CGTN: Why is deepening reform so important for China?

BEIJING, July 17, 2024 /CNW/ -- In the National Museum of China, there is a special collection of 109 official seals. The seals, which are from Binhai New Area in Tianjin Municipality, were scrapped in 2014 after the local government set up an administrative examination and approval bureau and incorporated hundreds of examination and approval units into one department, replacing 109 official seals with one official seal.

In 2014, though the concept of building a socialist market economy had been introduced more than two decades earlier, doing business remained a challenging endeavor. A lawmaker from Tianjin Municipal People's Congress revealed that a single investment project, from acquiring land to completing all administrative approval procedures, required more than 30 government approvals and over 100 seals. The entire process took a minimum of 272 working days.

The 109 seals displayed in the national museum demonstrated China's determination to deepen institutional reform. Over the years, to facilitate businesses, China's State Council has canceled or delegated to lower-level authorities the power of administrative approval for over 1,000 items and slashed the number of investment items subject to central government approval by over 90 percent.

Why deepening reform matters

China launched reform and opening up in 1978. Over the past 46 years, China has transformed from a poor and underdeveloped economy into the world's second-largest economy.

"Reform and opening up is a major reason why China is able to catch up with the times," Chinese President Xi Jinping said at a symposium in 2023. He added, "To promote Chinese modernization, we must further comprehensively deepen reform and opening up, continuously liberate and develop social productive forces, and unleash and enhance social vitality."

China kicked off the third plenary session of the 20th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China in Beijing on Monday. The meeting will focus on further comprehensively deepening reform and advancing Chinese modernization.

Wang Chunguang, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that China has now entered a "deep water" zone in its reform process, facing more complex and urgent tasks than before, such as the diminishing effectiveness of previous reforms, an unclear path of future reform, and shifting international relations. Failing to address the various challenges in society, the economy, culture and politics via further reform, China's modernization will be significantly constrained.