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| By
Wen Jiabao, Premier of the State Council of the
People's Republic of China. At the University of Cambridge,Cambridge, UK |
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Chinese
Premier, Wen Jiabo visit to the University of Cambridge, England, on February
2nd, occurred at a time of growing uncertainty over the continuing decline
of the global economy, and shadows of insolvency loomed ever larger over
international financial institutions and markets. |
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It gives me great pleasure to come to Cambridge, a world-renowned university that I have long wanted to visit. Cambridge has produced many great scientists and thinkers; Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin and Francis Bacon, to name but a few, and made important contribution to the progress of human civilization. This year marks the 800th anniversary of the university. Please accept my warm congratulations. Despite the great distance between China and Britain, the friendly exchanges between our people have been on the rise. I wish to pay tribute to all those who have been working tirelessly to promote friendly ties between our two countries. China is a country both old and young. She is old, because she is a big Oriental country with a civilization stretching back several thousand years. With diligence and wisdom, the Chinese nation created a splendid civilization and made significant contributions to the progress of humanity. She is young, because the People's Republic is just 60 years old, and the country began to reform and to open-up only 30 years ago. The Chinese people established the New China after unremitting struggles and ultimately found a development path suited to China's national conditions through painstaking efforts. This is the path of socialism with Chinese characteristics. Following this path, our ancient civilization has been rejuvenated. The key element of China's reform and opening-up is to free people's mind and the most fundamental and significant component is institutional innovation. Through economic reform, we have built a socialist market economy, where the market plays a primary role in allocating resources under government macro-regulation. We have carried out political reform, promoted democracy and improved the legal system. People are the masters of the country. We run the country according to law and endeavor to build a socialist country under the rule of law. The
essence of China's reform and opening-up is to put people first and meet
their ever growing material and cultural needs through releasing and developing
productive forces. It aims to give everyone equal opportunities for all-round
development. It aims to protect the democratic rights of the people and
promote stability, harmony and prosperity across the land. And it aims
to safeguard the dignity and freedom of everyone so that he or she may
pursue happiness with ingenuity and hard work. China is a country that withstood numerous vicissitudes but never gave up. Earlier in my career, I worked in northwest China for many years. There, in the boundless desert, grows a rare variety of tree called Euphrates Poplar. Rooted over 50 meters down into the ground, they thrive in hostile environments, defying droughts, sandstorms and salinization. They are known as the "hero tree", because a Euphrates Poplar can live for a thousand years. Even after it dies, it stands upright for a thousand years, and even after it falls, it stays intact for another thousand years. I like Euphrates Poplar because they symbolize the resilience of the Chinese nation. Over
the millennia, the Chinese nation has weathered numerous disasters, both
natural and man-made, surmounted all kinds of difficulties and challenges,
and made her way to where she proudly stands today. The long sufferings
have only made her a nation of fortitude and perseverance. The experience
of the Chinese nation attests to a truth: what a nation loses in times
of disaster will be made up for by her progress. With hard work over the
past half century and more, China has achieved great progress. Its total
economic output is now one of the largest in the world. However, we remain
a developing country and we are keenly aware of the big gap that we have
with the developed countries. There has been no fundamental change in
our basic national condition: a big population, weak economic foundation
and uneven development. China's per capita GDP ranks behind 100 countries
in the world and is only about 5.5 per cent of Britain. Those of you who
have been to China as tourists must have seen the modern cities, but our
rural areas are still quite backward. My beloved motherland is a country that values her traditions while opening her arms to the outside world. The traditional Chinese culture is rich, extensive and profound. The Chinese cultural tradition values peace as the most precious. The Chinese nation is generous and tolerant, just as Mother Earth cares for all living things, just as the eternal movement of the Universe. In the 15th century, the famous Chinese navigator Zheng, led seven maritime expeditions to the Western Seas and reached over 30 countries. He took with him Chinese tea, silk and porcelain, and helped local people fight pirates as he sailed along. He was truly a messenger of love and friendship. The
argument that a big power is bound to seek hegemony does not apply to
China. Seeking hegemony goes against China's cultural tradition as well
as the will of the Chinese people. China's development harms no one and
threatens no one. We shall be a peace-loving country, a country that is
eager to learn from and cooperate with others. We are committed to building
a harmonious world. Different countries and nations need to respect, tolerate
and learn from each other's culture. Today, 300 million Chinese are learning
English and over one million of our young people are studying abroad.
The cultures and arts of various parts of the world are featured daily
on China's television, radio and print media. Had we not learned from
others through exchanges and enriched ourselves by drawing on others'
experience, we would not have enjoyed today's prosperity and progress.
The fallout of the financial crisis on China's real economy is becoming more evident. Since the third quarter of last year, our exports have declined sharply, economic growth has slowed down, and the pressure on employment has been rising. In the face of the grim situation, we have acted decisively. We have made timely adjustment to the direction of our macroeconomic policy, promptly introduced ten measures to expand domestic demand, and formulated a series of related policies. Together, they make up a systematic and comprehensive package plan aimed at promoting steady and relatively fast economic growth. Its main contents are: First, substantially increase government spending to boost domestic demand. The Chinese Government has announced a two-year investment program that will generate, through fiscal spending, a total investment of RMB 4 trillion (US $585 billion) nationwide, equivalent to 16 per cent of China's GDP in 2007. The money will mainly go into government-subsidized housing, projects related to the well-being of rural residents, the construction of railway and other infrastructural projects, social development programs, environmental protection and post-earthquake recovery and reconstruction. The Chinese Government has introduced a massive tax-cut program, which will reduce the tax burdens on businesses and individuals by about RMB 500 billion (US $73.1 billion) each year. We have also cut interest rates by a large margin, increased liquidity in the banking system and adopted a range of financial measures. Second, implement a large-scale industrial restructuring and rejuvenation program. We are pushing forward industrial restructuring and upgrading across the board and formulating plans for the restructuring and revitalization of ten key industries, including automobiles and iron and steel. We will take economic and technological measures to boost energy conservation and reduce emissions, and promote merger and reorganization of enterprises to raise the level of industry concentration and the efficiency of resource allocation. We encourage and support the extensive application of new technologies, techniques, equipment and materials and the development of marketable products by enterprises. Third, make energetic efforts for progress and innovation in science and technology. Science and technology are of fundamental importance in overcoming the financial crisis. A
major crisis is usually followed by a revolution in science and technology,
and no economic recovery is possible without technological innovation.
We are stepping up the implementation of the National Program for medium-and-long-Term
scientific and technological development, with special emphasis on 16
major projects including core electronic devices, development and use
of nuclear energy and advanced numerically controlled machine tools. We
will strive to make breakthroughs in a host of core technologies and key
generic technologies to support sustainable economic growth at a higher
level. We will promote the development of high-tech industrial clusters
and cultivate new economic growth areas. All in all, we will rely on major
breakthroughs in science and technology to foster new social demand and
bring about a new round of economic boom. Fourth, significantly raise
the level of social security. We will continue to increase the basic pension
for retired workers, and upgrade the standard of unemployment insurance
and workers' compensation. We will raise the level of basic cost of living
allowances in both urban and rural areas and welfare allowances for those
rural residents without family support. We are advancing the reform of
the medical and health system and working to put in place a nationwide
basic medical and health system covering both urban and rural areas within
three years and achieve the goal of everyone having access to basic medical
and health service. We give priority to education and are now working
on the guidelines of the national program for medium- and-long-term educational
reform and development. We are following a more active employment policy
with special emphasis on helping college graduates and migrant workers
find jobs. We are endeavoring to create more jobs and lessen the impact
of the financial crisis on employment. The aforementioned measures will
help us boost domestic demand, readjust and reinvigorate industries, enhance
the support of science and technology and strengthen social security all
at the same time. They will stimulate consumption through increased investment,
drive economic growth while improving people's livelihood and creating
more jobs, and see us through current difficulties while also improving
the long-term prospect of the Chinese economy. They will not only benefit
China's development, but also bring enormous business opportunities to
other countries, Britain included. The international financial crisis once again shows how dangerous a market economy without regulation can be. Since the 1990s, some profit-driven financial institutions in economies lacking effective regulation have raised massive capital with a leverage of dozens of times. While they reaped huge profits, the world was exposed to enormous risks. This fully demonstrates that a totally unregulated market economy cannot work. We must strike a balance between financial innovation and regulation, between the financial sector and real economy, and between savings and consumption. To
effectively meet the crisis, we must fully recognize the role of morality.
Nothing is greater than morality. It shines even more brightly than the
sun. True economic theories will never come into conflict with the highest
moral and ethical standards. Instead, they should stand for justice and
integrity, and contribute in an equal way to the well-being of all people,
including the most vulnerable ones. Adam Smith, known as the father of
modern economics, held the view in The Theory of Moral Sentiments that,
if the fruits of a society's economic development cannot be shared by
all, it is morally unsound and risky, as it is bound to jeopardize social
stability. The loss of morality is an underlying cause for the current
crisis. Some people have sacrificed principle and sought profits at the
expense of public interests. They have crossed the moral baseline. We
should call on all enterprises to take up their social responsibilities.
Within the body of every businessman should flow the blood of morality.
The
future belongs to the younger generation. It is incumbent upon you to
build an even more splendid future of China-Britain relations. Here and
now, I cannot but mention Dr. Joseph Needham, a Cambridge alumnus who
made important contribution to cultural exchanges between China and Britain.
With his monumental masterpiece, Science and Civilization in China, he
built a bridge between the two great civilizations of East and West. To
honor tradition and innovation is the outstanding character of Cambridge.
I hope more of you will turn your eyes to China, see my country in the
light of her development, and act as ambassadors of China-Britain friendship.
I believe that as long as you, the young people of China and Britain learn
from each other and strive for progress hand in hand, you will add a brilliant
new chapter to the annals of our relations. |
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