Household
Appliances Make Life Easier in Tibet
(12/08/2002)
Sangmo, a retired Tibetan woman, is leading an easy life with the
help of her household electric appliances.
Watching her son boiling milk in the microwave oven, she comments,
"It is marvelous to cook meals without using a stove."
Her household electric appliances include a refrigerator, an air
conditioner, a washing machine, an electric cooker and a dishwashers.
"I used to be busy the whole evening with cooking and other
household chores after coming back from work each day and felt dog
tired at bedtime. Modern cooking appliances make it possible for
me to spend more time on physical training and reading," she
said.
According to a recent regional sample survey, there are 120 color
TV sets for every 100 households in Tibet. Almost all households
have at least one or two electric appliances. Over 95 percent of
the 11,513 households in the Chengguan District of Lhasa, the regional
capital, have TV sets.
Jamyang Gyamco, a research fellow at the Tibet Academy of Social
Science, said, China's economic reforms have modernized the daily
life of Tibetan people, making life easier for them.
Official statistics say the gross domestic product of Tibet rose
133 percent in the 1994-2000 period. The per capita disposable income
of urban dwellers in Tibet surged 63 percent while that of rural
residents increased by 94 percent. Economic growth paves the way
for the acquisition of electric appliances by Tibetan families.
He also attributes the spread of electric appliances to the fast
development of the power industry in recent years. By the end of
2000, 401 power stations had been built in Tibet with a combined
generating capacity of 356,200 kw, and annually generating 661 million
kwh of electricity.
However, the home appliance revolution in Tibet poses a grave
challenge to its traditional handicraft industry.
Gaisang Puncog, who sells pottery near Potala Palace, says people
no long use pottery for kitchen utensils. His products now sell
well as indoor decorations or religious articles, with improved
quality.
Rinzin, a farmer in Shannan Prefecture, who lives on the sale
of wooden or bamboo butter oil barrels, has found it more difficult
to keep his business going since people started using electric butter
oil machines.
"I have to keep making new models and to meet the demands
of different customers," he says.
Tibetans used to bring back goods when they travelled to other
parts of China. It was common to see people carrying bags and suit
cases while waiting for buses at Gonggar Airport after a journey
from other provinces. Now the majority of people buy what they need
at nearby department stores where many goods including Haier Brand
refrigerators, Hisense brand air conditioners and TCL brand TV sets
can be purchased off the shelf.
Name-brands are now shipped regularly to Tibet from all parts
of China through national air and highway networks.
(People's Daily )
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