Implications of China's Boom for the World
China's Economy
China is a country to be reckoned with.
The Economy of the People's Republic of China:
is the fourth largest in the world when measured by nominal GDP. Its per capita GDP in 2005 was approximately US $1,709 (US $7,204 with PPP), still low by world standards, but rising rapidly. As of 2005, 70% of China's GDP is in the private sector. The smaller public sector is dominated by about 200 large state enterprises concentrated mostly in utilities, heavy industries, and energy resources.
Since 1978 the People's Republic of China (PRC) government has been reforming its economy from a Soviet-style centrally planned economy to a more market-oriented economy but still within the political framework, provided by the Communist Party of China. This system has been called "Socialism with Chinese characteristics" and is one type of mixed economy. These reforms started since 1978 has helped lift millions of people out of poverty, bringing the poverty rate down from 53% of population in 1981 to 8% by 2001.
China as Economic Superpower
WB: China must overcome 3 major challenges to become world's top economy:
A senior World Bank official said Sunday that China is now facing the challenges of changing its economic growth mode, maintaining rapid and sustainable economic growth and managing its growing in equality in order to become the world's top economy by 2030 or 2040.
Addressing the China Development Forum 2005, Shengman Zhang, managing director of the World Bank, said China has to transform its current economic growth mode, which is characterized by low efficiency and excessive consumption of resources and energy, to an efficient one, not simply relying on high growth of investment.
China must also improve its market operating efficiency and improve corporate efficiency, he said.
Zhang said China has to maintain a rapid and sustainable economic growth while controlling the growing the negative impact on its environment through improved efficiency of energy and water consumption.
Compared with the energy-efficient industrialized nations, it costs China about 150 percent or 200 percent of energy as those nations to produce per-unit gross domestic product, he said.
The growing inequality in China remains one of the major challenges to the China, which is a by-product of China's evolution, said Zhang.
China needs the help of other members of the international community to address those challenges, said the vice-president.
China has become the world's third largest trading nation in the world and is projected to be the biggest trading nation in 2020, he said.
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Rock
(*Wikipedia is always my source unless indicated.)
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China's Economic Boom and Worries
China's economic boom continues: BBC NEWS | Business | "There are still worries about agriculture and rural incomes."
Dark Side of China's Economic Boom
migrant workers: Far Eastern Economic Review. A High Price to Pay for a Job. One dark side to China's economic boom is that migrant workers are owed billions of dollars in back pay despite some official efforts to help them. By Anthony Kuhn/BEIJING.
Environmental Problems
China's Boom Is Bust for Global Environment, Study Warns: Stefan Lovgren for National Geographic News.
Shenzhen, Booming City
Example of "Capitalism in Socialism with Chinese Characteristics"
Economic Boom
Shenzhen:The Rise of Activism and Political Awareness
In Chinese Boomtown, Middle Class Pushes Back: New York Times, by Ryan Pyle. SHENZHEN, China. A Chinese City's Boom.The Implications
China is an example of both the glory and the shame of capitalism. Capitalists can point with pride to China's rapid rise from third-world status to economic superpower through the implementation of capitalistic reforms. The reduction in their poverty rate and their rise in GDP has been astonishing. This could not have happened under pure communism. What's more, economic growth has also begun to have political implications, leading to more democracy and activism.
Socialists and leftists, though, will point to the dark side. This includes worker abuse, low wages, wealth disparity, pollution, and the waste of natural resources.
China is also at the forefront of the effects of globalization, good and bad. Their boom was started, after all, with both economic reforms and the availability of cheap labor. Is China a model for other third-world countries?
Further implications for the world and for the U.S. include the balance of power. This could change markedly especially as China arms itself for the twenty-first century, and begins to assert its muscle. No one knows whether China will continue to be satisfied with the status quo, or whether it could turn imperialistic. It certainly will become a player in all the world's important issues.
What Should We Do About China?
Nothing. China and its growth are a fact of life. We need to factor this in to our thinking and planning. We must grow our economy and stay strong. We should strengthen our democracy and ensure we are on a correct path for ourselves. In the best case, China will continue to reform and gradually transform into a peaceful democracy, another ally like Europe, perhaps even better. In the worst case? We'll handle that too.
What Should We Do About Globalization?
Again, globalization is a fact of life. We will have to deal with workers' rights, pollution, and the use of natural resources in ways that will help the poor with jobs, while at the same time protecting them from abuse; plus preserving our resources and environment. No small order. The challenge for the future.
The first step is understanding the issues.