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Специальные экономические зоны Китая

Оправдая открытие и серию экономических реформ, которые последовали в Китае , Дэн Сяаопинг сослался на Карла Маркса и его теории, которые предсказывали, что страны должны подвергаться урбанизации и стадии капитализма для естественного социалистического перехода. Одна из самых известных реформ под Дэнгом - создание четырех «специальных экономических зон» вдоль юго -восточного побережья Китая, а Шэньчжэнь , Шанту и Чжухай расположены в провинции Гуандун и Сямен , расположенные в провинции Фуцзянь . Четыре вышеупомянутых специальных экономических зон были созданы с 1980 по 1981 год. По состоянию на 2024 год было 3 дополнительных специальных экономических зон. В 1988 году Хайнан стал пятым «Сез». В 1990 году район Пудун в Шанхае стал шестым «Сез». В 2009 году район Бинхай в Тяньцзине стал седьмым «Сезом». Специальные экономические зоны ( SEZ ) в материковом Китае получают более свободную рыночную экономическую политику и гибкие правительственные меры со стороны правительства Китая по сравнению с запланированной экономикой в другом месте.

Это позволяет SEZ использовать экономическое управление, которое более привлекательно для иностранных и внутренних предприятий. В SEZS «... иностранная и внутренняя торговля и инвестиции проводятся без разрешения китайского центрального правительства в Пекине» с « налоговыми и деловыми стимулами для привлечения иностранных инвестиций и технологий». [ 1 ] Первоначально торговля контролировалась централизованным правительством Китая. Тем не менее, эти специальные зоны представляют собой рыночную капиталистическую политику, основанную на рынке, чтобы привлечь иностранные инвестиции в Китай. В 1986 году Китай затем добавил 14 дополнительных городов в список специальных экономических зон.

History

[edit]

In the late 1970s, and especially at the 3rd Plenary Session of the 11th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party in December 1978, the Chinese government initiated its policy of reform and opening up, as a response to the failure of Maoist economic policy to produce economic growth which would allow China to be competitive against not only industrialized nations of the west but also rising regional powers: Japan, Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, and Hong Kong.[2]

Officials in Guangdong Province led by Provincial Party Secretary Xi Zhongxun seized the initiative, starting with an investment project in Shekou prepared by Yuan Geng on behalf of the Hong Kong-based China Merchants Steam Navigation Company. This project, initially a ship breaking facility, was approved by Li Xiannian on January 31, 1979. In April 1979, Xi Zhongxun and other Guangdong officials presented in Beijing a proposal to give broader flexibility to the coastal provinces of Guangdong and Fujian to attract foreign investment, with additional exemptions in four cities, namely Shenzhen in the Pearl River Delta region, Zhuhai and Shantou in Guangdong and Xiamen[3]: 158  (Amoy) in Fujian Province. For these, Chinese Paramount leader Deng Xiaoping coined the name "special zones"[4][5] and characterized them as experiments in the mold of the pre-1949 Communist base areas.[6]: 65  The proposal was approved on July 15 and the four special zones were officially established on August 26, 1979.[7] Within these SEZs, export-focused businesses had the leeway to respond to quickly respond to demand in foreign markets.[8]: 50  These initial SEZs successfully attracted foreign capital, primarily from ethnic Chinese in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia.[9]: 90  Foreign businesses in these areas were generally motivated to move production to China's SEZs because of lower labor costs, preferential economic policies, and the general trend of offshoring more simple manufacturing as globalization increased.[9]: 90 

Successes in the initial SEZs led to the establishment of additional SEZs in 14 coastal cities:[8]: 50  Dalian, Qinhuangdao, Tianjin, Yantai, Qingdao, Lianyungang, Nantong, Shanghai, Ningbo, Wenzhou, Fuzhou, Guangzhou, Zhanjiang and Beihai. Since 1988, mainland China's opening to the outside world has been extended to its border areas, areas along the Yangtze River and inland areas. First, the state decided to turn Hainan Island into mainland China's biggest special economic zone (approved by the 1st session of the 7th NPC in 1988) and to enlarge the other four special economic zones.

Shortly afterwards, the State Council expanded the open coastal areas, extending into an open coastal belt the open economic zones of the Yangtze River Delta, Pearl River Delta, Xiamen-Zhangzhou-Quanzhou Triangle in south Fujian, the Shandong Peninsula, the Liaodong Peninsula (in Liaoning Province), Hebei Province and Guangxi autonomous region. In June 1990, the Chinese government opened the Pudong New Area in Shanghai to overseas investment, and additional cities along the Yangtze River valley, with Shanghai's Pudong New Area as its "dragon head."[10]

Since 1992, the State Council has opened a number of border cities and, in addition, all the capital cities of inland provinces and autonomous regions. In addition, 15 free trade zones, 32 state-level economic and technological development zones, and 53 new and high-tech industrial development zones have been established in large and medium-sized cities. As these open areas adopt different preferential policies, they play the dual roles of "windows" in developing the foreign-oriented economy, generating foreign exchanges through exporting products and importing advanced technologies and of "radiators" in accelerating inland economic development.

Most of China's SEZs are located in former treaty ports and therefore have symbolic significance in demonstrating a "reversal of fortunes" in China's dealings with foreigners since the century of humiliation.[8]: 51  Researcher Zongyuan Zoe Liu writes that "[t]he success of these cities as 'red' treaty ports represented another step in China's overall reform and opening-up plan while legitimizing the leadership of the CPC over the Chinese state and people."[8]: 51 

Primarily geared to exporting processed goods, the five SEZs are foreign trade-oriented areas which integrate science, industry and innovation with trade. Foreign firms benefit from preferential policies, such as lower tax rates, reduced regulations and special managerial systems. In 1999, Shenzhen's new and high-tech industry reached an output value of 81.98 billion yuan, making up 40.5% of the city's total industrial output value.

Since its founding in 1992, the Shanghai Pudong New Area has made progress in both absorbing foreign capital and accelerating the economic development of the Yangtze River valley. The government has extended special preferential policies to the Pudong New Area that are not currently enjoyed by the special economic zones. For instance, in addition to the preferential policies of reducing or eliminating Customs duties and income tax common to the economic and technological development zones, the state also permits the zone to allow foreign business people to open financial institutions and run tertiary industries. In addition, the state has given Shanghai permission to set up a stock exchange, expand its examination and approval authority over investments and allow foreign-funded banks to engage in RMB business. In 1999, the GDP of the Pudong New Area came to 80 billion yuan, and the total industrial output value, 145 billion yuan.

In May 2010, the PRC designated the city of Kashgar in Xinjiang a SEZ. Kashgar's annual growth rate was 17.4 percent in 2009, and Kashgar's designation has since increased tourism and real estate prices in the city. Kashgar is close to China's border with the independent states of former Soviet Central Asia and the SEZ seeks to capitalize on international trade links between China and those states.[11]

In 2015, then-magistrate of Kinmen County (ROC) Chen Fu-hai, along with a non-profit Taiwan organization "with close ties to the CCP",[12] proposed a referendum in which Kinmen would become a special economic zone and obtain free trade and free investment between it and neighboring SEZ Xiamen on the mainland. The plan received controversy due to PRC investment in the ROC being otherwise strictly controlled; it was praised by a Xiamen government official and PRC state media, but the referendum did not[citation needed] receive approval from the government of Taiwan before Chen's term ended in 2018.

List of the SEZs and open coastal cities

[edit]

As part of its economic reforms and policy of opening to the world, between 1978 and 1984 China established special economic zones (SEZs) in Shantou, Shenzhen, and Zhuhai in Guangdong Province and Xiamen in Fujian Province as well as designating the entire island province of Hainan as a special economic zone.[13]

In 1984, China opened 14 other coastal cities to overseas investment (listed from north to south): Dalian, Qinhuangdao, Tianjin, Yantai, Qingdao, Lianyungang, Nantong, Shanghai, Ningbo, Wenzhou, Fuzhou, Guangzhou, Zhanjiang, and Beihai. These coastal cities have been designated as the "open coastal cities" (simplified Chinese: 沿海开放城市; traditional Chinese: 沿海開放城市; pinyin: yánhǎi kāifàng chéngshì).[14][15]

Then, beginning in 1985, the central government expanded the coastal area by establishing the following open economic zones (listed from north to south): the Liaodong Peninsula, Hebei Province (which surrounds Beijing and Tianjin; see Jing-Jin-Ji), the Shandong Peninsula, Yangtze River Delta, Xiamen-Zhangzhou-Quanzhou Triangle in southern Fujian Province, the Pearl River Delta, and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.

In 1990, the Chinese government decided to open the Pudong New Area in Shanghai to overseas investment, as well as more cities in the Yang Zi River Valley.

Since 1992, the State Council has opened a number of border cities and all the capital cities of inland provinces and autonomous regions.

In addition 15 free-trade zones, 32 state-level economic and technological development zones, and 53 new and high-tech industrial development zones have been established in large and medium-sized cities. As a result, a multilevel diversified pattern of opening and integrating coastal areas with river, border, and inland areas has been formed in China.[16]

Type City Province
Special economic zone – Province Hainan
Special economic zone – City Xiamen Fujian
Shantou Guangdong
Shenzhen
Zhuhai
Kashgar Xinjiang
Open coastal city Shanghai
Tianjin
Fuzhou Fujian
Guangzhou Guangdong
Zhanjiang
Beihai Guangxi
Qinhuangdao Hebei
Lianyungang Jiangsu
Nantong
Dalian Liaoning
Qingdao Shandong
Yantai
Ningbo Zhejiang
Wenzhou

Economic policies of the SEZs

[edit]

Economic policies of SEZs included tax exemptions, reduced custom duties, reduced priced land, and increased flexibility to negotiate labor contracts and financial contracts.[17]: 37  SEZs were also authorized to develop their own legislation.[6]: 84  The Shenzhen Special Economic Zone was the most active SEZ for legislative experiments over the period 1979-1990 and these had a significant role in shaping national economic legislation on foreign trade and investment.[6]: 84 

Shenzhen's economic transformation

[edit]

Out of the special zones, perhaps the most successful was Shenzhen. It transformed from 126 square miles of villages into a business metropolis.[18] As seen by the table below, the ten years of economic reform from 1980 to 1990 increased population in Shenzhen by six-fold, GDP by around sixty-fold, and gross industrial output by two-hundredfold. Before 1980, Shenzhen's GDP was just 0.2 percent of Hong Kong's. In 2018, the city's GDP hit 2.42 trillion yuan (US$372 billion), overtaking Hong Kong.[19] Successes in Shenzhen prompted Chinese central authorities to instruct provincial officials to learn from Shenzhen.[20]: 114 

Year Population (thousands people) GDP (million yuan) Gross industrial output (million yuan)
1980 332.9 270 99
1982 449.5 826 424
1985 881.5 3902 3119
1990 2019.4 17,167 20,912

Overseas SEZs

[edit]

From 1990 to 2018, Chinese enterprises established eleven SEZs in sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East including: Nigeria (two), Zambia, Djibouti, Kenya, Mauritius, Mauritania, Egypt, Oman, and Algeria.[21]: 177  Generally, the Chinese government takes a hands-off approach, leaving it to Chinese enterprises to work to establish such zones (although it does provide support in the form of grants, loans, and subsidies, including support via the China Africa Development Fund).[21]: 177  Such zones fall within the Chinese policy to go out and compete globally.[21]: 182  The Forum on China-Africa Cooperation promotes these SEZs heavily.[21]: 177–182 

In southeast Asia, both state-owned and private Chinese companies are active in developing SEZs abroad consistent with the Chinese government's strategic priorities.[22]: 55  Efforts in these SEZs are often viewed as part of the Belt and Road Initiative.[22]: 55  China is involved in southeast Asia SEZs that include industrial parks, special export processing zones, technology parks, and innovation areas.[22]: 55  From the Chinese government perspective, Chinese participation in overseas SEZs helps to increase demand for Chinese machinery and equipment and helps restructure the domestic Chinese industrial value chain by moving low-end production activity abroad.[22]: 55  It can also help bypass trade barriers during periods of friction such as the U.S.-China trade war by facilitating exports to Europe and North America.[22]: 55 

The Chinese government has identified certain southeast Asian SEZs as highlighted destinations for Chinese investment.[22]: 55  These highlighted overseas SEZs include: Kawasan Industri Terpadu Indonesia-China, Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone in Cambodia, Thailand-China Rayong Industrial Park (RIP), Longjiang Industrial Park in Vietnam, Vientiane Saysettha Development Zone in Laos, and Malaysia-China Kuantan Industrial Park.[22]: 55–56 

The Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone began with a focus on manufacturing consumer goods with the goal of transitioning to producing machinery, photovoltaic materials, and chemicals.[23]: 132–133  It received support from China's Ministry of Commerce and the Export-Import Bank of China.[23]: 132  As of March 2020, the Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone had 174 factories employing more than 30,000 people.[23]: 133 

The RIP is China's largest industrial cluster and manufacturing export area in Thailand.[22]: 56  As of late 2018, the RIP has more than 120 Chinese--owned companies, employs 35,000 (largely Thai nationals), and its gross industrial output was $12 billion.[22]: 56 

The first Chinese overseas SEZs facilitated the offshoring of labor-intensive and less competitive industries, for example in textiles.[21]: 177  As Professor Dawn C. Murphy summarizes, these zones now "aim to transfer China's development successes to other countries, increase business opportunities for China manufacturing companies, avoid trade barriers by setting up zones in countries with preferential trade access to important markets, and create a positive business environment for Chinese small and medium-sized enterprises investing in these regions."[21]: 177  Overseas SEZs also foster support for China in the international system and help advocate for developing country causes through South–South cooperation.[21]: 182  They "help China demonstrate it is acting as a responsible great power in these regions."[21]: 182 

Effectiveness and legacy

[edit]

Deng described China's SEZs as "social and economic laboratories where foreign technologies and managerial skills could be observed", including in the development of manufacturing technology, a private real estate market, and management techniques.[20]: 113 

Many scholars argue that SEZs played a decisive role in the development of China and the success of Communism as implemented in China. Since their inception, SEZs have contributed 22% of China's GDP, 45% of total national foreign direct investment, and 60% of exports. SEZs are estimated to have created over 30 million jobs, increased the income of participating farmers by 30%, and accelerated industrialization, agricultural modernization, and urbanization.[24] One of the primary theoretical foundation of SEZs is its ability to cultivate a form of innovation that is uniquely top-down (supported by government) and bottom-up (characterized by local problem solving), while utilizing resources and research at every level. SEZs reflected a desire for Deng Xiaoping's CCP to be experimental, fluid, and localized when implementing Communist reforms.

However, issues like prioritizing the short-term gains, encompassing a limited number of industries, and lack of entrepreneurial promotion are pointed out by critics of the SEZs. Others, like Gopalakrishnan, point out that "Left out of the picture are inequities in development, arable land loss, real estate speculation and labour violence", as well as significant transparency problems in bureaucracy.[25]

China has benefitted from SEZs through foreign enterprises bringing in expertise, technology, and equipment.[17]: 37  In turn, private firms have benefitted from inexpensive labor, a business-friendly environment, robust infrastructure, and China's large domestic market.[17]: 37–38 

SEZs became destinations for workers from across southern and southwest China, particularly younger women who could earn significantly more for factory work than they could earn in their hometowns.[26]: 66 

Исследование 2022 года в американском экономическом журнале показало, что SEZ в Китае привели к увеличению инвестиций в человеческий капитал с улучшением результатов в области образования. [ 27 ]

Смотрите также

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Примечания

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  1. ^ «Специальная экономическая зона (SEZ) - китайская экономика» . Энциклопедия Британская .
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  4. ^ Столтенберг, Клайд Д. (1984). «Специальные экономические зоны Китая: их развитие и перспективы». Азиатское обследование . 24 (6): 637–654. doi : 10.2307/2644396 . ISSN   0004-4687 . JSTOR   2644396 .
  5. ^ Холмс, Фрэнк (21 апреля 2017). «Новая специальная экономическая зона Китая вызывает воспоминания о Шэньчжэне» . Форбс . Получено 22 марта 2019 года .
  6. ^ Jump up to: а беременный в Хейлманн, Себастьян (2018). Красный Лебедь: как неортодоксальная политика способствовала росту Китая . Китайский университет Гонконга Пресс . ISBN  978-962-996-827-4 .
  7. ^ Фогель, Эзра Ф. (2011). Денг Сяаопинг и трансформация Китая . БЕЛКНАП ПРЕССА Гарвардского университета Пресс. п. 398.
  8. ^ Jump up to: а беременный в дюймовый Лю, Zongyuan Zoe (2023). Суверенные фонды: как Коммунистическая партия Китая финансирует свои глобальные амбиции . БЕЛКНАП ПРЕССА Гарвардского университета Пресс . doi : 10.2307/jj.2915805 . ISBN  9780674271913 Полем JSTOR   JJ.2915805 . S2CID   259402050 .
  9. ^ Jump up to: а беременный Шебея, Мартин (2023). «Китайское экономическое чудо». В Киронске, Кристина; Turscanyi, Richard Q. (Eds.). Современный Китай: новая сверхдержава? Полем Routledge . ISBN  978-1-03-239508-1 .
  10. ^ Чен, Явей (2020-10-06). «Финансирование городской реконструкции: преобразование набережной Шанхая» . Политика землепользования . 112 : 105126. DOI : 10.1016/j.landusepol.2020.105126 . ISSN   0264-8377 .
  11. ^ Fish, Isaac Stone (2010-09-25). «Новый Шэньчжэнь» . Newsweek . Получено 2011-07-29 .
  12. ^ Ли, Йиму; Хунг, вера (8 октября 2015 г.). «Китай превращает огневую мощь в мягкую силу, чтобы попытаться выиграть крошечный остров Тайваня» . Рейтер . Архивировано с оригинала 6 июня 2019 года . Получено 6 июня 2019 года .
  13. ^ «Китай вкратце - China.org.cn» . www.china.org.cn . Получено 2020-12-02 .
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  16. ^ Стол, журнал (2020-11-01). «Китай и история его особых экономических зон» . Глобальная деревня . Получено 2020-12-02 . {{cite web}}: |last= имеет общее имя ( справка )
  17. ^ Jump up to: а беременный в Джин, Кейу (2023). Новый китайский пьесы: за пределами социализма и капитализма . Нью -Йорк: викинг. ISBN  978-1-9848-7828-1 .
  18. ^ Ding, Xuejie (2001 ) .
  19. ^ «Почему техническое мегаполизм Китая рискует быть ловушкой с высоким уровнем дохода» . Южно -Китайский утренний пост . 2021-03-16 . Получено 2022-10-04 .
  20. ^ Jump up to: а беременный Симпсон, Тим (2023). Ставки на Макао: казино капитализм и потребительская революция Китая . Глобализация и серия сообщества. Миннеаполис: Университет Миннесоты Пресс . ISBN  978-1-5179-0031-1 .
  21. ^ Jump up to: а беременный в дюймовый и фон глин час Мерфи, Дон С. (2022). Рост Китая на глобальном юге: Ближний Восток, Африка и Альтернативный мировой порядок Пекина . Стэнфорд, Калифорния: издательство Стэнфордского университета . ISBN  978-1-5036-3060-4 Полем OCLC   1249712936 .
  22. ^ Jump up to: а беременный в дюймовый и фон глин час я Хан, Энзе (2024). Эффект волнного волнения: сложное присутствие Китая в Юго -Восточной Азии . Нью -Йорк, Нью -Йорк: издательство Оксфордского университета . ISBN  978-0-19-769659-0 .
  23. ^ Jump up to: а беременный в Кертис, Саймон; Клаус, Ян (2024). Пояс и дорога: геополитика, урбанизация и поиск Китая нового международного порядка . Нью -Хейвен и Лондон: издательство Йельского университета . doi : 10.2307/jj.11589102 . ISBN  9780300266900 Полем JSTOR   JJ.11589102 .
  24. ^ «Специальные экономические зоны Китая» (PDF) .
  25. ^ Гопалакришнан, Шанкар (2007). «Негативные аспекты особых экономических зон в Китае» . Экономический и политический еженедельный . 42 (17): 1492–1494. ISSN   0012-9976 . JSTOR   4419511 .
  26. ^ Хаммонд, Кен (2023). Революция Китая и поиск социалистического будущего . Нью -Йорк, Нью -Йорк: 1804 Книги. ISBN  9781736850084 .
  27. ^ Лу, Фангвен; Солнце, Вайзенг; Ву, Цзянфенг (2022). «Специальные экономические зоны и инвестиции в человеческий капитал: 30 лет доказательств из Китая» . Американский экономический журнал: экономическая политика . 15 (3): 35–64. doi : 10.1257/pol . ISSN   1945-7731 . S2CID   236623774 .
  • Чи Киан Леонг, 2007 г., рассказ о двух странах: открытость и рост в Китае и Индии [1] Архивировали 2011-07-19 на машине Wayback , динамике, экономическом росте и конференции международной торговли (DEGIT).
  • Чи Киан Леонг, (готовится к публикации), Специальные экономические зоны и рост в Китае и Индии: эмпирическое исследование, [2] Международная экономика и экономическая политика.
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Special economic zones of China - Wikipedia
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