China has made remarkable progress over the past few years in breaking
through the technological bottleneck in economic development.
The booming high-tech industries have begun to play an important
role in changing China's economic growth manners and economic restructuring,
an official at the State Development Planning Commission (SDPC)
said Friday.
In 1996 the central government made clear the necessity of vigorously
developing high-tech and related industries. And in the ensuing
years, the state adopted a series of major policies to encourage
technical innovations, giving unprecedented priority to the development
of science and technology as well as high-tech industrialization.
Last year, the SDPC issued a directory for major high-tech areas
China was paying special attention to, aiming to guide social investment,
promote industrial restructuring and upgrade technologies.
Meanwhile, the SDPC began to work on a development plan for high-tech
industries during the 10th Five-Year Plan (2001-2005), the first
in history, the official said.
The Fifth Plenum of the 15th Central Committee of the Communist
Party of China, which was convened on October 9-11, called for greater
efforts in the research of high-tech areas of strategic importance.
In 1999, the central government for the first time earmarked treasury
bonds to finance 172 high-tech projects, including a project to
encourage domestic manufacture and use of digital mobile communications
equipment.
Implementation of those projects, along with others this year,
has been instrumental in breaking through technological bottlenecks
blocking the country's economic development, and helped form some
new economic growth areas and high-tech industries.
Increased support from the state helps expand the total volume
of high-tech industries rapidly. Statistics showed that the industrial
output value of China's high-tech industries rose from 440 billion
yuan in 1993 to more than 1.1 trillion yuan in 1999, an average
increase of 22.7 percent, 5.8 percentage points higher than that
of the total industrial output value.
High-tech exports and imports have also been on a fast track. Statistics
show that the total high-tech foreign trade volume climbed from
some US$20 billion in 1993 to more than 62 billion in 1999, contributing
greatly to reversing China's downhill exports, brought about by
the Asian financial crisis.
In addition, high-tech has been boosting the traditional industries,
raising their technological level and competitiveness, and unfolding
further options for development on a more technically advanced level.
(People's Daily 10/13/2000)
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