction that it can do its own thing well. In the past 40 years, China has actively blended with the world and achieved remarkable results. In the words of Robert Zoellick, former World Bank President who attended the seminar, "I have seen China's amazing accomplishments over four decades with my own eyes. And all of you deserve to be extremely proud of the historic success. This has been the greatest reduction of poverty in world history. It has been China's proud accomplishment. I have great respect for the hard work and drive of the Chinese people to have made these changes, and your transformation has changed the world, as well as changing China."In the past 40 years, China has freed more than 700 million people from poverty through reform and opening up, accounting for more than 70 percent of the total number of people in the world who have been lifted out of poverty.  The average life expectancy has increased from 67.8 years in 1981 to 76.7 years in 2017. China has successively crossed the thresholds determined by the World Bank for a lower middle income society in 1999 and upper middle income society in 2010 respectively. The country's per capita GDP reached nearly 9,000 US dollars in 2017, exceeding the average of upper middle income countries.

However, people have also seen China’s gaps and the challenges it faces. This is also the new starting line for China's determination to push forward reform and expand its openness. The biggest gap between China and the world is still reflected in the low level of development: China's per capita GDP is only ranked 70th of the more than 190 countries and regions in the world. At the end of last year, more than 30 million people in China still live below the poverty line. Therefore, China needs to plan its path of high-quality economic and social development in the future.

Robert Bruce Zoellick, former World Bank President [Photo: courtesy of Forum's official photography]

Robert Bruce Zoellick, former World Bank President [Photo: courtesy of Forum's official photography]

Former World Bank President Robert Zoellick says he believes that China's next step in reform and opening up will face three challenges, including the need to change China's growth model, to achieve inclusive and sustainable growth, and to recognize China's effect on the world. He has specifically mentioned the contribution of the private sector in China's economic development in recent years. The contribution from the private sector to China's economic growth once exceeded 70 percent. In recent years, due to the increasing downward pressure on China's economy and the complicated and ever-changing international situation, the private economy has also undergone a transformational period of high-quality development, and encountered a "bottleneck period." But even so, it still holds up half of the Chinese economy. By the end of 2017, the number of private companies in China exceeded 27 million; the number of individual industrial and commercial households exceeded 65 million, with their registered capital exceeding 165 trillion yuan. China's private economy and economies of other forms of ownership all require the government to introduce new reforms to address high-quality development issues and achieve stronger development in response to challenges.

Jochen Goller, president and CEO of BMW Group Region China [Photo: courtesy of Forum's official photography]

Jochen Goller, president and CEO of BMW Group Region China [Photo: courtesy of Forum's official photography]

Finally, people have seen the potential and win-win situation, which is the driving force for the common development for China and the world in the future. 40 years ago, China's economy only accounted for 1.8 percent of the world's GDP. Last year, this figure increased to around 15 percent, with China's contribution to global economic growth exceeding 30 percent for many consecutive years. As the world's largest exporter and the second largest importer, China has let other countries share the fruits and opportunities of its own economic development. Jochen Goller, president and CEO of BMW Group in China, notes that China is a decisive growth market for global automakers, including the BMW Group. It was reported that in 2017, BMW sold 560,000 vehicles in China, surpassing the total sales of the second and third-ranked US and German markets. Goller says he believes that China has become an important driving engine of innovation in the world. This year, BMW will build two new R&D bases in China, gaining a foothold in China and developing products for the world market. A new survey of more than 430 US companies in China shows that after being hit by the negative effects of the current Sino-US trade frictions, two-thirds of the companies surveyed did not move their production facilities out of China. Nor do they plan to do so either.

Justin Yifu Lin, former World Bank Chief Economist, says he believes China will need to shoulder a larger responsibility for the global development system and help other developing countries realize growth, get rid of poverty and achieve win-win. Lin estimates that according to his proposed concept of New Structural Economics, China will release about 85 million manufacturing jobs to other developing countries in the process of transformation from agriculture to manufacturing to service-oriented economies, which will help these countries upgrade their manufacturing industries.

Looking at China from 30,000 feet, people will inevitably find places that have not been seen clearly or misread. These can be improved through frank exchanges and mutual help. Continually advancing reform and opening up is a consensus among the Chinese government and all levels of society. For China, it is first necessary to do a better job in its own affairs. This will help make China more vivid and open, and the world will share China's development opportunities.

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LU Xiankun Professor LU Xiankun is Managing Director of LEDECO Geneva and Associate Partner of IDEAS Centre Geneva. He is Emeritus Professor of China Institute for WTO Studies of the University of International Business and Economics (UIBE) and Wuhan University (WHU) of China and visiting professor or senior research fellow of some other universities and think tanks in China and Europe. He also sits in management of some international business associations and companies, including as Senior Vice President of Shenzhen UEB Technology LTD., a leading e-commerce company of China. Previously, Mr. LU was senior official of Chinese Ministry of Commerce and senior diplomat posted in Europe, including in Geneva as Counsellor and Head of Division of the Permanent Mission of China to the WTO and in Brussels as Commercial Secretary of the Permanent Mission of China to the EU. Benjamin Cavender Benjamin Cavender is a Shanghai based consultant with more than 11 years of experience helping companies understand consumer behavior and develop go to market strategies for China. He is a frequent speaker on economic and consumer trends in China and is often featured on CNBC, Bloomberg, and Channel News Asia. Sara Hsu Sara Hsu is an associate professor from the State University of New York at New Paltz. She is a regular commentator on Chinese economy. Xu Qinduo Xu Qinduo is CRI's former chief correspondent to Washington DC, the United States. He works as the producer, host and commentator for TODAY, a flagship talk show on current affairs. Mr. Xu contributes regularly to English-language newspapers including Shenzhen Daily and Global Times as well as Chinese-language radio and TV services. Lin Shaowen A radio person, Mr. Lin Shaowen is strongly interested in international relations and Chinese politics. As China is quite often misunderstood in the rest of the world, he feels the need to better present the true picture of the country, the policies and meanings. So he talks a lot and is often seen debating. Then friends find a critical Lin Shaowen criticizing and criticized. George N. Tzogopoulos Dr George N. Tzogopoulos is an expert in media and politics/international relations as well as Chinese affairs. He is Senior Research Fellow at the Centre International de Européenne (CIFE) and Visiting Lecturer at the European Institute affiliated with it and is teaching international relations at the Department of Law of the Democritus University of Thrace. George is the author of two books: US Foreign Policy in the European Media: Framing the Rise and Fall of Neoconservatism (IB TAURIS) and The Greek Crisis in the Media: Stereotyping in the International Press (Ashgate) as well as the founder of chinaandgreece.com, an institutional partner of CRI Greek. David Morris David Morris is the Pacific Islands Trade and Investment Commissioner in China, a former Australian diplomat and senior political adviser. Harvey Dzodin After a distinguished career in the US government and American media Dr. Harvey Dzodin is now a Beijing-based freelance columnist for several media outlets. While living in Beijing, he has published over 200 columns with an emphasis on arts, culture and the Belt & Road initiative. He is also a sought-after speaker and advisor in China and abroad. He currently serves as Nonresident Research Fellow of the think tank Center for China and Globalization and Senior Advisor of Tsinghua University National Image Research Center specializing in city branding. Dr. Dzodin was a political appointee of President Jimmy Carter and served as lawyer to a presidential commission. Upon the nomination of the White House and the US State Department he served at the United Nations Office in Vienna, Austria. He was Director and Vice President of the ABC Television in New York for more than two decades.