男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
USEUROPEAFRICAASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
China
Home / China / View

No backtracking from globalization

By Ed Zhang | China Daily Europe | Updated: 2016-07-03 13:32

Market will continue to reward those who learn from past experience and open up their systems

There was a misprint in my column last week: a bureaucracy without (not with, as printed) enough authority to launch a change in its industry tends to be a drag, rather than a driver, of the reform. Remaining like that for too long, it not only contributes no progress, but also hurts confidence.

On the global level, this is what we see in some existing frameworks for international cooperation - Brexit, for example. It's hard to tell for how long, and how widely, its repercussions will affect this part of the world, at a time when many ominous forecasts are flowing around.

But whatever the consequence, in all likelihood it will also prove that backtracking from globalization, and from all the ties made and interests earned from it, is far from easy. It doesn't leads to a simple solution, if there can be a solution at all.

The global market, along with its logic that economists have described for more than 200 years, will continue to work and to distribute reward to those who learn from past experiences seriously and act more quickly to open up their own systems.

Globalization is unstoppable, even though it is now in a low cycle. New roles will rise for different national economies once breakthroughs come around, in technology or in management. Before that, people will find it more complicated than they thought to dismantle the existing systems than repairing them.

The same applies domestically. The country is going through many difficulties, admittedly, from a large stockpile of debt for companies and local governments, a slowdown in the growth in old industries and old industrial regions, to bureaucracies that, as I said, are unable to lead change.

But despite these difficulties, and the predictions about China's deviation from its past reformist line, there is no going back from what the country has achieved in its reform in the past 40 years. Beating a retreat would be even harder, although striking forward is unrealistic at the moment. Giving up the goals listed in the national leadership's solemn statement in 2013 would look even worse.

So, if some say, as a distant partner with the European Union, China may survive the Brexit crisis unscathed and even may be a net winner, the biggest winning point that the country stands to earn may not be in any monetary or material sense. It is a lesson that can be learned by the economic officials and corporate executives about the social cost they may face if they keep procrastinating in the actions they have promised.

Like in every reform that is overdue, people may run out of patience. Society may divide, as some individuals start peddling seemingly simple but practically messy solutions.

Fortunately, in at least one area, the Chinese leaders have shown enough resolution. That is the anticorruption campaign. It will soon result in some new accountability rules in the Communist Party of China, as official media announced last week.

China made the rules on disciplinary inspection for officials in August last year, and in October, it made the rules on self-discipline and disciplinary punishments. These are steps to institutionalize the anticorruption campaign that has been unrelenting in the past four years.

Although these rules don't directly contribute to a rise in GDP, or to any specific technological innovation, they will result in the buildup of a new regulatory environment, in which officials would risk their career, if not personal freedom, by misusing public funds or exacting personal bribes from private companies.

The direction of these developments will only match the good international practice as required by the age of globalization, and China's commitment to the latter. China, it is hoped, will take more actions along the line.

The author is an editor-at-large of China Daily. Contact the writer at edzhang@chinadaily.com.cn

Editor's picks
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 望都县| 鲁山县| 突泉县| 文成县| 岐山县| 通城县| 昭苏县| 神农架林区| 驻马店市| 高台县| 神农架林区| 会宁县| 竹溪县| 平安县| 和顺县| 邢台市| 丰镇市| 长乐市| 林州市| 双柏县| 永兴县| 南城县| 喀喇沁旗| 承德市| 宜都市| 新绛县| 临湘市| 万源市| 通州区| 自贡市| 邯郸市| 崇仁县| 云安县| 同仁县| 邢台县| 红桥区| 鸡泽县| 龙州县| 南靖县| 晋城| 田阳县| 深泽县| 老河口市| 隆尧县| 雷波县| 兖州市| 手游| 靖远县| 镇赉县| 隆回县| 潢川县| 龙州县| 谷城县| 清徐县| 宁国市| 东海县| 西盟| 麻江县| 琼海市| 德清县| 翁源县| 呼玛县| 阳曲县| 图们市| 晋江市| 白银市| 鸡泽县| 沽源县| 贵南县| 三江| 辛集市| 阳朔县| 呼玛县| 镇安县| 沭阳县| 弥渡县| 中卫市| 庐江县| 广汉市| 澄城县| 文化| 吐鲁番市|