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Since the founding of New China in 1949, according to the Constitution
of the People's Republic of China, the central government has made
it a basic state policy to help ethnic minorities-inhabited border areas
with their political, economic and cultural development, and to lead all
the ethnic groups of China onto the road to common prosperity.
Increased investment in fixed assets in Xinjiang. In the 10 five-year
plans of the central government, infrastructure construction projects,
projects involving basic agricultural development and modern industrial
construction projects in Xinjiang have always been listed as key state
projects. A whole slue of preferential and special policies have been
adopted to ensure the smooth implementation of these plans. During the
half century or more since the founding of New China, with energetic state
support, investment and construction have been proceeding in a big way
in Xinjiang.
From 1950 to 2001, investment in fixed assets there added up to 501.515
billion yuan. That included 266.223 billion yuan from the central government,
accounting for 53.1% of such investment in the corresponding period. Over
90,000 projects have been completed and put into operation, including
178 large and medium-sized projects, and a batch of projects having a
vital bearing on the economic development of Xinjiang. All these have
laid a firm foundation for the autonomous region's sustained economic
growth.
Sizable financial support for Xinjiang. Preliminary statistics show that
from 1955, when the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region was founded, till
2000, the financial subsidies Xinjiang received from the central government
totaled 87.741 billion yuan. Especially since 1996, with the increase
of the central government's financial strength and the implementation
of the great western development strategy, the regular financial subsidies
Xinjiang receives from the central government have increased year by year:
5.907 billion yuan in 1996, 6.838 billion yuan in 1997, 8.012 billion
yuan in 1998, 9.4 billion yuan in 1999, 11.902 billion yuan in 2000, and
18.382 billion yuan in 2001. The central government has also increased
its fund input and support of other forms through all kinds of special
financial transfer payment as well as financial transfer payment under
the preferential policy for ethnic minorities.
Support for the government of the autonomous region in actively using
loans from international financial organizations and foreign governments.
By the end of 2001, with support from and arrangement by the central government,
Xinjiang had completed or was in the process of undertaking 22 projects
with loans from the World Bank, and the total investment had reached US$
1.79895 billion, or 14.93128 billion yuan RMB according to the current
exchange rate. Three Sino-foreign joint ventures have obtained approval
to use US$ 5.524 million in loans from the Asian Development Bank. Loans
totaling US$ 410.67 million from Canada and several other countries and
their governmental financial organizations have been used in 68 projects
in Xinjiang, some of which have been completed. Loans from international
organizations and foreign governments, which have been made full use of,
have played an important and positive role in Xinjiang's economic
development.
Benefiting Xinjiang by exploiting petroleum and natural gas. Xinjiang
is rich in petroleum and natural gas resources. Since the founding of
New China, to promote Xinjiang's economic development, the central
government has adhered to the policy of large-scale prospecting for, exploitation
of and investment in petroleum and natural gas resources in Xinjiang,
so as to bring benefits to people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang. To
realize the strategic plan of building Xinjiang into China's largest
petrochemical industry base, the central government had increased investment
in prospecting for and exploiting petroleum and natural gas in Xinjiang
year by year, in spite of the fact that the domestic and international
prices of petroleum and natural gas had dropped, and the cost of prospecting
for and exploiting petroleum and natural gas was high. The investment
in this respect was 18.196 billion yuan in 1995, and 29.223 billion yuan
in 2000. An investment to the tune of well over 120 billion yuan is planned
for the project of "transporting western natural gas eastward,"
which, with Xinjiang as the main source, is already well on the way.
The rapid development of the petroleum, natural gas and petrochemical
industry has met the demand of Xinjiang's economic development
for energy and petrochemicals. It has also given strong impetus to the
development of the machine-building, transportation, telecommunications,
construction, electricity, water conservancy, food, textiles, chemicals,
plastics, rubber and pharmaceuticals industries, as well as agriculture;
stimulated the growth of service trades; and produced a great impact on
the formation and improvement of Xinjiang's regional economic structure.
As a result, there has been a great increase in the numbers of people
employed.
Since 1994, with the operation of the Tarim Oilfield, the annual increase
of employment in the Mongolian Autonomous Prefecture of Bayingolin alone
has exceeded 18%. Meanwhile, the process of urbanization has revved up.
New oil-producing cities have mushroomed on the barren sands of the Gobi
Desert, such as Karamay, Dushanzi (Maytag), Fudong and Zepu (Poskam).
The modernization drive is going ahead apace in such cities as Urumqi,
Korla, Fukang and Luntai. Local economic development has been effectively
supported. The large oilfields in Xinjiang, such as Karamay, Tuha and
Tarim, and major petrochemical enterprises in Zepu, Dushanzi, Urumqi and
Karamay, fully using their human resources and financial and technological
advantages, have aided local enterprises and invested in local construction.
The Desert Petroleum Highway, which runs from north to south across the
Taklimakan Desert, was built with an investment of 785 million yuan from
the Tarim Oilfield.
The development of the petroleum, natural gas and petrochemical industries
in Xinjiang has boosted Xinjiang's revenues considerably. The project
of "transporting western natural gas eastward" alone will
increase Xinjiang's yearly revenue by over one billion yuan, making
a great contribution to promoting the development of various undertakings
in the autonomous region.
Making preferential policies to promote Xinjiang's development.
Since the founding of New China, and especially since the reform and opening-up
started some 20 years ago, the central government has drawn up economic
development and other policies tilted in favor of Xinjiang. Relevant regulations
on the strategy of opening up the border areas have been promulgated,
providing eight preferential policies for enlarging the opening-up of
the western areas, including Xinjiang.
The central government also encourages the construction of grain and
cotton production bases in Xinjiang, the building of shelter-forests in
northern, northeastern and northwestern China, and the construction of
desertification control projects. The central government requires that
preferential policies for aiding economic development in the impoverished
areas be carried out; border highways be built and supportive highway
facilities at border checkpoints improved; comprehensive control of the
ecosystem and water resources of the Tarim River be accelerated, with
priority given to Xinjiang when arranging projects for exploiting resources
and infrastructure construction; standard transfer payment system be adopted
for the central budget, to gradually strengthen financial support and
increase the proportion of state policy-based loans, loans from international
financial organizations and those from foreign governments.
In 2001, the central government promulgated the "Notice of Opinions
on the Implementation of Some Policies and Measures for the Great Development
of China's West," which provided 68 concrete preferential
policies in 18 aspects. According to these provisions, the government
of the autonomous region formulated and promulgated the "Suggestions
of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region on Issues Concerning the Preferential
Tax Policy in the Great Development of China's West," providing
10 concrete preferential tax policies to attract domestic and international
enterprises, as well as farmers and herdsmen to participate in investing
in and operating projects concerning Xinjiang's social infrastructure,
eco-environmental protection, high-tech industry and industries with special
potentials and local characteristics.
Dispatching and training first-class professional and technical personnel
for Xinjiang. Since the founding of New China, considering Xinjiang's
remoteness, backwardness and shortage of high-caliber personnel, the state
has assigned, transferred or encouraged over 800,000 intellectuals and
professional and technical personnel from inland regions to work in Xinjiang.
Large numbers of university graduates, scientists, technicians and highly-trained
professionals have been assigned to Xinjiang. Working in such fields as
industry, agriculture, education, culture, scientific research, medical
care and health, such people have made outstanding contributions to the
modernization of Xinjiang.
Since 1989, with arrangements made by the central government, more than
80 institutions of higher learning in the hinterland have extended their
support to Xinjiang by enrolling from among Xinjiang's ethnic minorities
10,000 university and junior college students, 640 post-graduate students
for specific posts or work units, 860 teachers and education administration
personnel, and 1,400 business administration personnel, as well as sending
a number of ethnic-minority visiting scholars abroad for further studies.
Since 2000, the 12 better-developed cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin,
Nanjing, Hangzhou, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dalian, Qingdao, Ningbo, Suzhou
and Wuxi have run special Xinjiang classes in their key provincial-level
senior high schools, with an annual enrolment of 1,540 ethnic-minority
students who enjoy local government subsidies.
Xinjiang has received strong support from other provinces, autonomous
regions and centrally administered municipalities around China. During
the past few decades, other provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities
have provided immense amounts of aid for Xinjiang in terms of technology
and skilled people. Considering the backwardness of the industrial enterprises
in Xinjiang, the central government has moved some enterprises and factories
from more developed areas along the southeast coast to Xinjiang, transferred
engineers and technicians from the inland areas to newly established key
enterprises in Xinjiang, and sent large numbers of specially picked ethnic-minority
workers from Xinjiang to study and practice in advanced enterprises in
the inland areas, resulting in the growth of a big contingent of leading
engineers and technicians for Xinjiang in a very short period of time.
Since the introduction of the policies of reform and opening-up and with
the gradual establishment of a socialist market economic system, economic
and technological cooperation and exchanges, and the interflow of highly
qualified personnel between Xinjiang and other provinces, autonomous regions
and municipalities have kept expanding. A new market-oriented pattern
of aiding Xinjiang's economic and social development has shaped
up, with capital investment as the bond, "material and human resources
interflow" as the characteristic, and mutual complementarity as
the principle.
In recent years, in particular, in conformity with the requirements of
the central government, over 20 better-developed provinces and municipalities,
including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangdong, Shandong and Zhejiang, have paired
up with and provided aid for various prefectures and cities in Xinjiang
in relevant fields, with fruitful results. |