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Before the founding of the People's Republic of China, the economy
of Xinjiang was a natural economy, with farming and livestock breeding
as the mainstay. Industry was underdeveloped, and there were no railways
or up-to-the-mark factories or mines. Famines were frequent in some areas,
and the people were impoverished. Xinjiang was peacefully liberated on
September 25, 1949. On October 1, 1955, the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region was established, opening a new page for historic development in
Xinjiang. In the past half century, Xinjiang's economy and social
undertakings have advanced by leaps and bounds.
Fast growth of the economy. The GDP of Xinjiang was 148.548 billion yuan
in 2001. Taking price rises into account, this was 42.9 times that of
1952, and an annual growth rate of 8.0%. The per-capita GDP rose from
166 yuan in 1952 to 7,913 yuan in 2001. The autonomous region's
revenues amounted to 17.807 billion yuan in 2001, or 102.9 times the 1955
figure of 173 million yuan. Xinjiang's industrial structure has
been constantly adjusted and optimized. Primary, secondary and tertiary
industries accounted for 19.4%, 42.4% and 38.2% of the GDP in 2001, respectively.
Compared with 1955, the proportion of primary industry dropped by 35 percentage
points, that of secondary industry rose by 16.3 percentage points, and
that of tertiary industry rose by 18.7 percentage points.
The overall production capacity of agriculture has risen notably. After
50-plus years of development and construction, and especially since the
reform and opening policies were introduced, a complete farmland irrigation
network in Xinjiang has been preliminarily formed, and the level of modern
farm equipment has risen. By 2001, the total power output of farm machinery
came to 8,808,500 kw, the net quantity of chemical fertilizers used for
farming was 832,900 tons, and rural power consumption totaled 2.545 billion
kwh. Meanwhile, the total sown area was 3,404,120 ha, double the 1955
figure. The total output of food grains, cotton and sugar beet was 7.96
million tons, 1.57 million tons and 4.55 million tons, respectively, or
5.4 times, 62.5 times and 4,551.2 times the figures for 1955, respectively.
Turpan grapes, Korla pears and Hami melons, which have long been famous
Xinjiang products, sell well on both foreign and domestic markets.
Specialty horticulture and crop planting have leapfrogged in the past
few years. Livestock breeding is being promoted with the use of the latest
findings in agricultural science and technology. At the end of 2001, the
region had 46.0378 million head of livestock, 2.8 times the number in
1955. In addition, Xinjiang has become the largest producer of commodity
cotton, hops and tomato sauce, and one of the major livestock breeding
and beet-sugar producing centers in China.
Industrial strength rising rapidly. There were only 363 industrial enterprises
in Xinjiang, with an annual output value of 98 million yuan, when New
China was founded. In 2001, there were 6,287 industrial enterprises at
and above the township level, with an added value of 45 billion yuan,
and the output of major industrial products has all increased by large
margins. In 2001, Xinjiang produced 19.4695 million tons of crude oil,
28.1961 million tons of raw coal, 302,700 tons of cotton yarn and 19.762
billion kwh of electricity -- 591.78 times, 43.68 times, 81.8 times
and 359.3 times the 1955 figures, respectively. It also produced 419,800
tons of refined sugar, 1.3183 million tons of steel, 9.8129 million tons
of cement and 729,000 tons of chemical fertilizer.
The region's industrial strength has greatly increased and the
technological level has notably risen. A modern industrial system of considerable
size complete with all necessary departments has taken shape, with the
intensive processing of farm and sideline products as its leading industrial
sector, backed up by the oil, petrochemicals, steel, coal, electric power,
textile, building materials, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, food processing
and light industries.
Notable achievements made in water conservancy. On the basis of "oasis
ecology and irrigated farmland," Xinjiang has carried out large-scale
farm water conservancy construction. The multi-purpose project to harness
the Tarim River has, on four occasions, diverted 1.05 billion cu m of
water from Bosten Lake to the lower reaches of the river. A number of
modern, large-scale water conservancy projects represented by Kizil Reservoir
and the Ulug Ata key water control project in Hotan and large numbers
of trunk and branch canals, as well as seepage control projects have been
built, thus rapidly increasing the amount of water diverted, the capacity
of the reservoirs and the well-irrigated area in the whole region. By
2000, there were 485 reservoirs with a total holding capacity of well
over 6.716 billion cu m -- 162 times and 200 times the 1949 figures,
respectively. The total area of irrigated fields has been expanded to
3.388 million ha. The flood control dykes and dams built in the period
totaled 5,129 km -- 17.7 times the 1949 figure of 289 km.
Swift expansion of communications and transportation. Draught animals
were the chief means of transport in Xinjiang prior to the founding of
New China. There was almost no modern transport. In the more than 50 years
since then, Xinjiang has witnessed a drastic change in the communications
and transport industry. The Lanzhou-Xinjiang Railway reached Urumqi at
the end of 1962, bringing railway transport to the region for the first
time. The 476-km-long western section of the Southern Xinjiang Railway,
from Turpan to Korla, was opened to traffic in 1984. A stretch of 460
km was added to the western section of the Lanzhou-Xinjiang Railway in
1990, reaching the Alatav Pass from Urumqi, thus completing the second
Eurasian continental bridge. In 1994, the Lanzhou-Xinjiang Railway was
double-tracked and opened to traffic. In 1999, the 975-km section of the
Southern Xinjiang Railway was completed, extending from Korla to Kashi,
and opened to traffic. By 2001, operating railway lines totaled 3,010.4
km.
In 1949, Xinjiang had only several crudely built highways, with a total
length of a mere 3,361 km, but by 2001, the region's highways had
been extended to 80,900 km, including 428 km of expressways, 230 km of
Grade 1 highways and 5,558 km of Grade 2 highways. The highway running
through the Taklimakan Desert is a long-distance graded highway, the first
one in the world built on shifting sands. Now, a highway network covers
the whole region, with Urumqi as the center and seven national highways
as the backbone linking the region with Gansu and Qinghai provinces to
the east, the adjoining countries in Central and West Asia to the west
and Tibet to the south. The network is also connected with the region's
68 provincial highways. Buses now run to all cities, prefectures, counties
and townships in the region.
Xinjiang has 11 airports, both newly built and enlarged, with international
air routes connecting Urumqi with Alma-Ata, Tashkent, Moscow and Islamabad,
as well as chartered flights to Hong Kong. In all, there are 92 air lines
radiating from Urumqi to 65 cities in other parts of the country and abroad
and to 12 prefectures and cities within the autonomous region. The total
length of the air routes is 161,800 km.
The development of telecommunications facilities in Xinjiang has kept
pace with the national network. Xinjiang has built digital microwave trunk
circuits linking Urumqi with Ili through Kuytun and Bole, linking Kuytun
with Altay through Karamay, and from Turpan to Hotan through Korla, Aksu
and Kashi. Digital microwave communications link the southern and northern
parts of the region, and optical cable trunk lines link Urumqi with Xi'an,
Lanzhou, Yining, Korgas checkpoint, Turpan, Korla, Ruoqiang and Mangya.
A DDD telephone network now links all the cities and counties in Xinjiang
with all other parts of China, and the region's telephone subscribers
have reached the grand total of 2.626 million. The local data communications
network and multi-media communications network have developed rapidly,
and an ATM wide-band network covers all prefectures and cities. The construction
of an IP-based citywide LAN has been started. A mobile phone network with
a capacity of 2.924 million users is now in place to cover the whole region.
Rapid growth of foreign trade. Xinjiang's foreign trade is conducted
in multiple flexible ways, including spot trade, border trade, processing
with materials supplied by customers, compensation trade, and tourism.
By 2001, Xinjiang had trade relations with 119 countries and regions.
Nearly 1,000 commodity items in 22 categories were on the export list.
Among them, 10 export commodities earned more than US$ 10 million each.
The total value of Xinjiang's exports and imports amounted to US$
1.77 billion in that year. The export product mix has been constantly
improved, from primary bulk products with low added value to electromechanical
and precision instruments with high added value. Now, manufactured goods
account for 67% of Xinjiang's exports.
As one of the important autonomous regions (provinces) carrying out the
government strategy of opening China's border areas to the outside
world, Xinjiang has gradually formed an omnidirectional, multi-level and
wide-range opening pattern by expanding the links with foreign countries
and China's various provinces along the borders, bridges (Eurasian
continental bridges) and trunk communication lines to become China's
frontline in opening to the West.
Boom in tourism. With wonderful and rare natural scenery and colorful
ethnic customs, Xinjiang has greatly expanded its tourism sector. In 2001,
the region hosted 273,000 international tourists, and earned US$ 98.56
million in foreign exchange. It also hosted 8.393 million domestic tourists,
and earned 7.18 billion yuan. The region's capacity for accommodating
tourists has greatly expanded in recent years. In 2001, there were 250
hotels for foreign tourists, including 173 star-rated hotels. The tourist
trade has become a new economic growth point for economic development
in Xinjiang. |