China confirms leadership change
15 November 2012 Last updated at 05:10 GMT
China's ruling Communist Party has unveiled a new set of leaders.
Economic
reforms have transformed China into the world's second-largest
economy. But its 1.3 billion population and continental size mean the
problems these new leaders face are still daunting.
These are the issues set to be top of their agenda.
Change the model
China's
economic success has lifted 500 million people out of poverty. Yet the
economic model that worked so well during the early years of China's
development now needs to change.
Chinese
and Western analysts say the economy must be rebalanced to give more
weight to consumers instead of investment, much of which is
government-led and wasteful.
State-owned companies which dominate many sectors need to be opened up to competition.
And,
instead of championing these state-owned giants, the government must
give more support instead to small and medium-sized companies, because
these are likely to be the providers of future growth and jobs.
China's
government agrees with these goals, at least in its official
pronouncements. The problem is it has done little to address them.
Supporters
say it was sidetracked by the global financial crisis, which prompted a
huge stimulus package rather than structural reforms.
Critics
argue China's one-party state is too compromised by vested interest
groups, political concerns and corruption to introduce the needed
changes.
They
point to the state-owned sector, which produces only half of China's
GDP but gets the benefit of more than 70% of its bank lending, at
artificially low interest rates.
Huo Deming, an economist at Peking University, says it is "unthinkable" for the state-owned sector to be forced to retreat.
"The
state-owned enterprises will expand again, China's political leaders
want them to compete with the US and other countries, so further
strengthening them is a must," he says.
Inequality
Everyone is much better off than when China began its economic reforms in 1978.
But
incomes in the cities have risen far faster than in rural areas, while
rich coastal provinces have powered ahead of the poor interior. The
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences says the gap between urban and rural
incomes has jumped 68% since 1985, creating one of the widest wealth
gaps in Asia.
The
government is worried the gap could spark social unrest. It points to
poverty eradication programmes in poor provinces like Sichuan and its
abolition of a centuries-old agricultural tax as proof of its
commitment.
It
has also vastly expanded healthcare insurance, increasing the number
of people covered ten-fold to 830 million, and education.
Yet
critics say much more needs to be done, and point out that China
spends only about 6% of GDP on social welfare, about half the level of
countries at a similar level of development.
Part
of the problem is China's governance system. Social spending is
largely the responsibility of local governments, which say they do not
have enough money, however much Beijing hectors them.
Environment
China's explosive growth has created some of the world's most complex environmental challenges.
It
is now the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, yet will
continue to rely on coal as its main energy source for the foreseeable
future.
New
wealth has seen the number of cars on the roads quadruple since 2003.
Yet China is already home to 20 of the world's 30 most polluted cities.
The
central government well understands the problems. It points to success
stories like the restoration of the Loess plateau in the country's
north-west, and the fact that wind turbine capacity has doubled every
year since 2005.
It
has also put in place the legal and regulatory framework for tackling
environmental problems, though implemention - especially at the local
level - remains patchy.
And, alongside the task of cleaning up a "high growth, high pollution" past, China still faces basic development challenges.
"They've
made huge gains, but there are still 480 million people without access
to sanitation, and nearly 120 million without access to water
supplies," says Joanna Masic of the Asian Development Bank.
Rising expectations
As Chinese people have become richer and better educated, their expectations have drastically changed.
They
no longer just expect the next generation of leaders to run an economy
that creates jobs and wealth, they want better services and greater
freedoms too.
More
than 6 million people graduate from Chinese universities every year, a
six-fold increase since 1998. More than 500 million people use the
internet, especially a micro-blogging site called Sina Weibo. Smart
phones are helping drive social activism and, sometimes, environmental
protests.
There is conflicting evidence as to whether people are happier, as well as richer.
Analysis
by Richard Easterlin, of the University of Southern California,
suggests China's wealthiest third were more satisfied with their lives
in 2007 than in 1990, but the rest of the country was not.
Part of the reason may be aspirational. People know their lives have improved, but think other people are doing even better.
Demographics
China's
fertility rate is one of the lowest in the world, in part because of
the one-child policy. This restricts urban couples to having only one
child, unless both partners are themselves only children.
As a result, China has fewer and fewer young people to pay for the pensions and healthcare of more and more elderly.
The
working-age population is set to start shrinking from 2015, adding to
pressure on wages. China will also soon have more senior citizens than
the EU.
The
one-child policy has also created anomalies. Some parents who want
boys abort fetuses which ultrasound scans show to be female. China now
has about 120 male births for every 100 female births, and there are
estimates that by 2020, 24 million single men will be left without
potential partners.
Academics
and government think tanks have called for the policy to be scrapped,
which would be popular with young Chinese and could help restore
China's fertility rate.
But no senior leader has publicly backed any changes, which some officials appear to worry could lead to a population explosion.
From BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-20030681
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