Translation Tag: common prosperity
Researchers at Nankai University argue that increasing the proportion of China’s population in the middle class will have knock-on effects for social stability, productivity growth, and consumer demand. As a result, they argue, continuing to expand this demographic will be “an important task for China going forward in the new stage of development.” The authors recommend Beijing focus on raising income levels of rural residents through rural revitalization, promoting urbanization, and “gradually transition[ing] from an urban development orientation to a strategic focus that prioritizes rural revitalization and development.”
This Xi Jinping speech from the December 2021 Central Economic Work Conference, published in the May 2022 edition of China’s leading theoretical journal Qiushi, discusses major issues in China’s future development path and signals a renewed emphasis on common prosperity and stricter regulation of capital.
Readout from the December convening of the Central Economic Work Conference, one of the most important annual venues for laying out the coming year’s economic policies and priorities.
A partial speech by Xi Jinping at the 10th Central Financial and Economic Committee meeting (August 2021), that provides highest authoritative insights into the four guiding principles and six tasks of the Common Prosperity concept.
This 52-point outline of an ambitious urban planning project that, guided by Xi’s Common Prosperity concept, is intended to be a model for how the country will resolve “regional gaps, urban-rural gaps, and income gaps” and transition to a more innovation-driven, high-quality economic development model.
An interview with a researcher at one of China’s top universities on how the Common Prosperity concept seeks to make China’s labor laws, tax code, and state owned enterprises more consistent with the basic principles of socialism.
A professor of economics at Renmin University attempts an explanation of the “common prosperity” concept according to Marxist theory.
An explanation of how the Common Prosperity concept is the essential next step on China’s Socialist path to national rejuvenation because, according to Xi Jinping, it is necessary to correct the unequal distribution of benefits from China’s development thus far.
This interview with a leading Chinese economist discusses the need for, and goals of, Common Prosperity based on current and desired economic indicators; he weighs actions such as property and inheritance taxes, citizen donations, and education reform.
A leading Marxist theorist at the Central Party School attempts to locate the new Common Prosperity concept within the larger arc of China’s path of development and modernization.