| CPPCC member
proposes for integrating Yangtze River Delta's economic growth
(03/05/2003)
The integrated growth of booming economy in east China's Yangtze
river delta with the leading financial and commercial center of
Shanghai municipality as its axis and flanked by two economic powerhouses
of Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces has become an urgent issue to
deal with, a noted CPPCC member said Wednesday.`
Chen Shouyi from Zhejiang, who is currently attending the First
Session of the 10th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference (CPPCC) in Beijing, appealed to the central
government to set up a super government department to coordinate
the economic growth of the Yangtze River Delta areas.
"Such a government department is required to help remove barriers
and speed up economic growth of different places in the delta and
beef up coordination with local development planning, construction
and use of infrastructure facilities, environmental protection and
market access," said Chen Shouyi, who is from thriving Ningbo
city of Zhejiang province.
The Yangtze River Delta embraces 15 major cities in the region
of Shanghai municipality, and Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces. Withonly
one percent of China's land area and six percent of its population,
the delta boasts 18 percent of its total GDP, making it China's
largest economic bloc and the sixth largest city group in the world.
Economic integration in the delta area has been encouraged time
and again by Chinese state and government leaders and a mechanism
of communication has been worked out by heads of Shanghai, Zhejiang
and Jiangsu. Yet the invisible power of ingrained regional protectionism
remains very strong, posing a barrier to the process of integration.
He acknowledged there is not any overall planning of port construction
in the delta area and but acute competition for investments from
overseas. "Such laxity incurs the overuse and excess waste
of precious resources, both natural and human, and this is therefore
detrimental to interests of all the three parties in this area,"
said Chen, who is director of the Zhejiang Provincial Committee
of the China Association for Promoting Democracy.
The proposed agency could give scope to a number of coordinating
roles, he noted, including the adjustment of industrial structure,
the smooth flow of production materials and commodities as well
as construction of infrastructure facilities in the delta area.
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