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Premier Wen expounds 'real China' at UN debate

yangtomous

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UNITED NATIONS - China remains a developing country and will stick to the path of peaceful development for the common good of mankind, Premier Wen Jiabao said here Thursday.

"This is the real China," he said in a speech titled "Getting to Know the Real China" before world leaders and delegates at the annual general debate of the UN General Assembly.

China remains a developing country
While taking pride from the rapid growth and remarkable achievements over the past 30 years, "we are clear-headed about our place and role in today's world," Wen said.
Although China's gross domestic product is the third largest in the world, the per capita figure is only one tenth of that of developed countries, he noted.
China is a leading producer of many important products, but remains at the lower end of the global industrial chain; China is a big trading nation, but its exports are low in technology content and in added value, Wen said.
China's coastal areas and some of the big and medium-sized cities thrive in modernization, but many places in the central and western regions and the vast rural areas are still rather backward, he said, noting that 150 million people in China are still living below the poverty line set by the United Nations.
In addition, more efforts are needed before China establishes full-fledged social security and legal systems and eradicate inequity, corruption and other social ills, Wen said.
"Taken as a whole, China is still in the primary stage of socialism and remains a developing country," he concluded, adding that the country's further development faces constraints of energy, resources and the environment.
"These are our basic national conditions. This is the real China," Wen said.
China sticks to reform and opening-up
In order to realize the strategic goal of basically achieving modernization by the middle of this century, China will forge ahead in the coming decades with the already 32-year-old basic policy of reform and opening-up, the Chinese premier said.
The guideline "has benefited people across the country" and "there is no reason whatsoever for us to deviate from it," Wen said.
Terming development as Beijing's "top priority," he said China's progressing industrialization and urbanization will draw hundreds of millions of farmers into towns and cities and thus "create more domestic demand than ever."
The trend will "open up broad market and development space and serve as a powerful engine sustaining the growth of the Chinese economy and the world economy at large," Wen continued.
Meanwhile, China will be "even more open to the world" and adhere to the long-term strategy of practicing with other countries "mutually beneficial cooperation for win-win progress," he said.
Commenting on international finance and trade, the Chinese premier stressed that his country is "against protectionism in all its manifestations."
"We are committed to promoting the establishment of a fair, equitable, inclusive and well-managed new international financial order and an open and free international trading regime," he said.
China will also continue to deepen institutional reform, boost education, science and technology and promote its fine culture in order to improve peoples' well-being in an all-around way, he said.
China stays commited to peaceful development
Along with its development, China will "continue to take it as its own duty to promote the common progress and prosperity of mankind," Wen said.

"The world of the 21st century is far from being tranquil, but gone are the days when problems were ultimately settled by war. Peace and development remain the defining features of our time," said the Chinese premier.

China will stay firmly committed to peaceful development, whose essence is "to foster a peaceful international environment for our development and at the same time contribute to world peace through our development," he added.

"China's development will not harm anyone or pose a threat to anyone," Wen said, stressing that Beijing will never follow the footsteps of powers which sought hegemony once they grew strong.

Meanwhile, Beijing firmly upholds its national core interests, and "when it comes to sovereignty, national unity and territorial integrity, China will not yield or compromise," he said.

The Chinese government will continue to steadfastly support the leading role of the United Nations in international affairs, and to intensify cooperation with fellow developing countries and support their bid for a greater say on the world stage, Wen added.

"China's development is an opportunity to the world. And the world stands to gain from a China that is better off. History will continue to prove this... Let us join hands to work for a world of enduring peace and prosperity," he said.

Wen arrived in New York on Tuesday evening. During his tight-scheduled three-day stay, he also attended a high-level meeting on the Millennium Development Goals, a UN Security Council meeting and a high-level discussion panel on HIV/AIDS.

On the sidelines of these conferences, Wen held separate meetings with US President Barack Obama, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and some other foreign leaders.
Premier Wen expounds 'real China' at UN debate
 
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Just trying to bless this excellent thread from incoming pests:

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I would like to add here that, while Pakistan is a strong ally of China, the Pakistani people need to start getting self dependent. Whenever we face a problem we shouldn't just say leave it to the Chinese to figure it out, our research needs to be expanded we have a lot of expertise in various fields but we need to become more independent, future problems won't come with a warning we need to be prepared for when China is not sufficient enough to support and expand fields in which we have a foothold.

Pakistanis contributed to Chinese nuclear facilities for a long time instead of the other way around. Iran a leader in stem cell research, lasers and various other fields has extended a hand to aid Pakistan in developing modern technologies this offer shouldn't be wasted.

America takes its sweet time whenever it comes to helping Pakistanis, we should be independent of it, better technologies are available else where. Sorry to go on a little rant just need people to know this.
 
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With the greatest respect to Premier Wen

Although China's gross domestic product is the third largest in the world, the per capita figure is only one tenth of that of developed countries, he noted.
China is a leading producer of many important products, but remains at the lower end of the global industrial chain...but its exports are low in technology content

I belive it is now second and i think its fairly safe to say when your GDP is over 4 trillion your no longer developing, as for low in technology :blink:

China produces more "high tech" exports than the enitre EU.

http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-SF-09-025/EN/KS-SF-09-025-EN.PDF
 
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With the greatest respect to Premier Wen

I belive it is now second and i think its fairly safe to say when your GDP is over 4 trillion your no longer developing, as for low in technology :blink:

China produces more "high tech" exports than the enitre EU.

http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-SF-09-025/EN/KS-SF-09-025-EN.PDF

Thanks buddy. :cheers:

To be honest though, as long as there are many areas of China that are under-developed, most of us will consider our nation to be a developing country.
 
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our nation is definitely a developing one. our basic infrastructure is almost set, but there are many parts of the country that are not even as good as central China (which the west considers poor, but it isn't really, it's not poverty until you've been to Yunnan, Guizhou and Tibet). we do not even have full electrification yet, no developed country lacks full electrification.
 
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With the greatest respect to Premier Wen



I belive it is now second and i think its fairly safe to say when your GDP is over 4 trillion your no longer developing, as for low in technology :blink:

China produces more "high tech" exports than the enitre EU.

http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-SF-09-025/EN/KS-SF-09-025-EN.PDF

I'll have to disagree here, China is definitely still a developing country.

I prefer to compare various parts of China with countries in South East Asia. Hong Kong and Macau are of the same development level as Singapore and both are obviously developed. Coastal Mainland China are in the roughly same stage of development as Malaysia (probably sightly behind Malaysia but not that far). Central China is roughly comparable to Thailand (again they're still a bit behind Thailand). The Western and Southwestern China is on the level as Indonesia/other poorer ASEAN countries.

So IMO even the most developed Mainland regions are just comparable to Malaysia, which is one of the most advanced developing economies, but still will not reach developed status until 2020.

BTW some rating agencies still refuse to classify South Korea and Taiwan as developed economies.

As for high-tech exports, China does export a lot of high-tech products but we're not making the high tech part of those products. Take iPads for example. it's designed by the Americans with major components made by South Koreans, China only does the entirely low tech job of assembling. Yet the finial products count as high-tech Chinese exports!
 
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I'll have to disagree here, China is definitely still a developing country.

I prefer to compare various parts of China with countries in South East Asia. Hong Kong and Macau are of the same development level as Singapore and both are obviously developed. Coastal Mainland China are in the roughly same stage of development as Malaysia (probably sightly behind Malaysia but not that far). Central China is roughly comparable to Thailand (again they're still a bit behind Thailand). The Western and Southwestern China is on the level as Indonesia/other poorer ASEAN countries.

So IMO even the most developed Mainland regions are just comparable to Malaysia, which is one of the most advanced developing economies, but still will not reach developed status until 2020.

BTW some rating agencies still refuse to classify South Korea and Taiwan as developed economies.

As for high-tech exports, China does export a lot of high-tech products but we're not making the high tech part of those products. Take iPads for example. it's designed by the Americans with major components made by South Koreans, China only does the entirely low tech job of assembling. Yet the finial products count as high-tech Chinese exports!

we don't do high tech exports to the US. no consumer good is high tech. the high tech exports are industrial boilers, reactors, turbines, machine tools, etc. which go to other developing countries mostly. our high tech imports consist of, other than civilian aircraft, analytical tools such as HPLC, GC, SEM, TEM, AFM and other spectroscopy/microscopy tools.
 
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