China’s modernisation goal no longer out of reach

BEIJING. — When the Japanese invasion plunged China into peril in the 1930s, a renowned Chinese historian pondered and asked the famous question that had vexed him for long: Can the Chinese modernise?

The answer to the question has long been available. The Communist Party of China (CPC) has initiated a top-level design to promote China’s socialist modernisation, unveiling a two-stage plan to make the world’s most populous country a “great modern socialist country” by the mid-21st century. The modernisation goal that the Chinese have been striving for since the modern era is no longer out of reach.

According to the plan, the CPC will basically realise socialist modernisation in the first stage from 2020 to 2035, before developing China into a great modern socialist country that is “prosperous, strong, democratic, culturally advanced, harmonious and beautiful” by the middle of the 21st century.

Although modernisation theory has its origins in the West, modernisation by no means is equal to Westernisation. The world’s second-largest economy is becoming increasingly aware that there has never been a uniform path to modernisation.

China’s peaceful rise has in fact shown that the Western style is not the only viable route to modernisation.

Super-scale

The modernisation China seeks involves a massive population base and a rapid pace of realisation. It could be seen as a super-scale human development practice.

In China’s modernisation drive, new models of industrialisation, informatisation, urbanisation and agricultural modernisation will develop simultaneously. China will endeavour to achieve within decades what took the West centuries to achieve. The scale and speed of modernisation in the world’s most populous country are unprecedented and will inevitably have a profound impact on the world.

China bases its development on its own situation and taps into the potential of its massive population and accordingly, massive demands and markets. According to a blueprint for its development in the next five to 15 years, which is under review at the “two sessions,” China will accelerate forging a new development paradigm of  “dual circulation” in which domestic and overseas markets reinforce each other with the domestic market as the mainstay.

The world’s largest developing country will give full play to the advantage of its super-large market and continue to expand it by boosting domestic consumption in its modernisation drive.

Green drive

China is seeking a modernisation in which the construction of economic, political, cultural, social and ecological civilisation are jointly promoted.

The unbalanced advancement of modernisation can cause estrangement and conflict. Economic growth does not necessarily do away with social difficulties. On the contrary, certain types of growth actually cause these problems.

China rejects such types of modernisation path. With its GDP exceeding the 100-trillion-yuan (about US$15,42 trillion) mark in 2020, China has explicitly stated that it will strive to keep its economy running within an appropriate range during the 14th Five-Year-Plan (2021-2025) period rather than setting a numerical goal.

The move echoed the country’s strategy of focusing on promoting high-quality development which is key to its modernisation drive.

Although the modernisation of the West has created unprecedented material wealth, it has also led to the waste of resources and environmental damage.

Having taken notes from the West, China will not choose a development path that consumes a large quantity of non-renewable natural resources in the process of its modernisation. In the modernisation China is striving for, people and nature exist in harmony.

In its latest development blueprint, China has vowed to stay true to the principle that “lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets,” and to significantly lower the energy consumption per unit of GDP and its carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP. A modernisation path featuring green development has become a consensus of the Chinese, with sound progress made in recent years.

People-centred

China’s modernisation involves not only a drastic increase in economic production capacity, but also comprehensive social progress. China seeks a people-centred modernisation that is different from the Western model in which capital is the primary driver and dominant logic.

That is best illustrated by China’s massive poverty alleviation campaign and its handling of the pandemic.

China has always insisted that the vast majority of society should be the starting point for system design and policy formulation. The nation’s unique concepts and practices such as “No one should be left behind” and “People first, life first” express the essence and characteristics of Chinese-style modernisation, which is centred on people.

It is worth mentioning that people-centred modernisation is in line with the highest ideals and value pursuits of Marxism, whose goal is to benefit the people and ultimately achieve the full development of each individual.

Peaceful, win-win

China’s modernisation will be a road of peaceful development and will adhere to win-win cooperation.

It will not follow the Western path of aggression, colonisation and expansion, neither plundering and colonising foreign countries nor transferring domestic conflicts and crises abroad.

The modernising China, which does not subscribe to the notion that a strong country will inevitably seek hegemony, has blazed a trail of revitalisation.

China has pledged to open up new prospects for win-win co-operation and provide digital assistance to less developed countries in terms of technology, equipment and services, according to its development blueprint.

The modernisation China seeks is one based on the country’s national conditions and independent development. There is no one-size-fits-all development model, and modernisation theory needs to be enriched as modernisation practices unfold.

Alan MacFarlane, a Cambridge professor who proposes “modernity with Chinese characteristics”, believes that the civilisation of Britain, the first so-called modern country in the world, was based on individualism, while China’s civilisation has been based on collectiveness since ancient times. Different traditions and histories make the modernization path of each civilisation different.

Every country has the right to choose its own modernisation path. The Chinese model of modernisation offers a new option to other countries and nations who want to speed up their development while preserving their independence.

It also offers Chinese wisdom and a Chinese approach to solving the problems facing humanity. — Xinhua.

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