Some media commentators say the national leadership's recent meeting held
last week on building a harmonious society was the first in 20 years to focus on
social issues. I think this may be a bit of an exaggeration.
Back in the late 1970s, the national leadership, guided by Deng Xiaoping,
launched economic reforms meant to solve social problems as well. Perhaps the
writers in today's media have forgotten how their parents used to stand in long
queues just to get the meagre ration of some food or vegetables for their
households.
That kind of life not only slowed down the economy, and working of the
market, but also deeply cut into our social texture. Applause was heard from all
sectors when Deng told his comrades that poverty shouldn't be the name of
socialism.
Economic reform has not just marvelled the world with record growth in GDP,
it has also yielded a great unifying force, many shared norms and goals for this
society.
It would be quite wrong, indeed, to attribute the social problems facing
China today to the reforms of the past two decades, as if these social ills were
related purely to economic pursuits, or even worse, as if the problems now are
its intended goals.
Take a glance at the areas where the problems are most acute. Medical
services, education and housing have been nicknamed the "three mountains" to
crush the backbones of the middle-income groups. However rising prices for these
goods and services are not the inevitable consequences of having a market
economy. It is the result of lack of public finance support and government
initiative, despite continuous rises in tax revenues and the funds to better
manage these community needs.
These are areas showing a lack of progress to match reform in the rest of
society.
The management and supervision of public funds have remained weak and
disintegrated, subject to the interference from many local officials without
reporting to the central government.
One example is the recent scandal in Shanghai, where the former secretary of
the municipal committee of the Communist Part of China Chen Liangyu used his
discretion to lend the city's social security fund to his personal business
friends.
Zhang Rongkun was one of the business people. But Zhang was only a "fake"
capitalist. Of his 10 billion yuan (US$1.2 billion) worth of assets, according
to the Chinese-language news magazine Oriental Outlook, 30 per cent was borrowed
from the Shanghai social security fund, another 60 per cent borrowed from the
State-owned banks, and the rest from government grant for the restructuring of a
formerly State-owned enterprise.
Another example, which is even more outrageous, was reported from a smaller
city called Chenzhou, a booming city of Hunan Province. Municipal government
officials used the public housing fund for their gambling sprees in Macao's
casinos.
At one time, one person (Li Shubiao, former director of Chenzhou
administration of public housing fund) used as much as 120 million yuan (US$15
million).
The reforms of the late 1970s have generated a tremendous amount of money for
China that could be used to help and care for low-income groups and building a
harmonious society.
Instead, China social progress still has a long way to go because this
tremendous amount of money is being wasted by corrupt officials at quite an
alarming rate.
Don't blame economic reforms for the obvious problems. Blame the corrupt
officials.
Email: younuo@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily 10/16/2006 page4)