China as a Developing Country
China's Economic Growth
China as a developing country
The world economy has grown to be very competitive of late; there have emerged new economic trends, new economic alliances as well as new economic powers in the world over. Among the newly emerging economic powers is China which has been observed to be one of the fastest and stable rising economies in the world that no other economies can ignore them. The big question is how the Chinese have been able to set this trend and how they are maintaining it throughout.
Before 1978, China had been experiencing an annual growth of 6% annually; at times it had severe setbacks in the economy and this was due to the control that the government had on almost all assets of China and the significant infrastructure and means of production and trade. However, this came to change in 1978 when the government of China came up with a mega economic reform agenda. This was in the form of encouraging the rural enterprises and the liberalization of foreign trade, private business was encouraged, state invested in industrial production, the state eased the price control system and invested much in the education of its workforce (Zuliu Hu & Mohsin S. Khan, 1997).
Immediately after the introduction of the economic stimulation program through the economic liberalization, China experienced a 9% economic growth with lesser strenuous time as before and recording way up to 13% in some good years. The per capita income of China has since quadrupled over the past 15 years and is predicted to hit a higher scale than that of the U.S.A. In the next 20 years if there are no major interruptions in the economic progression. By 2008 the Per Capita national income of China stood at a high of $1,740 as confirmed by Embassy of the Peoples Republic of China in the United States (2008) up from $350 in 1990. It was during the same time that the GDP was estimated to be $7.8 trillion hence being ranked the second -- largest economy in the world on the basis of purchasing power parity (PPP) (World Factbook, 2011). By the year 2005 the GNP of China stood at $1,529 billion and Goldman Sachs, a research firm, estimated that in 2050 the economy can hit a possible $44,453 billion (Economy Watch, 2011)
Reasons for the growth
There are various reasons as to why the economy of China has managed to have such a massive growth within a very short-term, with figures doubling and tripling over a short period of time. There is an intricate relationship between the various factors that account for the growth of China and they have to be viewed as part of the whole and not in isolation.
One of the major determinants of the growth was the end of the commune system under Mao. The idea of concentrating on the rural farming and giving the state any excess product was brought to an end hence the excess production could enable the rural Chinese the chance and incentive to start businesses. This sparked off a race towards forming small nonagricultural businesses and more efficient use of labor and saw the export levels of China rise from 5.3% of the GDP in 1978 to a pleasant 20.2% this was reflective of 1,450% of the China's export trade (Sonia Wong, 1998). This was achieved due to the liberalization of trade, and the strengthening of the inter-bank foreign exchange market. In turn the increase in export levels encouraged more people to move into higher-value-added manufacturing hence the shift in economy from basic production to the processing of the raw material which are more suited for export (Christopher E. Hearne, 2009).
The other factor was the granting of greater autonomy to the private enterprise ownership. With the relaxation of the rules, people became freer to set up their mega businesses, sell more of the products to a market that presented more competitive prices, control the quality of the manpower they employed, retain the reasonable portions of the income to expand the firms further and future investing. The private ownership gave rise to more job creation, boosted foreign trade, expanded consumer goods production, higher tax collection and insulated the state economy in general, indeed the privately owed enterprises outdid the State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) (Centennial Group Holdings, 2002). From 1978 there was a drop in the Gross Value of Industrial Output (GVIO) from 77.6% to 18.05% in 2001, the employment by the state in 1978 was at 73.3% but dropped to 31.9% in 2001 and on the other hand, employment by the private sector had risen from 0% to 6.4% in the same duration mentioned above (Aimin Chen, 2004)....
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