BIZCHINA> 30 Years of Reforms
![]() |
Shenzhen Zen
By Fu Jing (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-08-04 11:27 Eager to tap Shenzhen's low costs especially for labor and land, foreign companies rushed into the SEZ, led by factory owners from nearby Hong Kong. But the SEZ's small space - it occupies a mere 396 sq km - later arrested its further development. In 1992 the 14th National Congress of the Communist Party of China made it clear that the goal of China's economic reform was to build a socialist market economy. Now that the reform has taken hold the institutional advantages enjoyed by the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone faded a bit. In response, Shenzhen started looking beyond the narrow SEZ and at the city's entire 1,952.8 sq km of land. The result was a decades-long boom, with Shenzhen's economy expanding at an average rate of 28 percent a year from 1980 to 2004 driven largely by exports. Its exports totaled $168.2 billion last year, leading the country as it has for 15 consecutive years. Today the city is home to some of China's most important electronics manufacturers, such as telecom-equipment firm Huawei Technologies and mobile phone maker ZTE. The rapid development of Shenzhen has also allowed Guangdong to become the richest province in China. Guangdong still leads its peers in economic output, accounting for about 12 percent of national GDP. The province's population, including migrants, is near 100 million. Shenzhen can attribute much of its success to migrant workers. Today, it has 2.1 million "official" residents and almost 8 million "unofficial" ones, who are not granted local household registrations or "hukou". Luckily, since August 1, the city has adopted a "residential permit" system for migrants. Replacing "temprary residential system," the new policy allows the administration to better manage the population by collecting full information on non-permanent residents and provide more employment, social security and educational services for their children. Qin Hui, a professor with Tsinghua University, points out that while migrant workers have left their rural homes to work in big cities and have spent their "prime" literally building urban growth, they are still not legally entitled to settle permanently in the cities and enjoy the same privileges as those with hukou.
These days, Shenzhen is trying to reinvent itself as a high-tech economic powerhouse with an advanced services sector and more diversified ownership. This is the progression that Japanese companies went through in the 1950s-70s. It's also progression that Korean companies went through in the '70s and '80s. Shenzhen began with garments and footwear, and then moved into consumer electronics. Now it's communications equipment, telecoms switches and routers, and automobiles. The municipal government's painstaking efforts to upgrade its industrial structure have also paid off. The service industry now accounts for 49 percent of the economy, following the manufacturing industry at 50.9 percent. Agriculture has narrowed to 0.1 percent. But Shenzhen has been faced with many barriers such as shortages of land, power and water, population growth and a worsening environment. And it has also been challenged by global factors including the US subprime mortgage crisis and US dollar depreciation, falling global market demand, the rising prices of oil, grain and raw materials, and global inflation. "Shenzhen is at an important strategic turning point," the city government said recently. "We should waste no time to turn Shenzhen into an innovative city." Two major factors are helping make it possible for Shenzhen push for a change in the manufacturing landscape. A new highway network to the coast is making it possible to move factories inland, where officials are eager for the investment. Second, most of the low-wage laborers who fill the Pearl River Delta's factories are migrants from rural areas inland. These workers are mobile, quickly moving on if the basic jobs they do disappear. Now, Shenzhen and the rest of Guangdong province look at Hunan and Sichuan as a much more cooperative hinterland. If Shenzhen can leap from assembling basic products with low-pay, unskilled labor to nurturing lavishly paid talent, it could blaze a trail for the rest of China. Confronted with resource and energy constraints, the entire Chinese economy is being faced with the transitional pains Shenzhen must tackle today. Shenzhen is "continuously trying to set an example for the rest of the country," says the expert Li Luoli. Strategically Li is right: Shenzhen is on the way to realizing its Seoul, Hong Kong or Tokyo dream while China is transforming itself.
(For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
|
主站蜘蛛池模板: 可以看的黄网 | 精品a视频 | 色综合久久88色综合天天提莫 | 交videos人妖 | 玖玖在线免费视频 | 国产黄色片在线免费观看 | 在线精品欧美日韩 | 久热中文字幕在线精品免费 | 国产欧美综合在线一区二区三区 | 黄色美女免费看 | 三级毛片网 | 日本xxxxx黄区免费看动漫 | 国产欧美综合精品一区二区 | 男人的天堂亚洲 | 国产成人精品一区二区免费视频 | 美女黄18 | 黄色片日本人 | 一级片美女| 久久精品国产精品青草 | 国产三级视频网站 | 国产一起色一起爱 | 亚洲第五色综合网啪啪 | 免费一区二区三区四区 | 一区自拍 | 夜色伊人 | 91热久久免费精品99 | 三级精品 | 一区二区三区欧美 | 久久综合久久久 | 日韩亚洲欧美一区噜噜噜 | 亚洲三级理论 | 青青草原色 | 国产高清专区 | 特黄日韩免费一区二区三区 | 国产欧美一区二区三区在线看 | 在线视免费频观看韩国aaa | 欧美色xxxx| 国产日韩欧美精品在线 | 国产成人午夜精品免费视频 | 精品日本一区二区三区在线观看 | 一级a性色生活片久久毛片 一级a做爰片欧欧美毛片4 |